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Article 1.
NYT
The Tony Awards
Roger Cohen
May 12, 2011— Every few years along comes a brilliant Jewish
writer called Tony with challenging views on Israel, and this great
city — on all other matters the most open in the world — gets tied in
knots over what can or cannot be said. After “L’ Affaire Judt” we
have “L’ Affaire Kushner,” but with different outcomes that suggest a
shifting American Jewish discourse.
The late Tony Judt, author of the brilliant study of late 20th-century
Europe called “Postwar,” saw his New York persona changed with
the appearance in 2003 in The New York Review of Books of an
article called “Israel: The Alternative.” It posited the creation of a
single binational state of Jews and Palestinians and suggested a
Jewish state was anachronistic.
The calls to his office began — “Tell Tony Judt this is Hitler calling
and he says, “Congratulations.” Years later, an event featuring Judt
at the Polish Consulate got canceled at the last minute after its
organizers apparently came under pressure from prominent New
York Jewish groups.
To this day, in the city this British-born Jew came to love for its
clamorous diversity, Judt’s luminous oeuvre sometimes seems
overshadowed by a single polemical piece.
I disagreed with Judt: No alternative binational state of Palestinians
and Jews is imaginable in the Holy Land, at least not this side of
utopia. History demonstrates that Jews need a homeland called Israel.
Amos Oz, the Israeli author, has noted that, “When my father was a
young man in Vilna, every wall in Europe said, ‘Jews go home to
Palestine.’ Fifty years later when he went back to Europe on a visit,
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| Filename | HOUSE_OVERSIGHT_030061.jpg |
| File Size | 0.0 KB |
| OCR Confidence | 85.0% |
| Has Readable Text | Yes |
| Text Length | 1,675 characters |
| Indexed | 2026-02-04T17:07:25.319990 |