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Author(s): Byford, Jovan
Date: 2003
Abstract: This paper proposes that understanding the causes of anti-Semitic hate crime requires the recognition of the cultural specificity of anti-Semitism, reflected in its unique mythical and conspiratorial nature. By neglecting to consider the idiosyncrasies of anti-Semitic rhetoric, general theories of hate crime often fail to provide an adequate explanation for the persistence of anti-Jewish violence, especially in cultures where Jews do not constitute a conspicuous minority, or where there is no noticeable tradition of anti-Jewish sentiment. This point is illustrated using as an example the emergence of anti-Semitic hate crime in Serbia in the aftermath of political changes in October 2000. The paper explores this development in the context of Serbia’s recent past, arguing that the onset of violent incidents towards Jews entailed two distinct but related stages, both of which are linked to the conspiratorial nature of anti-Semitic ideology. The first phase – which culminated at the time of the NATO bombing of Yugoslavia – involved the proliferation of the belief in Jewish conspiracy. At this stage, anti-Semitic conspiracy theories, which were to be found even in the mainstream media, retained an ‘abstract’ quality and their proliferation did not, in itself, lead to anti-Jewish hate crime. The onset of anti-Semitic violence is associated with the second phase, which followed Milošević’s downfall, when, with the marginalisation of conspiratorial culture, the belief in Jewish conspiracy, as an abstract ideological position, became reified and transformed into concrete instances of violence against the local Jewish population. In exploring this two-stage process, the paper highlights the way in which a closer examination of anti-Semitic conspiracy theories and other anti-Semitic texts can help shed some light on the dynamic underpinning the persistence of anti-Jewish hate crime in modern society.