These are legitimate concerns of the Jewish community—an
accomplished
historical and cultural minority that is generally unwilling to become so
assimilated that it disappears. Jews were very poorly assimilated into American
and European culture for long periods and were the object of much
discrimination, even within people’s living memory. Additionally, for many
decades Jews were associated with radical movements
and anarchist terrorism
that had a grip on the Western imagination in the early twentieth century, with
echoes of Muslim terrorism today.
Today the position of Muslims differs considerably from Jews in numerous
respects, of course. Muslims are now the object of intensified overt and covert
suspicions, sometimes even discrimination on a de jure basis, on anything that
smacks of security issues. Muslims in the West have yet
to receive the benefit of
public political correctness; their characteristics and culture remain open season
for spoof, lampoon, derision, and hatred in ways no longer tolerated by Western
society in
respect to African-Americans, Jews, or Native Americans.
The key argument, then, revolves around problems of large-scale migration
of people of color, at a particular time of intense geopolitical tension in the
Muslim world itself. Beyond that, there is little doubt
that Islam does create a
stronger social glue and broader international links than is the case of most other
immigrant groups. But the United States has seen previously “indigestible” or
“unassimilable” minorities before—Hungarians, Italians, Irish, Chinese; indeed,
Jews were once routinely referred to as “clannish.” Clannishness, to a
considerable degree, reflects the absence of a social alternative.