The messy fallout of a Brooklyn bookstore cancelling a ‘Zionist’ talk… with two progressive Jews

A sign taped to the front door of a bookstore in Brooklyn informed visitors, last-minute, that a talk for Joshua Leifer's debut book would be cancelled. The employee who unilaterally made the call did not want to host a Zionist onstage. (Photo courtesy of Joshua Leifer/Twitter)

Joshua Leifer made headline last month when he was slated to do a public talk at a Brooklyn bookstore about his debut book, Tablets Shattered: The End of an American Jewish Century and the Future of Jewish Life, and discovered, an hour before the event was scheduled to start, that the event had been unilaterally cancelled by an employee who didn’t want to host a Zionist onstage. (The Zionist in question wasn’t even Leifer—it was the Reform rabbi who would be interviewing Leifer, who, like Leifer, is quite progressive.) Leifer swiftly took to social media, and the story caught fire as the latest example of “cancel culture” silencing Jews in the real world.

To explain the real story of what happened and the fallout he’s faced, Leifer joins Bonjour Chai to discuss the messy middle he’s found himself in—how, despite writing a book that is critical of Israel, he’s suddenly found himself supported by pro-Israel organizations and the Jewish community writ large.

And after that, he sticks around to help explain the recent wave of mass protests in Israel that erupted after six hostages were found murdered in Hamas tunnels. While North American spectators on both pro- and anti-Israel sides would like to map their viewpoints onto Middle Eastern politics, the realities are quite different—and more nuanced.

Credits

  • Hosts: Avi Finegold and Phoebe Maltz Bovy (@BovyMaltz)
  • Production team: Michael Fraiman (producer), Zachary Kauffman (editor)
  • Music: Socalled

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