In this extract from Fascists, Fabricators and Fantasists. Antisemitism in South Africa from 1948 to the Present, the final volume in his trilogy on the history of South African antisemitism, Milton Shain reflects on the alleged ‘hidden hand’ of the Jews in South African thought from the late nineteenth century to today.
Over time the identity of the purveyors of Jew-hatred in South Africa has changed. Anti-alienism (or hostility towards the eastern European Jewish immigrants in the late nineteenth and early twentieth centuries) emanated essentially from the white English-speaking merchant class and rural Afrikaners, and was rooted in upheavals wrought by the ‘mineral revolution’, the demonstrable power of mining capital, and the economic recession in the wake of the Anglo-Boer War.
By the 1930s and early 1940s, the ‘Jewish question’ was driven by the white (mainly Afrikaner) radical right and was embedded in the nativism of the 1920s and the socio-economic instability and political tensions at a time of burgeoning völkisch Afrikaner nationalism.
Since the 1970s, a ‘Zionist question’ has replaced the ‘Jewish question’ as a younger Muslim generation, operating in the oppressive apartheid political milieu, sought meaning and explanations in radical Islamist literature and conspiratorial texts. More recently, the anti-Western and post-colonial intellectual turn has brought in other ‘progressives’ beyond the Muslim community.
In each of these different phases it is apparent that attitudes have been informed – at least in part – by ideas and intellectual traditions emanating from beyond South Africa. This is hardly surprising. The period of anti-alienism in early twentieth-century South Africa was an age of increasing literacy, improved communications and large population migrations, notably from Britain to South Africa.
The penetration of European ideas was inescapable, and a vaguely racial definition of ‘Jewishness’ ensured that those traits traditionally associated with Jews abroad would be ascribed to their co-religionists in South Africa. The impact of European ideas was also apparent in the 1930s when the radical right imported fascist ideas, as evident in the ‘shirtist’ movements, the Ossewabrandwag and Pirow’s New Order.