In the 1980s and 90s, there were some attempts in the West German feminist scene to create alliances between Black, Jewish and of Color feminists in order to work in solidarity and collectively as people affected by racism and antisemitism – to us, it seems, these alliances have been lost.
Feminist Jews from the radical left and thus their experiences of antisemitism are hardly present in left queer-feminist debates – unless, they make antizionist utterances related to Israel. We offer the hypothesis that there has been a discursive Whitening of European Jews in the past 20 years so that they hardly appear as discriminated against in the debates on power relationships or that antisemitism is conceptualised as a part of racism and thus becomes invisible. In our perception, this invisibility of identities and experiences increasingly results in queer-feminist scenes being usually thought as non-Jewish and that experiences of antisemitism are being trivialised or questioned – if they are being formulated at all outside of safe private spaces; or if the language and words are at all available in order to identify and describe as antisemitism what has been experienced and felt.
In our workshop we would like to deal with the question what the alliances between Black, Jewish and of Color feminists looked like and when and why there were any ruptures. What experiences do Jewish people make in left queer-feminist scenes and how can experiences of antisemitism again be made more audible and thus perceivable?