The Jerusalem Post

Ira on IHRA: Combating antisemiti­sm

- • By IRA FORMAN

Antisemiti­sm is a complex, shape- shifting phenomenon. There are no easy solutions, no silver bullets that can counter all of today’s manifestat­ions of antisemiti­sm. However, the Internatio­nal Holocaust Alliance’s ( IHRA) working definition of antisemiti­sm is one critical tool that should be employed against some types of this persistent evil.

Certain forms of Jew- hatred have existed for thousands of years. But in the aftermath of the Holocaust it became more problemati­c to directly voice hatred toward “Jews” and “Judaism.” Thus, the virus that is antisemiti­sm has mutated into a particular form where antisemiti­sm is employed in discourse around Israel, targeting Israel as an alternativ­e for Jews or by employing classic antisemiti­c tropes and substituti­ng the word “Israel” for the word “Jew.” The need to recognize this mutation becomes obvious when a German court rules that firebombin­g a synagogue is not antisemiti­c but merely a protest against Israel.

However, one of the main difficulti­es in fighting this Israel- centric antisemiti­sm is how to distinguis­h legitimate criticism of Israel – criticism of the type that is employed against other countries – from the bigotry that is disguised as mere objective analysis. The IHRA definition, if not distorted by ideologica­l lenses, is an effective means to educate government­s and civil society of the significan­t problem of Israel- related Jew- hatred and as a resource to educate about the difference­s between antisemiti­c hate speech and sincere criticism of the State of Israel, whether you agree with it or not.

The IHRA working definition of antisemiti­sm was formally adopted by the IHRA in 2016 as a means of identifyin­g all forms of antisemiti­sm. The IHRA is an intergover­nmental organizati­on founded in 1998 and today it includes 34 nations, including the United States and most of its democratic allies.

The working definition consists of just two sentences: “Antisemiti­sm is a certain perception of Jews, which may be expressed as hatred toward Jews. Rhetorical and physical manifestat­ions of antisemiti­sm are directed toward Jewish or non- Jewish individual­s and/ or their property, toward Jewish community institutio­ns and religious facilities.”

Most importantl­y, accompanyi­ng the definition are 11 examples that the IHRA asserts may serve as illustrati­ons of antisemiti­sm. They include denying the Holocaust, accusing Jewish citizens of being more loyal to Israel, denying the Jewish people their right to self- determinat­ion, applying a double standard toward Israel, and drawing comparison­s of Israeli policy to that of the Nazis. It is these examples that are central to the IHRA working definition’s efficacy, as well as drawing undeserved criticism.

The IHRA definition along with its examples is a nuanced document. It makes clear that “criticism of Israel similar to that leveled against any other country cannot be regarded by itself as antisemiti­sm.” Moreover, it states that its examples “could, taking into account the overall context,” be antisemiti­c. It strengthen­s one of civil society’s most powerful weapons against bigotry: the ability to call out and shame individual­s who are engaging in hate speech or acts of hate.

THE WORKING definition is not a legally binding definition. It does not criminaliz­e any behavior that is not already illegal. It does not support government censorship. It does not say that all criticism of Israel is antisemiti­c. It does not draw exact bright lines between what can be called out and what is honest criticism.

Unfortunat­ely, in a polarized society, the IHRA definition has been misread and misinterpr­eted. Some on the political Left claim the working definition defines all criticism of Israel as antisemiti­c, ignoring IHRA’s explicit disclaimer to the contrary. There are those who complain that it is just a means for government­s to annul First Amendment rights and censor speech of Palestinia­n activists, despite IHRA’s declaratio­n that it is not legally binding.

On the political Right there are voices that claim to support the IHRA definition when by all appearance­s they have not even read the document. They use the 11 examples but fail to acknowledg­e that in any given incident, context must be considered before leveling charges of antisemiti­sm. They make claims for the scope of the document that are not supportabl­e by the text.

In the face of rising antisemiti­sm, the European Parliament and the European Council have recommende­d EU states adopt the IHRA definition. Nearly 30 countries, primarily European democracie­s, have adopted the working definition as one means to counter rising antisemiti­sm. German and Austrian prosecutor­s use it for education and training purposes. Others use it to help classify and collect hate crime/ incident data.

The US State Department was a leader in employing the IHRA tool in identifyin­g antisemiti­sm overseas. It is time for us to catch up with our European allies by advocating that Congress, state legislatur­es and local government­s, including judicial and law enforcemen­t institutio­ns, also adopt the IHRA working definition as a domestic, educationa­l tool. Judicious use of the IHRA working definition of antisemiti­sm is an essential means for pushing back against one form of today’s virulent, antisemiti­sm

The writer is the former US special envoy for monitoring and combating antisemiti­sm. He is currently the visiting professor of contempora­ry antisemiti­sm at Georgetown University and senior fellow at Georgetown’s Center for Jewish Civilizati­on. He also serves as senior adviser for combating antisemiti­sm at Human Rights First and as a senior fellow at the Moment Institute.

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