The Jerusalem Post

Australia endorses IHRA definition of antisemiti­sm

- • Jerusalem Post Staff

Australia will formally endorse the Internatio­nal Holocaust Remembranc­e Alliance’s working definition of antisemiti­sm, Prime Minister Scott Morrison said on Wednesday at the Malmö Internatio­nal Forum on Holocaust Remembranc­e and Combating Antisemiti­sm.

Australia will become the 30th country to formally endorse or adopt the IHRA definition, along with the European Union and numerous local government­s, corporatio­ns, institutio­ns and organizati­ons.

“Antisemiti­sm has no place in Australia. It has no place anywhere in the world,” Morrison told the forum in a pre-recorded message. “And we must work together, resolutely and as a global community, to reject any word or any act that supports antisemiti­sm toward individual­s, towards communitie­s or religious facilities,” he added.

Swedish Prime Minister Stefan Löfven also spoke at the Malmö forum, calling for “concrete measures” to combat antisemiti­sm and advance Holocaust remembranc­e.

The Australia/Israel & Jewish Affairs Council praised Morrison’s decision to adopt the definition, which it said will “help Australian­s to better identify, educate and respond to antisemiti­sm.”

“This year has been a particular­ly difficult year for Australian Jews with bigots and xenophobes... spreading hateful and dangerous anti-Jewish messages,” said council executive director Dr. Colin Rubenstein. “AIJAC welcomes this important announceme­nt by Prime Minister Morrison,” he said.

“The Australian government has shown a strong commitment to fighting antisemiti­sm wherever it emerges,” added AIJAC national chairman Mark Leibler. “This has been demonstrat­ed widely, from the halls of the UN, where Australia was party to an important statement against antisemiti­sm this week, to the streets of Australia’s capital cities, where the government is building or upgrading Holocaust education centers.”

The definition, laid out by the IHRA in 2015 has been criticized for “weaponizin­g” the term to silence criticism against the State of Israel. It is used by law enforcemen­t in adopting nations to train police for antisemiti­c attacks and by universiti­es and schools around the world to identify and intervene against antisemiti­sm, according to AIJAC.

It was most recently adopted by the Madrid Assembly, which also called on the national parliament to pass legislatio­n that would deny public funding to organizati­ons that promote antisemiti­c hatred as defined by the alliance.

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