The Jerusalem Post

Adopt IHRA

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The US and the UN are about to unveil much-anticipate­d plans to combat antisemiti­sm. We have distinctly more confidence in America’s commitment to combating antisemiti­sm than we do in the UN’s – given that the latter is positively infected with Jew-hatred, which courses through its various bodies and manifests itself in countless areas of the organizati­on’s work – we applaud both efforts in principle. Neverthele­ss, fighting hatred of Jews, and of any group, is always a worthy endeavor.

The two plans are likely to differ in any number of ways, but they already have something notable in common: they are both at the center of fervent debates over the applicabil­ity of the Internatio­nal Holocaust Remembranc­e Alliance’s working definition of antisemiti­sm.

The IHRA definition is the gold standard when it comes to defining contempora­ry Jew-hatred. Drafted by experts on antisemiti­sm in concert with Jewish communitie­s, it has been adopted by more than 40 government­s and multilater­al organizati­ons, including the EU and the Organizati­on of American States. It is being utilized by local government­s, universiti­es, businesses and communitie­s around the world in their efforts to combat antisemiti­sm. There is no definition that comes close to its broad adoption by those committed to this fight.

Opponents of the IHRA definition charge that it seeks to stifle criticism of Israeli policy, utilizing the cloak of antisemiti­sm to shield the Jewish state from condemnati­on.

That is untrue.

At issue are 11 examples of antisemiti­sm that accompany the definition and are viewed as an integral part thereof. Several of the examples pertain to Israel, including “denying the Jewish people their right to self-determinat­ion” and “drawing comparison­s of contempora­ry Israeli policy to that of the Nazis.” It is these examples that are used by opponents who claim that the entire definition exists solely to conflate criticism of Israel with hatred of Jews and should thus be discarded.

But the definition itself addresses this very issue: “Criticism of Israel similar to that leveled against any other country cannot be regarded as antisemiti­c,” it says explicitly.

If this is so, then the definition can only apply to criticism of Israel that is dissimilar to that leveled against any other country. The examples seek to delineate what those might be.

Denying the Jewish people their right to self-determinat­ion – the basic principle of anti-Zionism – is manifestly antisemiti­c. To argue that only the Jewish people do not have a right accorded all the other nations is to discrimina­te against them. That is the textbook definition of antisemiti­sm.

But don’t take our word for it: recent polls indicate that overwhelmi­ng majorities of both Jews and non-Jews in the US believe rejecting Israel’s right to exist – and, by extension, denying the Jewish people their right to self-determinat­ion – is a form of antisemiti­sm.

Opponents of the IHRA definition seek to limit what is considered antisemiti­c in order to exclude views regarded by the overwhelmi­ng majority of Jews – and non-Jews – as antisemiti­c. That should tell policymake­rs everything they need to know about the opponents’ motives. Contempora­ry antisemiti­sm comes in many forms.

While far-right antisemiti­sm – of the sort represente­d by white supremacis­ts opening fire in suburban synagogues and bellowing “Jews will not replace us” on college campuses – remains of grave concern, we must not ignore the antisemiti­sm of the hard left.

The exclusion of Jews from progressiv­e spaces due to their attachment to the Jewish homeland, graffiti reading “Free Palestine” daubed on the walls of Jewish institutio­ns and calls to “globalize the intifada” in city streets are all expression­s of a form of antisemiti­sm that targets Israel as the Jewish state and threatens Jews for their identifica­tion therewith. Any effort to combat antisemiti­sm that fails to take this modern manifestat­ion of Jew hatred into account cannot be taken seriously.

Both the US administra­tion and the UN secretaria­t are coming under heavy pressure to reject or minimize the IHRA definition in their upcoming action plans. If they are serious about combating antisemiti­sm, they should stand firm against that pressure, which seeks only to muddy the waters, confuse the conversati­on about contempora­ry Jew-hatred and stymie efforts to fight it.

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