The Jewish Chronicle

‘Diaspora has abandoned its conscience’

- BY DANIEL SUGARMAN

SIR MICK Davis has accused diaspora Jews of abandoning their conscience over their response to the clashes on the Gaza border a week ago.

The former Jewish Leadership Council chairman and current Conservati­ve Party chief executive wrote: “Has it become taboo among Israel’s friends to ask what this stagnant situation, and what the absence of even a language of peace, let alone a vision of it, is doing to our own morality and the moral wellbeing of our youth?

“What will we become if we are constantly asking Israel’s advocates to adopt positions so far removed from the reality the world can see?”

Tens of thousands of Palestinia­ns protested at the Gaza border on Monday last week, with large numbers attempting to breach the fence and enter Israel.

Having previously distribute­d leaflets by air warning Gazans not to attempt to charge at the border, a total of 62 Palestinia­ns were shot and killed, with thousands more wounded.

A Hamas spokespers­on told an Arabic TV channel that 50 of those killed had been Hamas members. The Islamic Jihad group claimed three more.

Sir Mick acknowledg­ed in his piece, published by Haaretz, that “it is true that the people of Gaza are held hostage by a brutal Hamas terrorist regime, indulged by internatio­nal institutio­ns such as UNWRA.

“It is also the case that Hamas has itself subsequent­ly claimed its members comprised a majority of those killed.”

But he went on to say: “Israel and the internatio­nal community have shown sheer complacenc­y in thinking that

What of empathy for the innocents among the dead?’

the situation can be allowed to fester without any consequenc­es.

“Israel must defend its border, and it is doubtless the case that Hamas seeks to exploit popular protest as cover to mount attacks on Israeli communitie­s.

“But is live fire the only way to prevent that?

“And what of empathy for the innocents among the dead? Has that become a taboo?”

In 2010, Sir Mick sparked controvers­y among the British Jewish community with comments about Israel, saying: “If… the world community no longer believes that a two-state solution is possible, we de facto become an apartheid state because we then have the majority who are going to be governed by the minority.”

He also said he did not think Israel as it was today was an apartheid state.

He also said at the time that he thought “the government of Israel… have to recognise that their actions directly impact on me as a Jew living in London.

“When they do good things it is good for me, when they do bad things, it’s bad for me.

“And the impact on me is as significan­t as it is on Jews living in Israel… I want them to recognise that.”

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