The Jewish Chronicle

Vote in our mortal interest

- Jonathan Freedland

ITrue, plenty of Outers build their case on the last war. Nigel Farage frequently invokes the 1940 notion of a free Britain standing valiantly against the totalitari­an tendencies of the continent. I can see how the supposed threat of a European superstate sends a shiver down Jewish spines especially. Recall the 1990 declaratio­n by Margaret Thatcher’s cabinet colleague, Nicholas Ridley, that, “This is all a German racket designed to take over the whole of Europe.” Plenty of Jews would have heard that and been ready to vote Out there and then. But the Brexiteers do not have the monopoly on wartime memories. You can be equally mindful of history and draw the opposite conclusion. You can note the tendency of the peoples of Europe to murder each other in the bloodiest kinds of war over several centuries — the Hundred Years War, the Thirty Years War, the FrancoPrus­sian War, two world wars in the last century — and conclude that this is what, unchecked, Europe’s nations do to each other.

And yet for the past 60 or so years, the major nations of Europe have not fought each other. Those within what is now the European Union have instead traded together, in peace and prosperity. Some might say that’s a coincidenc­e, that even without the EU, Germany and France would not possibly have taken up arms against each other. But surely the more rational view is that the existence of the EU can claim some credit for this outbreak of relative tranquilli­ty. Disputes that would once have been settled by lethal combat have instead been resolved through all-night meetings in Brussels. I know which I’d prefer.

Jews have a mortal interest in all this. War in Europe brings desperate suffering to everyone, of course, but it has inflicted a very particular pain on Jews. For all its huge flaws – and the EU is a clunky, often dysfunctio­nal entity currently tested to its very limits by migration and the strains of a single currency — the notion of cohering Europe’s nations into a single market rather than having them fighting each other to the death has been a good thing. Maybe even a life-saver.

With a dangerous, toxic populism on the rise on both sides of the Atlantic, and with an anti-immigratio­n, anti-outsider mood spreading, Jews would surely want to strengthen, not weaken, an organisati­on that demands democracy and respect for the human rights of its members — one that prefers tedious jaw-jaw to murderous war-war. For that reason, I hope — and, actually, I expect — that, come June 23, most British Jews will vote to stay in.

Tranquilli­ty in Europe is as a result of us staying inside the EU

Jonathan Freedland is a columnist for the Guardian

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