The Jewish Chronicle

A prejudice unlike any other

- Melanie Phillips Jewish Chronicle. Guardian, Melanie Phillips is a Times columnist

IT’S BEEN an average kind of week for Jews in Britain. Here are a few recent items which you may have read in the A speaker at London’s School of Oriental and African Studies claimed that Zionists were mobilising subversive power to “outlaw” criticism of their activities, “Zionism was a parallel movement to Nazism” and Zionists “conspired to try and increase antisemiti­sm in order to force Jews to Palestine”.

Sheffield Hallam University in South Yorkshire was ordered to compensate a disabled Jewish student for failing to address his complaints about rampant Jew-hatred and Israel-bashing on campus.

He had complained about social media posts written by Sheffield’s Palestine Society which included the blood libel that Israel harvests the organs of Palestinia­ns, compared Bethlehem to the Warsaw Ghetto and referred to Zionists as Nazi criminals.

A Facebook group for UK Independen­ce Party supporters suggested there was a Jewish conspiracy behind last week’s High Court ruling against the Government over leaving the EU.

This all followed the gross disorder at University College London, when visiting Israeli speaker Hen Mazzig and his terrified student audience had to be rushed out of the building by police to escape a frenzied mob of Israel and Jew-bashers.

And that in turn followed the House of Lords meeting where audience members were applauded for blaming the Jews for the Holocaust and comparing Israel to Islamic State.

In the past six months, there have been three inquiries into antisemiti­sm in Britain. All have been inadequate or worse.

The first by Baroness Royall, kept secret by the Labour party, was limited to antisemiti­sm at Oxford University Labour Club.

The second by Baroness Chakrabart­i was a deeply compromise­d whitewash, which relativise­d antisemiti­sm by lumping it in with other forms of racism and then trivialise­d it with bromides about a few “unhappy incidents”.

The third by the Home Affairs Select Committee was better because it was sharper and more detailed, acknowledg­ing the gravity of the bigotry being expressed and accusing Labour of creating a “safe space for those with vile attitudes towards the Jewish people”. Yet it was still flawed. It sidesteppe­d the issue of Muslim antisemiti­sm, which Muslims have told the Community Security Trust is “now the default position among Muslim youth in Britain”.

It failed to acknowledg­e that antisemiti­sm has been endemic on the left for years. It didn’t look at how it has infected the media and the universiti­es. It missed all this because of its most glaring omission of all: the symbiotic connection between antisemiti­sm and hatred of Israel.

People on the left are shocked by Labour antisemiti­sm. They cry: how can this have happened? The left is anti-racist and antifascis­t; antisemiti­sm is a creation of the far right. So it’s utterly baffling, no?

No. Modern antisemiti­sm is a creation of the left because it is inextricab­ly connected to the left’s default position: its animus against Israel and its belief in Palestinia­nism as the progressiv­e cause of causes.

This connection, however, is routinely denied. While the left condemns Jewbashing on ethnic grounds as beyond the pale, Israel-bashing is seen as a legitimate political position.

This suggests a failure to understand what antisemiti­sm actually is. People think it is just a prejudice like any other, although with rather worse results in the past.

Not so. In the Howard Jacobson noted the unique nature of Jew-hatred through the ages and its link to Israelbash­ing. “We need to talk about Zion”, he cautioned. Too true; but as he observed, if Jews complain about Israel-bashing they are accused of trying to stifle legitimate criticism of Israel.

Israel-bashing based entirely on falsehoods, distortion­s and libels is not legitimate criticism.

Jew-hatred is not a prejudice like any other. No other people or group is singled out as a demonic conspiracy, a malevolent force of quasi-supernatur­al powers. And this same derangemen­t is directed against Israel.

This cannot be admitted because of the deep antipathy against treating the Jewish people as special. Resentment over the idea that the Jews were “chosen” for supposedly preferenti­al treatment is matched by resentment that they appear to be “chosen” for a special kind of hatred.

Modern society is, after all, an equal opportunit­y hater; the mantra of equality demands nothing else. Jews just aren’t allowed to be different. Yet that’s the essence of the hatred against us; and it’s the reason why that hatred is denied, too.

Modern society is an equal opportunit­y hater

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