The Jewish Chronicle

A wasted summer — we should have been putting the heat on the Tories

- BY JOAN RYAN

THE LABOUR party should have spent this summer highlighti­ng the government’s failings. Instead, the past four weeks have been dominated by stories about our leader attending ceremonies at the graves of those behind Munich massacre, presiding over Holocaust Memorial Day meetings where Israel was compared to Nazi Germany, and casting doubt on the guilt of Hamas terrorists.

Consider the past week’s revelation­s alone. Jeremy Corbyn was photograph­ed next to the leader of the PFLP, a month before they claimed responsibi­lity for the 2014 axe murder of seven rabbis in a Jerusalem synagogue.

He spoke at a conference in Doha in 2012 alongside Hamas terrorists and called their speeches “fascinatin­g and electrifyi­ng”. And he enjoyed a takeaway dinner in 2010 with Hamas leader Khaled Mashal, who is on Britain’s terror sanctions list.

But the issue here is not wasted opportunit­ies. It is the moral crisis which the Labour party now faces. I am shocked by the revelation­s of the past month, ashamed of my party’s response, and appalled at Jeremy Corbyn’s unwillingn­ess to confront his own part in it. Jeremy Corbyn claims his only interest is in peace and that he will talk to anyone who wishes to bring that about. But I am afraid this assertion is undermined by his repeated failure to engage with Israelis.

Since becoming Labour leader he has repeatedly refused to accept invitation­s to travel to Israel, even to visit Yad Vashem. Over many years, he has, instead, met repeatedly with those who seek Israel’s destructio­n and who have the blood of hundreds of its citizens on their hands. He has lent them the respectabi­lity of meeting a member of the British parliament. They have given nothing in return. This is not at all how peace is achieved. His behaviour – and his incomprehe­nsible unwillingn­ess to, for instance, apologise to the widows whose husbands were murdered at Munich for his actions – has done nothing to persuade Israelis that, as Prime Minister, he could play a part in a peace process.

In many respects, the place where Labour now finds itself is the inevitable result of its failure to heed the warnings issued by the JC in the summer of 2015 about Jeremy Corbyn’s past associatio­ns with “Holocaust deniers, terrorists and some outright anti-Semites”. The party has had multiple opportunit­ies since to tackle antisemiti­sm. But it has missed every one: from the Chakrabart­i report of 2016 to the terrible decision not to adopt IHRA in full last month.

Even after all that has happened over the past four weeks, the leadership appears to be desperatel­y trying to wriggle out of accepting IHRA.

Instead, it seems determined to protect the rights of those who wish to call the Jewish people’s right to selfdeterm­ination a “racist endeavour”.

That some have decided to put this right over the express wishes of Britain’s Jews is beyond arrogant and insensitiv­e. IHRA needs no additions, deletions or qualificat­ions. Nor should we pretend that even full acceptance of IHRA ends Labour’s battle against antisemiti­sm. In recent days, we have seen outrageous attacks by Len McCluskey on the communal leadership and a totally dismissive attitude towards Jews’ legitimate concerns.

You do not assuage anxieties by abusing those who have raised them but by listening, empathisin­g and responding. We have also seen John McDonnell attempting to impugn the motives of Labour MPs who have fought hard over the past three years to do just that. None of this gives me any confidence that Labour’s leadership understand­s or is prepared to commence the huge task of erasing the shame which has befallen our party.

You do not assuage concerns by abusing those who have raised them’

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