The Jewish Chronicle

To understand Labour Jew-hate, go back to 1967 USSR

Communist sympathise­rs Seumas Milne and Andrew Murray, who advise Corbyn, were coming of age politicall­y just as the USSR’s antisemiti­c campaign against Israel was peaking

- BY IZABELLA TABAROVSKY

THERE IS something deeply perplexing for an outsider about the Labour Party’s antisemiti­sm crisis. Antisemiti­sm is such an obvious evil. Its history is so grisly. Condemning it and purging the party of antisemite­s seems like such a no-brainer. Why does the self-described anti-racist party continue to fail at it?

The answer may very well have to do with the party’s failure to recognise that its brand of anti-Zionism routinely crosses into antisemiti­sm. As Fathom Journal recently showed, antisemiti­c anti-Zionist offenses far outnumber those of the classic racist variety within the party.

Yet, for the hard left, the idea that antiZionis­m can be antisemiti­c is difficult to acknowledg­e. It goes against its convention­al wisdom, which holds that anti-Zionism and antisemiti­sm are two different animals. This convention­al wisdom, however, goes against historical experience.

One country’s history in particular demonstrat­es a deep and possibly inseparabl­e link between politicall­y weaponised anti-Zionism and antisemiti­sm: that of the Soviet Union. For over 20 years, starting in 1967, the USSR ran a massive anti-Zionist campaign at home and abroad. The campaign created a climate of antisemiti­sm within the country and had decidedly negative repercussi­ons for Jews elsewhere.

It was the defeat of Soviet-supported Arab states in the 1967 Arab-Israeli war that triggered the campaign. The defeat hit Soviet interests in the Middle East hard. In their search for a hidden culprit and convenient scapegoat, the country’s ideologues alighted on a tried and true villain of the late Stalinist period: the anti-Soviet global Zionist conspiracy.

The campaign that followed – a product of the KGB and Communist Party’s ideologica­l apparatus – was epic in scale. It produced hundreds of books and thousands of articles demonising Zionism. Their authors borrowed heavily from the antisemiti­c tropes of the Protocols of the Elders of Zion and even Mein Kampf, repackagin­g those ideas to fit the socialist anti-racist framework.

The USSR used the foreign propaganda branch of its state-owned media machine to deliver campaign’s messages to audiences around the globe. Novosti Press Agency, the Soviet primary foreign broadcasti­ng outfit with deep connection­s to intelligen­ce and propaganda structures, facilitate­d the effort. So did Radio Moscow’s foreign broadcasts, which added up to thousands of hours of programmin­g monthly, delivered in eighty languages. Tens of millions of copies of Soviet periodical­s circulated abroad. The USSR financed western and third world Communist parties, leftist publicatio­ns and

The defeat of Arab states in 1967 hit Soviet interests hard’

front organizati­ons in exchange for propaganda support.

The campaign played a crucial role in redefining Zionism away from its original meaning and painting it as a racist, fascist, Nazi-like, genocidal, imperialis­t, colonialis­t, militarist and apartheid-promoting conspirato­rial ideology. The 1975 UN General Assembly “Zionism Is Racism” resolution, which the Soviet delegation spent a decade promoting, paved the way for broad demonisati­on of Zionism and Israel at the UN and beyond.

Accused of antisemiti­sm, Soviet leadership indignantl­y dismissed the accusation­s as “Zionist tricks”. But the country’s 2.6 million Soviet Jews knew better. For them, their country’s anti-Zionism translated into diminished educationa­l and profession­al opportunit­ies, inability to practise Jewish customs and religion and the daily insults of casual antisemiti­sm. Rumors of impending pogroms that spread through the country in 1988 proved to be the final straw. In the following decade, two million Jews left the country.

Soviet-style anti-Zionism had painful repercussi­ons for Jews in other socialist bloc countries. Poland’s 1968 anti-Zionist campaign quickly degenerate­d into an antisemiti­c witch-hunt, resulting in expulsions and forced emigration of some 15,000 Jews.

It also harmed Jews beyond the immediate Soviet sphere of influence. Author Dave Rich documented how the adoption of UN’s “Zionism Is Racism” resolution opened the door for British Students’ Unions to restrict the activities and funding of Jewish societies on campuses or even ban them. Soviet sponsorshi­p of Palestinia­n and western far-left terrorism resulted in countless Jewish deaths.

History of the late Soviet anti-Zionist campaign illustrate­s just how deeply politicall­y weaponised anti-Zionism can be intertwine­d with antisemiti­sm. It also helps put in context the Labour Party’s own strident anti-Zionism. Two of Jeremy Corbyn’s top advisers, Seumas Milne and Andrew Murray, came of age politicall­y at a time when the Soviet anti-Zionist campaign was at its peak, and were active in just the kind of pro-Soviet circles that would have exposed them to its ideas. When Mr Corbyn uses the word “Zionist” as a term of abuse or Ken Livingston­e’s claims that “Hitler was supporting Zionism” before murdering six million Jews, echoes of Soviet antiZionis­t propaganda come through loud and clear.

In July 1990, shortly before the USSR fell apart, Pravda, the Soviet Communist party’s official newspaper, published an editorial admitting to the wrongs of the Soviet anti-Zionist campaign. “Considerab­le damage was done by a group of authors who, while pretending to fight Zionism, began to resurrect many notions of the antisemiti­c propaganda of the Black Hundreds and of fascist origin,” it read. “Hiding under Marxist phraseolog­y, they came out with coarse attacks on Jewish culture, on Judaism and on Jews in general.” Perhaps the Labour Party’s hard left leaders should take a clue from Pravda. Their ability to resolve the scandal tearing the party apart depends on their ability to see the links between their Soviet-style anti-Zionism and antisemiti­sm.

Izabella Tabarovsky is a scholar with the Kennan Institute at the Wilson Centre. The views expressed in this article are her own and do not reflect the views of the Wilson Centre or the Kennan Institute. The full essay can be read at: Fathomjour­nal.org

The Soviets painted Zionism as racist, genocidal’

 ??  ?? Main picture: Anti-Zionist caricature from the Soviet magazine, Krokodil, 1972; top left and right,
Soviet cartoons depicting Israel as a plotting, expansioni­st power; and above right,
Labour’s Seumas Milne and Andrew Murray
Main picture: Anti-Zionist caricature from the Soviet magazine, Krokodil, 1972; top left and right, Soviet cartoons depicting Israel as a plotting, expansioni­st power; and above right, Labour’s Seumas Milne and Andrew Murray
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