The Jewish Chronicle

CST’s report explains how we got here

- BY MARK GARDNER is generally less newsworthy than our annual

CST’S ANNUAL Antisemiti­c Discourse Report

Antisemiti­c Incidents Report, but it is no less important, as shown by the headline point stating, “Antisemiti­sm played an unpreceden­ted public role in British public life”.

The Incidents Report explains the statistics of anti-Jewish hate crimes, but the Discourse Report describes the atmosphere around Jews, antisemiti­sm and related issues. It shows, in a considered way, developmen­ts in politics, media and other public contexts. It also gives the welcome opportunit­y to show where people have spoken and acted against antisemiti­sm.

This is the last report we issue each year, but the report for 2018 was delayed by the election. Charity law meant we could not criticise Labour: a somewhat tricky requiremen­t in a report studying antisemiti­c discourse in 2018. So, it only came out days before the end of 2019.

It is, neverthele­ss, well worth visiting CST’s website and reading the report. It is the discourse reports, not the incidents reports, that explain how we got to the bizarre situation of December 2019, where the organiser of a far Left protest outside South Hampstead synagogue warned against “Zionist journalist­s” to a crowd including anti-Israel boycotters, and some whom Labour had expelled or discipline­d for antisemiti­sm. The protest was not against the synagogue, nor even against Israel or Zionism. In fact, it was against antisemiti­sm, prompted by the daubing of antisemiti­c graffiti featuring a Star of David, “9” and “11”.

Normally, antisemiti­c graffiti is associated with the far Right. Here, however, we cannot jump to that conclusion.

The numbers 9 and 11 most likely accuse Jews of the 11th September 2001 terror attacks. This is the modern conspiracy allegation par excellence. It is worryingly common in Muslim societies, is central to conspiracy cranks everywhere and has accordingl­y infiltrate­d far Left and anti-Israel circles.

Then there are the questions about left wing protestors against antisemiti­sm, most of whom will be very anti-Zionist, some of whom have even been discipline­d by Labour for antisemiti­sm. Where to begin with this? By asking how can the left even be antisemiti­c? By asking how the Labour Party can stand accused of antisemiti­sm, whilst still disciplini­ng some members for antisemiti­sm?

This is where we hope that the discourse report can provide an especially useful guide to the perplexed. Each year it begins with explanatio­ns for what we mean by antisemiti­sm and how that relates to anti-Zionism. It has the space to explain this in depth, showing how accusation­s that comprised older forms of Jew-hatred repeat, echo and update within much of what we now call “anti-Zionism”.

Then, we get into the specifics of 2018. Inevitably, Labour has the lead role. This was the year, remember, in which many of Jeremy Corbyn’s own associatio­ns with antisemiti­sm became fully public knowledge. For example, his failure regarding the now infamous mural in Brick Lane showing Jewish bankers. This is the graphic on the cover of the report, because its content and reactions to it, say so much about the overall Labour problem. .

The report covers far more than Labour. The Conservati­ve Party, the SNP and Leave EU all feature. It covers George Soros, antisemiti­sm in football, on campus and social media; and how Mitzvah Day’s Jewish-Muslim chicken soup challenge faced condemnati­on as “Zionists doing soft infiltrati­on”.

Consider again the report’s opening, “Antisemiti­sm played an unpreceden­ted public role in British public life”. Sadly, we will likely open the 2019 report the same way. The impact of all this attention on antisemiti­sm has deeply impacted the morale of British Jews. It helps explain the strong revulsion at the Hampstead graffiti attack. When the 2020 report comes around, let us all hope that it can begin by honestly saying that antisemiti­sm diminished in public life.

CST’s 2018 Antisemiti­c Discourse Report can be read at the publicatio­ns section of the CST website https://cst.org.uk

 ?? PHOTOS: BBC, CST ?? Gravestone­s daubed with graffiti
PHOTOS: BBC, CST Gravestone­s daubed with graffiti
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