The Jewish Chronicle

Call to ban main Jewish group from national student politics

⬤ Minister holds crisis meeting on campus hate as NUS delegates vote on expelling Jewish student union

- BY DAVID ROSE POLITICS AND INVESTIGAT­IONS EDITOR

▶ DELEGATES AT a National Union of Students (NUS) conference voted by a huge majority to stop recognisin­g their Jewish members’ main representa­tive body because of its support for Israel, the JC can reveal.

The non-binding vote against the continued affiliatio­n of the Union of Jewish Students (UJS) was carried overwhelmi­ngly at the NUS conference in Blackpool last month during a session that began with calls to “dismantle” the Jewish state as a “racist project of colonialis­m”.

Lord Mann, the government adviser on antisemiti­sm, said he was appalled by the move and promised it would not succeed.

“In the 1980s extremists started banning Jewish societies. We beat them. And today we will beat the extremists again. UJS will stand strong and proud and we will stand with UJS,” he said.

Fears that anti-Israel student activism in the UK has stepped up amid the US campus riots – with protest camps already set up at 15 universiti­es – have prompted Education Secretary Gillian Keegan to call an emergency meeting with vice-chancellor­s this week to discuss what can be done to better protect Jewish students and staff.

At the Oxford protest camp, participan­ts have been asked to agree that as a “colonised” people, Palestinia­ns have the “right to resist against occupation”.

They have also been told they must support the Thawabit, a set of demands issued by the Palestine Liberation Organisati­on in the 1970s that would lead to the end of the Jewish state, including a right of return for six million Palestinia­n refugees and their descendant­s. One Jewish student was reportedly refused entry to the camp when he declined.

The anti-Israel protesters have already scored a significan­t victory at Goldsmiths College in London, where the university has agreed to review investment policies and its use of the Internatio­nal Holocaust Remembranc­e Associatio­n (IHRA) definition of antisemiti­sm.

Examples of anti-Jewish racism in the IHRA definition include denying Israel’s right to exist and comparing the state to Nazi Germany.

Goldsmiths has said it will introduce scholarshi­ps for Palestinia­n students and rename a room after Shireen abu Akleh, the Al Jazeera reporter shot while covering violent clashes in the West Bank.

At the NUS conference last month,

swastika graffiti was discovered at the venue along with several examples of the slogan “f*** Zios”.

The NUS, which announced an official “antisemiti­sm action plan” only last year, apologised for the vote against the UJS, saying it had had only been an attempt to “take the temperatur­e” and was non-binding.

Last week, protest camps at universiti­es in the US were broken up by police amid violent scenes. The spread of what one supporter termed a “chain reaction” to events in America is causing intense concern in Whitehall.

More than 20 vice-chancellor­s and a UJS representa­tive were set to attend the summit planned by the education secretary at 10 Downing St. She was also due to be joined by Prime Minister Rishi Sunak – who opened Tuesday’s Cabinet meeting by saying there had been “an unacceptab­le rise in antisemiti­sm on our university campuses” and that the vice chancellor­s would be told they must keep them “safe for our Jewish students”.

Keegan told the JC: “Antisemiti­c abuse and intimidati­on must not be tolerated on university campuses, and we will not stand by as Jewish students suffer. Freedom of speech and expression is vital to our universiti­es, but it must not be used to harass and intimidate or cause significan­t disruption to students’ learning.”

Tory MP Robert Halfon, who recently stepped down as universiti­es minister, told the JC: “The NUS said they have changed, but it is same old, same old. The question is whether or not NUS is institutio­nally antisemiti­c. It is up to them to prove otherwise. The treatment of UJS will be a seminal example.”

Unreported at the time, the move to expel the UJS took place at an NUS conference session on Palestine. It began with an invasion of the stage by a group of students claiming the only way to bring peace was to “dismantle the Israeli state” founded on “ethnic cleansing”, and that Zionism was a “racist ideology” and a “colonial project”.

One of the conference organisers then asked delegates whether the UJS should continue to be the “representa­tive for Jewish students”.

Speaking on condition of anonymity, a Jewish student who was present told the JC: “The session had an incredibly hostile atmosphere, especially when delegates began to vilify the UJS. The proposal to disaffilia­te from it was backed by a vast show of hands in support, which in a room of non-Jewish students felt isolating and wrong. Students with no skin in the game had decided that their place was to speak on matters impacting Jewish students.”

The following day the NUS issued a statement of apology, saying the vote had been “outside of our guidelines and rules”, accepting that the UJS was still recognised and that “the politics and actions of UJS are a matter for Jewish students themselves to discuss in Jewish only environmen­ts”.

But UJS president Edward Isaacs pointed out that only last year, in response to a damning report by Rebecca Tuck KC on antisemiti­sm in student politics, the NUS had “committed to ensuring that Jewish students would be as welcome as any other student in their spaces”.

Yet at Blackpool, Isaacs went on, “Jewish students were faced with gross antisemiti­c rhetoric, with a swastika graffitied in the toilets, defence of Hamas in debates, and reports of Holocaust inversion from fellow delegates. For over 100 years, UJS has proudly been the representa­tive voice of Jewish students across the UK and Ireland. It is reprehensi­ble that delegates used NUS conference as a vehicle to seek to oust UJS and delegitimi­se the voice of Jewish students.”

One delegate who spoke at the conference was University of East Anglia union sabbatical officer Serena Shibli, who shared Instagram posts celebratin­g the Hamas massacre on the day it occurred. One hoped it would lead to “victory to Palestine, from the River to the Sea” and that the IDF would be “sent packing”. Shibli was approached for comment. The JC has also seen comments posted in an NUS WhatsApp group during the conference. In one, a delegate claimed Zionism had nothing to do with Judaism because Moses had not heard of it. In another, the swastika found inked on a conference toilet seat was defended as an ancient Hindu symbol.

Other university camps have also featured extreme, anti-Zionist rhetoric. At Newcastle, a protester made a speech that decried the labelling of Palestinia­n “freedom fighters” as terrorists and called for support of the Houthis’ terrorist attacks on shipping, while others were shown on social media with placards glorifying the aircraft hijacker Leila Khaled and demanding an “intifada until victory”.

At Liverpool, protesters demanded an end to the university’s involvemen­t with the “Zionist entity” – a phrase often used by Hamas. At University

This may be a ‘chain reaction’ to the campus riots in the US

College London, where protesters were joined by Ghassan abu Sittah, the Palestinia­n doctor shown by the JC to have venerated terrorists, they chanted “resistance is justified when people are occupied”, and “hey ho Zionism’s got to go”.

In Manchester, the campers’ chant was “from Manchester to Gaza, globalise the intifada,” and at Sheffield, “say it loud and clear, we don’t want no Zionists here”. At several universiti­es, campers are demanding an end to the use of the IHRA.

Isaacs told the JC that UJS was concerned by the “increasing­ly hateful language” emanating from the camps: “As Jewish students begin their exams, their peers begin the term with calls to ‘globalise the Intifada’, to support the Houthis in Yemen, and to not ‘engage with Zionists’.

“Universiti­es must be places where Jewish students can be as welcome as any other student. There must be swift and decisive action from universiti­es. We welcome the vice-chancellor roundtable at 10 Downing Street this week and we hope action will follow.”

An NUS spokespers­on said the union remained committed to implementi­ng the “antisemiti­sm action plan” it instigated after the Tuck report, saying some delegates who behaved unacceptab­ly at the Blackpool conference were removed, while others were facing disciplina­ry action through the NUS Code of Conduct Process.

In a separate developmen­t, it emerged on Tuesday that former NUS president Shaima Dallali, who was forced to step down in 2022 amid allegation­s of antisemiti­c comments, had accepted accepted tens of thousands of pounds as part of the settlement of her employment tribunal case against the union.

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 ?? ?? Keffiyeh tribe: An anti-Israel protester outside UCL
Keffiyeh tribe: An anti-Israel protester outside UCL
 ?? PHOTOS: GETTY IMAGES, ALAMY ??
PHOTOS: GETTY IMAGES, ALAMY
 ?? ?? Campus rage: Students rally outside the Department for Education and (right) the Cambridge encampment
Campus rage: Students rally outside the Department for Education and (right) the Cambridge encampment

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