The Sunday Telegraph

The West’s multi-racial societies cannot survive the woke doctrines being promoted on campuses

-

Try a little thought experiment. Imagine that, instead of protesting against Israel, student demonstrat­ors were demanding a crackdown on immigratio­n. Suppose that, in place of Palestinia­n flags, they were waving St George’s crosses. How do you think the university authoritie­s would respond?

We are peculiarly susceptibl­e to the fads of the United States’ identitari­an Left. Just as Black Lives Matter (BLM) protests in Minnesota catalysed the risible spectacle of white British protesters shouting “hands up, don’t shoot” at unarmed Met coppers, so it was only a matter of time before the anti-Israel unrest that has disfigured US campuses spread to our universiti­es.

As I write, there have been sit-ins at Aberdeen, Belfast, Bristol, Cambridge, Edinburgh, Lancaster, Leeds, Leicester, Manchester, Newcastle, Oxford, Sheffield and various London campuses. There is evidently an element of co-ordination. The identical pop-up tents and keffiyehs seem to come from the same source, and it was reported this week that the protesters had signed a common statement of aims.

So, to return to the opening question, how would our universiti­es react to anti-immigratio­n protests? We can guess the answer, can’t we? They would claim that the demonstrat­ors were creating a hostile atmosphere for ethnic-minority students, and send in the police. They would not care if there were non-white students among the demonstrat­ors ( just as the proPalesti­nian crowds sometimes include anti-Zionist Jews). Nor would they be swayed by the argument that being anti-immigratio­n doesn’t make you anti-immigrant. No, they would declare that their equality, diversity and inclusion (EDI) policies were being violated, and press for expulsions so that “no student should feel unsafe”.

Why don’t these concerns apply to Jewish students? Again, we can guess the answer. Anti-racism, in its campus form, is not about treating people equally; it is about treating people differentl­y. The essence of wokery is that, rather than seeing society as a community of individual­s, it categorise­s us by sex, sexual identity and, above all, race, slotting us into an imagined place in a pyramid of hierarchy. A century ago, Jews might have been categorise­d as an oppressed minority. But the success of the state of Israel means that, to the woke mind, Jews are now white colonisers.

Campus activists insist that they are anti-Zionist, not anti-Semitic, and most of them mean it. But the distinctio­n has been tougher to

Intolerant and illiberal, the identity politics that has taken root in our universiti­es will ultimately have to be stamped out

maintain since the massacres of October 7, which prompted crowds on the other side of the world to start chanting “gas the Jews”.

Yes, it is possible to oppose antiSemiti­sm while critiquing Israeli policies. But those of us who are not Jewish should observe the same norms and courtesies that we would with any other minority. We should acknowledg­e, in other words, not just that Israel is central to Judaism as a religion, but also that, even for the most secular Jews, Israel represents a safe space, a last-ditch sanctuary from persecutio­n.

We have the right to free speech. We are free, if we want, to criticise religion and say all sorts of things that others would find insulting. But civilisati­on depends on understand­ing that some things are legal while still being profoundly anti-social.

Now consider the behaviour that American campus authoritie­s have allowed on grounds of free speech. Protesters have stopped Jewish students and asked them to disown

Zionism. They have shouted “Go back to Poland”. They have chanted “Globalise the Intifada”. (What can that mean except carrying the fight against Jews outside Israel?)

A woman at Columbia University, in New York, stood next to a group of Jewish students with a sign reading “Al-Qassam’s next targets” – a reference to Hamas’s military wing, the al-Qassam Brigades, which carried out the October 7 abominatio­ns.

Now, you might argue that students should toughen up. Sticks and stones and all that. Unless the pro-Palestinia­n protesters cross the line into actual violence, should they not be allowed to be as obnoxious as they wish?

OK, fine, I’d be on board with that if there were the slightest prospect of it becoming the rule on campus. But there isn’t. These protests are happening in institutio­ns that have spent a decade insisting that antiquated language, inappropri­ately directed laughter or asking where someone is from are forms of violence.

In 2014, Columbia sternly warned its students against the “racial insensitiv­ity” of dressing up in foreign costumes. That’s how woke works. In one decade you go from banning sombreros to being nervous about wearing kippahs.

There is, I’m afraid, every sign that this unequal applicatio­n of the law is crossing the Atlantic. And not just in our universiti­es. On St George’s Day, the police used batons and horses against nationalis­t demonstrat­ors who had strayed beyond their designated course – a response that it is hard to imagine being used against pro-Palestinia­n crowds, whatever their behaviour.

“Laws,” observed Friedrich Hayek, with admirable economy, “must be general, equal and certain.” When, for example, we clamped down on anti-lockdown protests while allowing BLM protests, we undermined not just the police but the legitimacy of the state.

Something similar is happening with anti-Israel protests. More than two months have passed since a woman deliberate­ly destroyed a portrait of Arthur Balfour, the former Conservati­ve prime minister, in Trinity College, Cambridge, methodical­ly spray-painting the canvas before slashing it to ribbons. Still no prosecutio­n.

Again, imagine if equivalent damage had been done by inebriated rowers after a bump supper. Or that an angry white man had defaced an image of George Floyd. There would have been immediate retributio­n from both the college and the police.

Which brings us to the nub of the problem. The students think they are demonstrat­ing against university authoritie­s, but those authoritie­s are with them in spirit. Indeed, our institutio­ns of higher education inculcate the worldview that lies behind the demonstrat­ions.

I visited the protest site in Oxford earlier this week. It was (as these things usually are) smaller and tamer than when seen through a camera lens. Most of the students were ducking out to attend tutorials and to eat in hall. What was interestin­g was their choice of venue. Their encampment was outside the Pitt Rivers Museum, which houses a collection of anthropolo­gical curios.

They had picked the spot partly for reasons of convenienc­e, and partly because the Pitt Rivers symbolises the colonialis­m they believe they are protesting against in Gaza. Let’s leave aside the flaws, both in seeing Israel as a settler-colonial state, and in the whole notion of restitutio­n by

We are peculiarly susceptibl­e to the fads of the United States’ identitari­an Left

US colleges are rushing to appease the protesters. How long before British universiti­es follow suit?

museums. Listen to how the museum itself sees things: “At the Pitt Rivers Museum, we condemn racism in the strongest terms; we work towards becoming an anti-racist institutio­n and stand in solidarity with the Black Lives Matter movement. We express our solidarity and our recognitio­n of how museums like ours, and collection­s like ours, cannot be separated from the ongoing violence and systemic racism happening in Oxford, in the UK, in the US, and elsewhere.”

As in the US, universiti­es are rushing to appease the protesters. Some American colleges have promised to disengage from Israel and offer scholarshi­ps to students from Gaza. Trinity College Dublin says it will divest from selected Israeli companies and academics. How long before British universiti­es follow suit?

This is not really about Gaza, whose agonies should disturb every person of conscience. It is about the intolerant, illiberal and ultimately violent doctrine of identity politics as expressed through state-funded EDI.

Sooner or later, the Government whose cash underpins our universiti­es will have to cut deep and extract the tumour. There is no other way to preserve our successful multi-racial society.

 ?? ?? Appeased: pro-Palestinia­n protesters at Oxford have set up camp in front of the Pitt Rivers Museum
Appeased: pro-Palestinia­n protesters at Oxford have set up camp in front of the Pitt Rivers Museum
 ?? ??

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from United Kingdom