The IHRA, the Pretext for this racism has nothing to
do with opposing anti-Semitism and everything to do with Undermining Solidarity with Palestinians
In what must count as one of the most
shameful and racist decisions of a ‘Labour’ Council, Tower Hamlets refused last weekend to
host the Big Ride for Palestine.
The reasons that Council officials gave
were that raising money to fund sporting equipment for Palestinian children had
“political connotations” and that the
closing rally of this year’s bike ride could not go ahead in the borough “without problems”.
One wonders whether raising money for
Israeli Jewish children would also have had political
connotations. The stench of hypocrisy is overbearing.
Officials told organisers there was a risk
speakers might express views which contradicted the council’s policies on
community cohesion and equality. Fancy that.
You would never guess that we live in a democracy.
This is what free speech under a New
Labour Council is about. I guess we should be grateful. If this were Israel we
could be locked up without trial – it’s called administrative
detention.
What kind of Orwellian world do we
live in when supporting children in the world’s largest open prison, Gaza,
might be thought to promote inequality? How could this possibly affect ‘community
cohesion’ – unless they are saying Jewish residents would be upset by
supporting Palestinian children?
The real reason for banning The Big
Ride was that supporting the event might breach the International
Holocaust Remembrance Alliance’s (IHRA) working definition of antisemitism
because of references on the Big Ride’s website to apartheid and ethnic
cleansing.
In other words calling Israel what it
is – an apartheid state and referring to ethnic cleansing is considered to be ‘anti-Semitic’.
What this really means is that telling the truth is now anti-Jewish! The IHRA is effectively saying that Jews are racist, because if you are anti-racist you are anti-Jewish.
There is no doubt that Israel is a
racist and apartheid state. It is a state
where the Chief Rabbi of Safed, a government employee, backed up by dozens of
other rabbis, issued an edict
forbidding Jews to rent homes to Arabs.
It is a state where hundreds of
demonstrators come onto the streets in Afula to protest
the sale of a house to an Arab. It is a state where hundreds of Jewish communities
are legally entitled, under the 2011 Admissions Committee Law
to bar Arabs from their communities.
It is a state where education is
segregated and according to the 2006 Israeli Democracy Institute Survey, 62% of
Israelis wanted the government to encourage local Arabs to leave the
country and 75% of Jews
didn’t approve of sharing apartments with Arabs.
It is a state where not one single
Arab village or town has been created since 1948, whereas hundreds of Jewish communities
have been created.
As for ethnic cleansing it is the
official policy of the Israeli government, of whatever political hue, to
increase the number of Israeli Jews and reduce the size of the Arab population.
That is why no Palestinian refugees are allowed to return whereas any Jew is
allowed to ‘return’ regardless of whether they have been there before.
It is a state where the Ministry of
Education can ban
a book, Borderlife, about a
relationship between Jewish and Arab teenagers because it gives the wrong message.
intimate relations between Jews and non
Jews, and certainly the option of formalising them through marriage and having
a family... is perceived by large segments of society as a threat to a separate
identity
According
to Dalia Fenig a senior education official:
“Young people of adolescent age
tend to romanticizing and don’t, in many cases, have the systemic vision that
includes considerations involving maintaining the identity of the people and
the significance of assimilation.”
In other words teenagers might not
yet have had time to assimilate the racist ideology behind a ‘Jewish’ state
which says that mixed relationships between Jew and Arab are forbidden.
As for ethnic cleansing where would
one start? The demolition
of 100 Palestinian homes in July in Sur Baher, Jerusalem might be a start.
Of course the IHRA doesn’t actually
say that calling Israel an Apartheid state or a state that practices ethnic
cleansing is anti-Semitic. It doesn’t
have to. It is vague enough so that officials will interpret it cautiously
excluding anything controversial that might cause ‘problems’ later. That is how
bureaucracies operate.
Seven of its eleven illustrations of ‘anti-Semitism’
relate to Israel. The preamble to the 11 illustrations states that:
Contemporary examples of antisemitism... could,
taking into account the overall context, include...
But of course Council officials and
politicians don’t do context. They apply the definition as if the examples are
inflexible and straightforward.
The
IHRA definition has been subject to excoriating criticism by a host of
academics and legal scholars such
as Geoffrey
Robertson QC, who described it as ‘not fit for purpose’. Hugh
Tomlinson QC described the IHRA as ‘chilling’ free speech
and the Jewish former Court of Appeal Judge Sir
Stephen Sedley was similarly critical. Even David Feldman, Director of the Zionist Pears
Institute for the Study of Anti-Semitism described
the IHRA as ‘bewilderingly imprecise’. Even the person who drafted it, Kenneth Stern attacked
the misuse of the IHRA saying:
The definition was not drafted, and was never intended, as a tool
to target or chill speech on a college campus.
No amount of reasoned argument or logic can
withstand the unanimity of bourgeois support for Zionism.
The IHRA is a necessary defence of British
foreign policy support for Israel.
Last week even Dr Geoffrey Alderman, a maverick
right-wing Zionist academic and former Jewish Chronicle columnist, slated
the IHRA definition. Like Geoffrey Robertson he described the IHRA as not fit
for purpose. The IHRA’s 11 examples ‘embed numerous internal contradictions.’
Yet despite all of this criticism the
IHRA continues on its way because it is important to dress up support for the
West’s armed guard dog in the Middle East in rosy and comfortable colours.
The actions of Tower Hamlets Council are
of course outrageous. Tower Hamlets is a heavily Bengali and Muslim area. The
idea that supporting the Palestinians is anti-Semitic is not likely to gain
much support in the area and it should be used to remove this politically
corrupt and racist New Labour council which owes its existence to the undemocratic
removal of the previous independent left administration of Lofthur Rahman, by
a combination of the High Court and Tory right-winger Eric Pickles.
But above all it is incumbent on the
trade unions, which were responsible for the Labour Party adopting the IHRA to
now recognise that their existing policies on supporting BDS and the Palestinians
are incompatible with support for the IHRA.
My own branch Unite SE/6246 has sent
an open letter to Len McLuskey calling for UNITE to reverse its support for the
IHRA. Activists in UNISON and other trade unions should be doing the same. Our
message should be simple – support the Palestinians or support Israeli Apartheid
and Zionism.
On October 12th Palestine Solidarity
Campaign will be holding a trade union conference. They have so far ensured
that the IHRA is kept off the agenda as the Socialist Action leadership of PSC
is anxious not to come into conflict with the trade union leaders. It provides
an ideal opportunity for us to raise the issue nonetheless.
Our message must be that the IHRA
must go. It has nothing to do with
fighting anti-Semitism and everything to do with supporting racism and
apartheid in Israel.
Tony Greenstein
No comments:
Post a Comment
Please submit your comments below