At a cross-party panel, UK lawmakers leave their tea and scones and
discuss grave implications of a new report on the oldest hatred
BY JENNI FRAZER February 10, 2015, For the Times of Israel
In the Gothic splendour of Archbishop Justin Welby’s Lambeth Palace in central London, a sumptuous English afternoon tea is laid out – strawberry chocolate gateau, lashings of strong tea, and even tiny triangular cucumber sandwiches.
But the great and the good gathered at Lambeth Palace this week were wearing the expressions
of men and women in shock – shock that in 2015 they were still dealing with the manifestations of
the oldest hatred, anti-Semitism.
In a world where too often Jews feel left to their own devices to deal with anti-Semitism, the 2015
All Party Parliamentary Report on Antisemitism comes as a welcome breath of fresh air. It was
commissioned by a non-Jewish parliamentarian, John Mann, the Labour MP for Bassetlaw — a
constituency where it is unlikely that there are many Jews.
The cross-party panel – including members both of the House of Commons and the House of
Lords – had only one Jewish parliamentarian, the Labour peer, Lord Mendelsohn. It was the
second such report commissioned by Mann, the first being in 2006.
One of the best-known names on the panel is that of the Democratic Unionist MP for North
Antrim, Ian Paisley. Son of the rabble-rousing Northern Irish minister of the same name who died
last year, Paisley Jr told The Times of Israel that he had wanted to work on the panel because he
has a particular interest in Israel and anti-Semitic attacks.
“Our synagogue in Belfast was attacked and there has even been a boycott of Israeli goods by
IRA [Irish Republican Army] supporters. I felt I had to speak out and say something,” said Paisley.
He reserves his strongest contempt for other parliamentarians who have used violence in Israel to make
comments which can be construed both as inflammatory and – occasionally – anti-Semitic.
“If I had said those things in my country [Northern Ireland] I would have been called a bigot. I don’t believe we can just shrug our shoulders and say, ‘Oh, anti-Semitism, just one of those things.’ It is not. And those MPs who make those remarks – yes, I think the [parliamentary] whip should be removed,” he said.
The APPG report was commissioned in July 2014 and its work was conducted between August and November last year. During its deliberations the panellists went to Amsterdam to talk to members of the Jewish community there.
As MP John Mann revealed, “We met 16- and 17-year-olds who told us they saw no future for
themselves in Holland. We were all tremendously shocked. By the next parliament [in Britain] we
need to be in a position where no British Jewish teenager sees no future for themselves in the
UK.”
The report lists 34 recommendations but two are at the top of John Mann’s list. Though the report
is not binding it has been generally welcomed by the government and Mann’s two priorities are
“increased security for Jewish communal buildings,” and so-called “Internet ASBOs” (anti-social
behaviour orders).
“Security for communal buildings is an urgent priority,” Mann told The Times of Israel. “Yes, the
government pledged to help underwrite security at Jewish schools [presently primarily funded by
parents] but there are plenty of other community buildings.”
The report declares, “Given the continuing threat of terrorism against the Jewish community, we
recommend that a government fund be established to cover both capital and revenue costs for
the security of British synagogues.”
The other headline-grabbing recommendation was the so-called “Internet ASBO” – with a view to
tightening up existing guidelines on what constitutes hate crime on social media. Those guilty of
“grossly offensive speech” on social media sites, say the panel, should be warned that they will be
prosecuted.
At least one MP, Luciana Berger, a former director of the Labour Friends of Israel, endured a
summer of abusive attacks on Twitter for being Jewish. Though one of the Twitter abusers was
jailed, Twitter itself was unable to explain to the panel why such people were able to set up
subsequent accounts and begin their campaigns anew. In the last week there have been
indications that Twitter will toughen up its procedures, something welcomed by John Mann.
MP Yvette Cooper, Shadow Foreign Secretary, warned: “Technology has changed and that
means that old forms of hatred are finding new means of expression. We need to ensure that
social media do more to more to clamp down on this kind of abuse.”
John Mann said he hoped the security and Internet recommendations to be implemented by the
summer.
Part of the APPG report is devoted to an examination of the boycott movement and its
recommendation pulls no punches.
“People have a legitimate right to protest against Israel though boycott or other peaceful means.
However, such protest becomes entirely illegitimate when constituting an attack on or intimidation
of British Jews. We have set out that cultural boycotts, implemented in the way they were in the
summer, were unacceptable. The boycott movement faces a challenge of how to put their tactics
into effect while not slipping into anti-Semitism, unlawful discrimination or assaulting valued
freedoms.”
The parliamentarians commissioned a survey to accompany the APPG Report on Anti-Semitism. It
was carried out by the polling company, Populus, between January 22 and 25 2015, sampling
1001 adults aged over 18.
The poll shows both levels of ignorance and respect for British Jews. Those sampled, for example,
believed there were around 2.7 million Jews in the UK, whereas in fact there are something like
250,000. But 62 percent of those polled thought Jews were as loyal to Britain as any other British
citizens.
More than half those surveyed – 55% – said they would be able to explain what anti-Semitism
means to someone else. Confidence in their ability increased with age, with only 37% of 18-24-
year-olds believing they could explain it, in contrast to 71% of those aged over 65.
Populus asked those sampled to assess how much of a problem anti-Semitism is in Britain today
on a scale of one to 10, where one means it is not a problem at all and 10 means it is serious.
Britons rate it at 4.66; women think it is more of a problem than men, and over-65s give it the
highest score.
Thirty-seven per cent think anti-Semitism is more of a problem than 10 years ago.
The vast majority of people (91%) had heard about the killing of four Jews in a kosher supermarket
in Paris by a gunman supporting the murderers of 12 Charlie Hebdo journalists, cartoonists and
staff. Out of those aware of the incident, 80% regard it as an example of anti-Semitism.
Conversely, only 20% had heard about the Tricycle Theatre in London refusing to host Jewish Film
Week and of the “Hitler was right” placard at the ProPalestine/Anti-Israel rally. For the former, just
over half – 52% — of those aware of the incident regard it as anti-Semitic, and for the latter a
much larger proportion — 83%
Two-fifths had heard of a soccer club owner declaring that “Jewish people chase money more
than everybody else,” with 69% who were aware of the incident considering it to be an act of antiSemitism.
Young adults, 18-24 year olds, are most likely to think it is an act of anti-Semitism. Of
those 18-24 year olds aware of the incident, 81% think it is an act of anti-Semitism.
A quarter of people have heard about the MP declaring Bradford to be an “Israel Free Zone,” and
three-fifths of those who recall the remarks (68%) regard them as anti-Semitic.2/16/2015 Manifestations of persistent anti-Semitism shock British MPs | The Times of Israel
http://www.timesofisrael.com/manifestations-of-persistent-anti-semitism-shock-british-mps/# 4/5
Anti-Semitism in the Church of England
It was a grave-faced Archbishop of Canterbury who welcomed guests to Lambeth Palace for the
report’s launch. Archbishop Justin Welby, whose grandfather was a German Jewish immigrant to
Britain, said he had read the report in shock.
“It is not just the essential right of people to live their lives unimpeded. It goes to the heart of our
belief that all men are made in the image of God,” said Welby.
Welby said the Church of England had a particular responsibility “to be accountable and to hold
others to account [on anti-Semitism]. This is something on which we will act, and I hope those
gathered here will do the same with passion and commitment.”
Some observers took the Archbishop’s remarks to refer to a stinging rebuke given to the vicar of
Virginia Water, in Surrey, the Rt Rev Stephen Sizer. Sizer has posted a series of links to antiSemitic
or anti-Israel sites on his blog posts, and when challenged by Jewish community leaders
has insisted that he does not necessarily endorse such views.
Finally, this week, an exasperated Bishop of Guildford – Sizer’s direct boss – issued a ruling: Sizer
has to refrain from posting anything on social media about the Middle East for six months or face
losing his job.
T
he latest row emanates from Sizer’s posting on his Facebook page of a Wikispooks article
entitled “9/11 Israel did it.” The incoming Bishop of Guildford, the Rt. Rev. Andrew Watson, said
that Sizer had “demonstrated appallingly poor judgment in the material he has chosen to
disseminate, particularly via social media, some of which is clearly anti-Semitic.”
Perhaps the most moving presentation at the APPG launch came from an unexpected source: the
Speaker of the House of Commons, John Bercow.
Bercow, who is Jewish, has had his fair share of anti-Semitic abuse over the years. He said that
he had changed his view that anti-Semitism was “a dormant volcano.”
“We have to concede that it has fomented and brought its hatred to the surface. I do not want to
be alarmist, nor do I want to be complacent. But I do say that anti-Semitism is intolerable in any
decent and civilized society. Combating it is a serious struggle which requires the widest possible
constitution to sustain it,” said Bercow.
Natan Sharansky, chairman of the Jewish Agency, welcomed the report. It confirmed, he said,
surveys on European anti-Semitism previously published by the Agency.
But, he declared, it was “not enough to deploy armed policemen and soldiers around synagogues
and Jewish schools. The problem must be addressed at its very roots, through education, legal
steps, and social action.”
T
he APPG report was issued a week after Britain’s Community Security Trust issued the highest
ever number of anti-Semitic incidents recorded in the UK. The report’s authors hope their
recommendations – which include guidelines to local councils, the judiciary, and an extension of
inter-faith dialogue – can improve the situation. Certainly, at least this week, there was profound
goodwill among the teacups and the cucumber sandwiches.
© 2014 THE TIMES OF ISRAEL, ALL RIGHTS RESERVED