Monday, May 04, 2026

From Ian:

Lord David Frost: Let's Put an End to Ingrained Jew Hate in Britain
I thought Jewish people were surely as safe in Britain as anyone else. Apparently the British Jewish community must now live in fear. It sees its schools and synagogues under airport-style security and watches its children drilled in responses to attacks - while the rest of the population need do none of these things.

Sadly, security at Jewish institutions has been necessary since the mid-1990s in response to largely foreign-inspired Palestinian and Islamist terrorism. But what we have been seeing recently is different. Our Jewish fellow citizens fear to wear Jewish symbols in the street, to overtly identify as Jewish, and, it seems nowadays, even to go about their normal business in Jewish areas. In short, they are facing a growing campaign of intimidation and systematic incitement to violence.

This has happened because we have let it happen. The political and social response to the Gaza war - caused, let us not forget, by a horrific pogrom of murder, rape, and mutilation - has created a hostile environment. The Government's recognition of "Palestine" - an action which has made precisely zero difference on the ground - has only served to legitimize all those who want to think that "Zionists" are bad people and deserve everything they get.

We don't have to put up with the terrorizing of Jewish people in Britain. We are going to have to over-correct until something like normality has returned. For now, pro-Palestine marches should be prohibited. Open expressions of antisemitism in the mass media, in mosques, or on the streets need to be banned and prosecuted. We should deport foreign nationals who are guilty of this and revoke British citizenship for those who have acquired it. We need exemplary prosecutions and sentences for any kind of violence or intimidation of the Jewish community.

In short, we need to get tough if we are to reset the norms of civilized behavior in a democratic liberal state. I don't particularly welcome any of this. But for now, either we ignore the problem and see it get ever worse and ever harder to tackle, or we face up to it while we still can. Do we want to be the generation that let the Jewish community be intimidated into silence or out of the country? Shame on us if we do. But I think, even nowadays, we are better than that.
Kemi Badenoch: Extremists spreading Jew hate have no place in Britain
This is what the Green Party is pandering to – that alliance between the so-called progressive Left with the Islamist extremists – to the extent that they don’t even talk about the environment anymore. It is this ideology which has infiltrated many parts of our society and normalised hostility towards Jews.

The first place to start is a moratorium on marches relating to Israel and Palestine because they are being used as a cover to promote violence and intimidation against Jews. When these marches first started, I was Equalities Minister. My view then was that those who glorify the massacre of Jews have no place on our streets.

Next, we should crack down on hate preaching, extremist organisations, and ideologies that glorify violence and undermine Britain.

Back in 2021, a convoy of cars draped in Palestinian flags drove through Jewish neighbourhoods while a man’s voice, amplified by a megaphone, shouted: “F*** the Jews, rape their daughters.” These men were arrested, but the CPS dropped the charges. If people get away with this sort of hatred, and this sort of behaviour has no consequences, then these crimes will escalate.

The Prevent programme must be more vigilant when it comes to cases that pose a credible threat to Jews. There is a disturbing mismatch between the proportion of Prevent’s caseload on Islamist extremism, which is just 10 per cent, and the head of MI5 saying that three quarters of their counter-terrorism caseload is Islamist extremists.

The Golders Green stabbing suspect, Essa Suleiman, was known to Prevent, but his case was closed. Now is the time for a comprehensive audit of counter-terrorism investigations involving anti-Semitic motivation to ensure nothing is missed. The Prime Minister needs to be bold if he’s going to deal with this threat. Warm words and more money for security are not enough.

The Iranian regime and its proxies are fuelling anti-Semitism on British soil. Just this week we learnt that the Iranian Embassy in London urged Iranians in Britain to recruit their children as martyrs and “sacrifice their lives for the homeland”. Britain should not be a recruiting ground for extremism.

I have offered to work with Sir Keir Starmer to fast-track legislation to ban the Iranian Revolutionary Guards (IRGC). But he should implement Jonathan Hall KC’s recommendations and designate the IRGC as a hostile force and criminalise recruitment or displays of support for them.

Britain has been a sanctuary for Jews for hundreds of years and must continue to be so. Israel cannot be the only safe country in the world for Jews, who have been driven out of so much of the Middle East. We must all play our part in making anti-Semitism shameful. It cannot remain acceptable in supposedly polite dinner party conversations.

The Conservative Party is clear: if you want to spread hatred and violence towards Jews, you are not welcome in Britain.
Australia to hold first antisemitism commission hearing after Bondi Beach interim report
The Royal Commission on Antisemitism and Social Cohesion is set to begin its first block of hearings on Monday, following the presentation of an interim report regarding the Bondi Beach massacre.

The commission, formed in the wake of the December terrorist attack to investigate government and societal failings, will hold the hearings through May 15.

The first hearings will focus on defining antisemitism and examining its historical and contemporary manifestations, and listening to the experiences of Jewish Australians, as well as on metrics for assessing levels of antisemitism in institutions and society.

Several major Jewish Australian institutions said in a joint statement that the hearings would be an opportunity for community members to have their voices heard, and that they hoped the commission would use their testimonies to develop practical recommendations.

“Giving evidence about these experiences takes courage,” said the Executive Council of Australian Jewry, Australian Israel and Jewish Affairs Council, Zionist Federation of Australia, National Council of Jewish Women Australia, Dor Foundation, New South Wales Jewish Board of Deputies, and Jewish Community Council of Victoria.

“Many of those appearing are speaking publicly for the first time. They are doing so because they believe this country can be better and because they want the commissioner to hear their truths and recommend changes that will make all Australians safer.”

The Jewish groups said that students would speak about rising campus hostility, while congregants would share what it was like to visit Jewish sites under armed guard and how workplaces had become uncomfortable.

Sunday, May 03, 2026

  • Sunday, May 03, 2026
  • Elder of Ziyon

(Part 1 of a series on "The Jewish Question")

Across the nineteenth century and into the twentieth, the phrase "the Jewish Question" — die Judenfrage in German, la question juive in French, the Jewish problem in English — saturated European discourse. 

But what, exactly, was the Jewish Question?

Strangely, there is no single answer. 

The phrase was ubiquitous. There were multiple books titled The Jewish Question or The Jewish Problem. There were countless newspaper articles, pamphlets, parliamentary speeches, and learned essays addressing it. One scholar catalogued 1,230 sources (books, pamphlets, articles, speeches, meetings) on the topic in a single decade from 1875-1884. 

But looking at these sources does not help define the question. They presume the reader already knows.

It appeared in Hegelian philosophy and in evangelical missionary tracts. It was the title of Bruno Bauer's 1843 treatise and Karl Marx's 1844 reply. It was used by French revolutionaries debating emancipation and by German racial theorists demanding separation. It appeared in respectable London newspapers as routine political vocabulary, requiring no definition because every reader was assumed to know what it meant. By 1939, when the Nazi government published Germany and the Jewish Problem, the phrase had been a fixture of European discourse for nearly two centuries, deployed across every political ideology, in every Western language, by every kind of publication.

The one thing nearly everyone using the phrase seemed to agree on was that the Jewish Question was not antisemitism. On the contrary. It was meant to be the alternative to antisemitism. It was the considered intellectual response to a real problem, the kind of thing serious people engaged with in contrast to the rabble who merely hated Jews.

For example, on November 7, 1881, the Pall Mall Gazette of London printed a brief telegram from Berlin under the headline "Prince Bismarck and the Jewish Question." The Tageblatt, organ of the German anti-Jewish Conservatives, was replying to remarks Bismarck had reportedly made condemning anti-Jewish agitation. The Conservatives wanted to clarify their position. "We have always condemned the brutalities of Jew-baiting," they wrote, "but these must not be confounded with the Jewish question, which is well founded. The Jewish question exists in spite of the supposed opinion of Prince Bismarck, and if the Prince adheres to the statement attributed to him, the Jewish question will exist even against him."

The German Conservatives — the leading anti-Jewish party of their moment — were drawing a line between two things they regarded as entirely distinct. On one side was Jew-baiting: vulgar, brutal, the kind of thing respectable people condemned. On the other side was the Jewish Question: serious, well-founded, a matter that any thinking person was obliged to engage with. The Conservatives located their moral position in being against the first while being committed to the second. They were not antisemites, by their lights. They were responsible men, addressing a real problem, in contrast to the ignorant bigots who physically attacked Jews.

For the educated nineteenth-century European, pogroms were awful and blood libels were medieval superstition. But the Jewish Question — that was something else. That was a matter of serious analysis.

So what was the analysis? What did the Question actually claim?

The texts will not tell you directly. They presume the reader already knows. The only way to recover what the Question meant is to work backward from the solutions its serious analysts proposed. If we can identify the solutions, we can reconstruct the questions they were meant to answer. The result is illuminating, and not in the way the analysts intended.

Four solutions, four problems

Consider four representative texts.

In 1883, Arnold Frank, a licentiate of the Irish Presbyterian Church, published The Jewish Problem and Its Solution through the Bible and Colportage Society of Belfast. Frank was an evangelical Protestant of unimpeachable respectability. The solution he proposed was conversion, pursued through evangelism. The Christian world, he wrote, had a duty to win the Jew for Christ — "if it were for nothing else than self defence," because Jewish religious influence undermined Christian belief. Working backward from this solution, the question Frank was answering becomes clear: Jews refuse the true faith and undermine those who hold it. What should we do? For Frank, the Jewish Problem was a religious problem. The condition that made Jews problematic was their continued existence as Jews, which conversion would remedy.

A century earlier, in December 1789, the French revolutionary Stanislas de Clermont-Tonnerre rose in the National Assembly to defend Jewish emancipation. He was a liberal and a constitutional monarchist, on the progressive side of the debate, advocating equal rights for Protestants and Jews against those who wanted to maintain the centuries-old exclusions. The solution he proposed has echoed through every subsequent discussion of Jewish citizenship: "We must refuse everything to the Jews as a nation, and accord everything to Jews as individuals." Working backward, the question becomes: Jews constitute a corporate body within the state — with their own laws, their own institutions, their own communal courts — incompatible with the unified citizenship the Republic requires. What should we do? For Clermont-Tonnerre, the Jewish Question was a political-organizational problem. The condition that made Jews problematic was Jewish communal existence, which dissolution of Jewish institutions would remedy.

In 1844, Karl Marx published Zur Judenfrage — "On the Jewish Question" — replying to Bruno Bauer. Marx reframed the entire debate. The solution he proposed was structural: the abolition of the social conditions that produced both Judaism and capitalism. The closing line of the essay is unambiguous: "the social emancipation of the Jew is the emancipation of society from Judaism." Working backward, the question becomes: Jewish economic activity — usury, commerce, what Marx called "huckstering" — is capitalism in concentrated form. What should we do? For Marx, the Jewish Question was an economic problem. The condition that made Jews problematic was the persistence of the social form Judaism allegedly expressed, which revolutionary transformation would remedy - and leave the world with no Judaism.

In 1879, Wilhelm Marr published Der Sieg des Judenthums über das Germanenthum — "The Victory of Jewry over Germandom" — and helped popularize a new word for an old position. Marr coined "antisemitism" specifically to give Jew-hatred a scientific veneer, distinguishing his position from what he portrayed as backward religious prejudice. The solution he proposed was racial separation, which his successors would push toward catastrophic conclusion. Working backward, the question becomes: Jews are a biologically distinct people whose hereditary characteristics make them permanently incompatible with German national life. What should we do? For Marr, the Jewish Question was a racial problem. The condition that made Jews problematic was their biological inheritance, which no conversion or civic emancipation could touch.

These are not four facets of one problem. They are four different problems with four different referents and four different proposed remedies. Frank's religious problem cannot be solved by economic transformation. Marr's racial problem cannot be solved by conversion. Clermont-Tonnerre's organizational problem cannot be solved by changes in the social conditions of production. Marx's economic problem cannot be solved by the dissolution of communal courts. The four frameworks did not merely disagree about details. They disagreed about what kind of thing the Jewish Question even was.

And yet all four called what they were addressing "the Jewish Question." All four believed they were treating the same subject. Across a century of discourse, no one seems to have been particularly bothered by the fact that the people writing about "the Jewish Question" did not agree, even at the most basic level, on what the Question actually was. Yet everyone agreed that there was a question.

What the shared phrase actually meant

Each framework began from the conviction that Jewish existence was the kind of presence that required management. Frank knew Jews were a religious problem because his theology said so. Clermont-Tonnerre knew Jews were a political problem because his Republicanism said so. Marx knew Jews were an economic problem because his materialism said so. Marr knew Jews were a racial problem because his pseudo-science said so. Each was correct given his framework. But the framework did not generate the conclusion that Jews required treatment. The conclusion preceded the framework. The framework provided respectable contemporary vocabulary in which the prior conclusion could be articulated.

This becomes visible when you examine what happened as proposed solutions failed. Spain attempted the religious solution in the fifteenth century, demanding conversion or expulsion. The conversos who chose conversion were persecuted as crypto-Jews for generations afterward. If the problem had really been religious, conversion would have ended it. It did not. 

France attempted the political solution in 1791, granting full civic emancipation conditional on the dissolution of Jewish corporate identity. But Napoleon convened a Grand Sanhedrin to determine if Jews can really live in France as normal citizens. A century later, the Dreyfus Affair revealed that emancipated French Jews remained suspect as Jews. If the problem had really been organizational, civic equality would have ended it. It did not. 

The Soviet Union attempted the economic solution after 1917, abolishing the bourgeois conditions Marx had identified. Soviet antisemitism flourished anyway, eventually producing its own state-sponsored persecutions. If the problem had really been economic, abolishing capitalism would have ended it. It did not. 

Germany attempted the racial solution under the Nazis, and the catastrophe needs no description.

Each "solution" failed in the same way. A specific proposed answer was implemented, the proposed answer did not resolve the discomfort with Jewish presence, and a new framework was selected to articulate why Jewish presence remained problematic. Religious gave way to political gave way to economic gave way to racial. Each successor framework presented itself as the deeper analysis that the previous framework had missed. None of them ever considered the possibility that the Question itself was not what it claimed to be.

Real political questions, when their proposed solutions fail, generate refinement of analysis. The Eastern Question was reformulated repeatedly across the nineteenth century as Ottoman conditions changed, but each reformulation was a closer approach to the actual referent — the Ottoman Empire's relationship with European powers. The Irish Question evolved from Catholic Emancipation through Home Rule through partition, but the evolution tracked actual changes in the Anglo-Irish relationship. When the referent was finally addressed, the Question dissolved.

The Jewish Question never got refined. It got replaced. Each new framework was not a closer approach to a real referent but a fresh respectable vocabulary deployed when the previous one had become embarrassing. The pattern is the diagnostic of cognitive architecture rather than honest inquiry. A question whose stated referent keeps changing is a question whose actual referent is something else.

The actual referent — the one all four frameworks shared, beneath their respective vocabularies — was the assumption that Jewish existence as Jewish existence was the kind of presence European societies could not simply accommodate. The Question was always what should we do about our Jews?, with the answer "something" already settled, and the rationale to be supplied by whichever framework the era found most respectable.

The respectable form

This brings us back to the German Conservatives of 1881 and to the most important feature of the Jewish Question as a discursive form. Each of the four frameworks I have described did not merely articulate the assumption that Jewish presence required resolution. Each one presented itself, in its own moment, as the moderate and enlightened position — explicitly defined against a cruder antisemitism it considered beneath itself.

Arnold Frank was not a medieval Christian persecutor. He was a Belfast Presbyterian writing in the post-Enlightenment evangelical tradition. He did not endorse pogroms or forced conversion at sword-point. He represented the Protestant reform of Christian-Jewish relations: love them, pray for them, send missionaries, persuade them. By the standards of the world he had inherited, Frank was a moral progressive. He understood himself as advancing beyond the ugliness of medieval Christendom toward a more humane Christian witness to the Jewish people. And the position he took was that Jewish existence as Jewish existence should end, gently, through evangelism rather than coercion.

Clermont-Tonnerre was not a defender of the ancien régime's Jewish disabilities. He was a leading voice for Jewish emancipation in a National Assembly debate where some delegates wanted to maintain the centuries-old exclusions. His famous formulation — everything to Jews as individuals, nothing to Jews as a nation — was understood at the time as a defense of Jewish rights against those who wanted to keep Jews as a permanently inferior caste. He was on the liberal side of the argument. And his liberalism took the form of demanding that Jewish corporate existence be dissolved as the price of admission to French citizenship.

Marx was not a populist scapegoater of Jewish bankers. He was, in his own self-understanding, the deeper analyst, locating Jewish economic behavior within the structural critique of capitalism, distinguishing his position from the vulgar Jew-hatred of the conservative populists. He was a radical, and he understood his radicalism as the alternative to the cruder forms of antisemitism that produced pogroms and individual scapegoating. And his alternative was that Jewish existence as expressed in social form be abolished along with the conditions producing it.

Marr is the hardest of the four to call respectable, but in his own moment, he positioned himself as scientific and modern against what he portrayed as backward religious bigotry. He coined the word "antisemitism" precisely to give the position a scientific register, distinguishing it from the superstitious Christian Jew-hatred of the past. His self-understanding was that he was offering a sober racial analysis — modern, biological, Darwinian — in contrast to medieval prejudice. And his sober racial analysis demanded racial separation that culminated, two generations later, in industrialized murder.

Each framework, then, performed the same operation. It identified a cruder, more vulgar form of antisemitism prevalent in its environment. It defined itself explicitly against that cruder form. It articulated the same prior assumption — that Jewish existence required resolution — in the respectable contemporary vocabulary of its moment. And it understood itself, by its own lights, to be antisemitism's opposite: the moral progress over what came before.

This is what the German Conservatives were doing in the Pall Mall Gazette of 1881. They were not confused or hypocritical. They had located the moral high ground in being against the brutalities while embracing the well-founded Question. That is a stable, coherent, durable cultural-political achievement: the construction of an acceptable antisemitism, articulated in whatever vocabulary the era considers serious, sincerely understood by its adherents to be the antithesis of the vulgar form they reject.

The achievement is what made the framing so durable. Each generation could point to a worse version — one that they did not endorse — and locate themselves on the right side of history relative to it. The Reform Christian was not a Crusader. The French Republican was not an absolutist excluder. The Marxist was not a Pale of Settlement antisemite. The racial scientist was not a credulous superstitious peasant. Each could, with full sincerity, distinguish his position from antisemitism as he understood antisemitism — while occupying a position that carried forward the same load-bearing assumption that animated every cruder form.

The structural reading

When you place the four frameworks beside one another, the diagnostic is unavoidable. Frank wanted Jewish religious existence to end. Clermont-Tonnerre wanted Jewish communal existence to end. Marx wanted Jewish economic existence to end. Marr wanted Jewish biological existence to end. Each framework specified a different mode of Jewish existence as the relevant one and demanded its termination. None of them were content with Jewish existence continuing as itself.

The society's treatment of Jews was never considered the problem. The Jews themselves were the problem. And soon enough, even the respected academics admitted this. In 1879, Heinrich von Treitschke — professor at the University of Berlin, the most prominent German historian of his generation — said it without ornament in the pages of the Preußische Jahrbücher: 'Die Juden sind unser Unglück.' The Jews are our misfortune. This phrase was first published in the most prestigious journal of German political thought as an enlightened viewpoint. 

The Nazis recognized it for what it was. 

The Jewish Question was the socially acceptable form of antisemitism. It was sophisticated: serious analysis, considered solutions, learned treatises, careful debate. It carefully distinguished itself from the earlier, crude manifestations of antisemitism. And the world, by and large — including most but not all  European Jews themselves — accepted this framing. 

Almost no one considered that there was an alternative way of looking at Jews in Europe, of dissolving the Jewish question altogether. Yet there was an another way that emerged — in the New World. And only when compared against Europe can the genius of the American system be recognized, which is the topic of the next essay.

Tragically, the progressive Europeans did not recognize that the liberal, serious, progressive Jewish Question itself, that they debated endlessly as the enlightened alternative to pogroms and blood libels, is what would directly lead to genocide.




Buy EoZ's books  on Amazon!

"He's an Anti-Zionist Too!" cartoon book (December 2024)

PROTOCOLS: Exposing Modern Antisemitism (February 2022)

   
 

 

  • Sunday, May 03, 2026
  • Elder of Ziyon
Anti-Zionists love to trot out Neturei Karta as "real Jews" and as proof that they are not antisemitic since they welcome the fringe of Orthodox-looking Jews to their protests.

But what if Neturei Karta itself says antisemitic things?

Rabbi Yaakov Weiss, a NK leader in England, was interviewed by Al Araby, about the UK's decision to look more carefully at approving anti-Israel protests in the wake of a string of increasingly serious antisemitic attacks.  He said, "This serves the Zionists. They (the Zionists and their supporters in Britain) are looking forward to this, to attacks on the Jewish community, and silencing protests against Israel and Zionism."

He is claiming that Zionists, the vast majority of Jews, support attacks on their own  Jewish community because that helps, somehow, to silence anti-Israel protests. 

When antisemites say that most Jews are not really Jews but Khazars, that is antisemitism; When Neturei Karta says that they are the only real Jews and everyone else are not real Jews, that is no less antisemitism. And to claim that most Jews welcome attacks on Jews is simply slander. 

Neturei Karta blamed "Zionists" for October 7. They did not say a word of condemnation for the murders or rapes and did not say anything negative about Hamas, whose leaders they had met a number of times. 


Neturei Karta may be technically halachically Jewish. But there is nothing remotely Jewish about them. 



Buy EoZ's books  on Amazon!

"He's an Anti-Zionist Too!" cartoon book (December 2024)

PROTOCOLS: Exposing Modern Antisemitism (February 2022)

   
 

 

Saturday, May 02, 2026

From Ian:

With gallows humor, UK author Howard Jacobson takes on post-Oct. 7 ‘bloodlust’ for Jews
Jacobson can’t disguise his disdain towards far-left politicians such as the former Labour leader Jeremy Corbyn and the new leader of the Green party, Zack Polanski, a self-proclaimed anti-Zionist Jew. He labels Polanski “a despicable clone of Jeremy Corbyn,” while saying Corbyn at least has the excuse of ignorance. “He really is an ignorant man and doesn’t know what Zionism was and really does think it was a colonial enterprise from the start,” Jacobson says. “Zach Polanski doesn’t have that excuse.”

Jacobson recognizes that “the Zionist heart has hardened,” but believes this was inevitable both because “no grand ideal … can ever stay loyal to its first principles” and because “there’s been so much pressure put on it [by] the enmity it faced once the world decided to turn against Zionism.”

But he maintains his staunch belief in the nobility of the founding Zionist dream, which he terms “the liberation of the Jewish mind, as well as the liberation of the Jewish body.”

If Charmian desperately tries to help her husband cling on to sanity — “it can’t all be catastrophe, Ferdie,” she tells him — his mother has a view of the world shaped by history’s darkest hour. “She never did think humanity had learnt its lesson or ever would,” Ferdie recounts, quoting Agata’s dismal words: “I will not waste my time saying Never Again.”

Do the last two years validate that assessment? In the days after October 7, Jacobson recalls sensing an “exuberance … in some academic circles, on campuses throughout the Western world, [and] on the streets of our great cities.”

After eight decades of supposed restraint in the wake of the Holocaust, he says, “permission” had finally been given to “do to the Jews, and then say about the Jews, all the things we’d been brought up not to.”

Jacobson believes the results are horrifying. “The moral walls erected around Belsen and Auschwitz [are] finally coming down, and that’s terrifying,” he says.

The “raucousness” of the demonstrations in Britain, the manner in which people would “shout and scream” if they were denied their weekly “right” to protest exactly as they wished, didn’t just offend Jacobson’s Jewish sensibilities. “It bothered me as an Englishman too,” he says, adding it felt alien to the “free and easy way that life in London … and England has always been.”

But, Jacobson was recently reminded, the sympathies of England’s silent majority may not be with the strident minority.

As he traveled by cab to do a promotional interview, a London taxi driver asked Jacobson what he was going to be talking about on the radio. The author told him about “Howl.”

The driver asked to pull over for a minute, turned to face Jacobson, and said: “I just want you to know that out there in this country, we’re with you, you know.”

A perplexed Jacobson asked him what he meant.

“We’re not buying it,” the driver replied. “We’re not all buying that horrible [antisemitic] Jewish stuff, we’re not. We’re with you.”
It is no wonder Jews want to leave Britain
I am the one with the big personality around the Friday night dinner table. I have spent my whole life being told to ‘stop it with the dramatics’ as I sip my chicken soup. A day does not go by where my family – proud Jewish Brits – long for me to lower my voice or roll their eyes at my overexaggerating tendencies. So you can only imagine my horror when my friend – one of the most rational people in our social circle – said exactly what I was thinking: that Britain is no longer safe for British Jews. If Green party leader Zack Polanski made it to Number 10, my friend said that he would leave immediately. He told me in candid detail that he would stay in Israel until a visa was accepted for him to go to America. I was startled. Is the situation for the Jewish community really that bad? The latest attack in Golders Green shows that my friend – and many other British Jews – are right to be afraid.

When Jeremy Corbyn was leader of the Labour Party, members of the Jewish community started to explore the idea of leaving the UK. Who could blame them when faced with the realities of living as a Jew in 21st Century Britain? A lot of my non-Jewish friends were somewhat surprised when I told them that it was standard protocol that synagogues are heavily guarded. Being educated in two Church of England schools, I had the luxury of assimilated protection from outside threats in that regard, although I still felt the danger when going to my place of worship. But when I think back to my old school days, memories flash before me of being told to ‘get in the oven’ by ignorant classmates. When meeting another Jew at university who was also educated at a private school, we bonded over similar shared experiences. It’s a reminder that the scourge of antisemitism is always present, but now war in the Middle East has enabled it to float to the surface and into the mainstream.

Childhood memories include skipping the children’s service at my synagogue to chat with my dad as he was on guard duty, only for him to tell me to go back inside for my own safety. Should any place of worship in the UK even be in such need of security? This is a proud country which has freedom of religion. And why do Jewish schools in the UK need prison-like walls? So why do synagogues need to be so heavily guarded? Jewish children in Britain have been forced to hide their blazers in public for fear of putting a target on their backs. These issues aren’t confined to schools, of course; a friend working in the media told me she was scared of even outing herself as Jewish to her colleagues.

The rate of people leaving the UK to emigrate to Israel hit a 40-year high in 2025, with an increase of 20 per cent over the previous year. That was already on top of an increase of over 70 per cent in 2023. This is not necessarily just members of more orthodox denominations, but young adults who are feeling the impact directly on the streets and in the workplace. I spoke to one of my friends in Israel – a 29-year-old living in Tel Aviv, who told me in explicit terms that they feel safer in a warzone than on the streets of the UK. “We moved to Israel with the security of knowing we would feel secure in a war zone rather than in a country who has abandoned its most loyal yet petrified minority group, the Jewish community,” she said.
Jake Wallis Simons: Whisper it, but Trump’s blockade is working
Foreigners who commit evil belong in the depths of the water, apparently. That’s according to Mojtaba Khamenei, Iran’s new supreme leader, who is badly wounded, living like a rat underground and reduced to handwriting his words of wisdom, or having them handwritten for him.

Did nobody point out that when his father, Ayatollah Ali Khamenei, posted on X that an American warship was less dangerous than “the weapon that can send that warship to the bottom of the sea”, it heralded his death 11 days later?

No sense of irony, these people. Speaking of irony, rumours abound that the new dictator might be dead and the regime is hushing it up. A mural recently unveiled near Qom “mistakenly” included his mugshot in a gallery of martyrs, and the state-run Tasnim News Agency “mistakenly” referred to him as the “martyred leader of the revolution”. Oops!

Yes, the regime isn’t doing particularly well. Factions are squabbling, the leadership – or what is left of it – is in disarray, it can’t decide if its figurehead is alive or dead, while its armed forces, air defences and munitions production capabilities are devastated.

Whisper it, but Economic Fury may be working. For almost 50 years, the regime has weathered Western sanctions by covertly selling oil to China via shadow ships. So far, the US navy has intercepted 44 such vessels, with an estimated value of up to $6billion (£4.8bn).

Friday, May 01, 2026

From Ian:

Israel’s first lady: British Jews have always supported Israel. Now, they need us
Israel has fought many battles to survive over the decades, with Jewish communities across the world raising billions of pounds for critical services and providing tens of thousands of volunteers in times of crisis.

Thousands of people, from London to Sydney and New York, went over to help after the Oct 7 massacre by Hamas, many of them caring for traumatised survivors, while funds raised by Jews abroad helped rebuild the Israeli communities most affected by the attacks.

But, as an extraordinary wave of anti-Semitism has hit the Jewish diaspora, there has been a subtle change in who is looking after whom. Which is why Israel’s first lady Michal Herzog, wife of its president Isaac Herzog, happened to be paying a visit to Britain this week, when two Jewish men were stabbed in a terror attack in Golders Green.

Herzog describes Wednesday’s attack as “very disturbing”. But, tragically, it wasn’t a surprise. In fact, it was a desire to support Britain’s Jewish population in the face of shocking levels of anti-Semitism that compelled her to arrange her visit in the first place, with the intended focal point being Manchester’s Heaton Park Synagogue, where an anti-Semitic attack resulted in the death of two men seven months ago.

“The diaspora communities were always so wonderful to us,” she says. “They came to volunteer and help, not to mention the philanthropy. But it is a two-way street and that has become more apparent since October 7. We help each other in every possible way.”

In February, the Herzogs travelled to Australia to meet the families of the victims of last December’s Bondi Beach massacre. They were warmly welcomed by the Australian Jewish community and the Australian government, but the couple also faced ugly protests by Palestinian supporters, who hounded them, even when they were talking to survivors of the attack.

For the first lady, an instinctive feminist, one of the most disturbing aspects of the Western anti-Israel hatred has been the denial of horrific sexual assaults carried out by Hamas terrorists on Oct 7.

“One UN rapporteur, Pramila Patten, did come and do a report about the sexual violence and she was attacked for it,” says Herzog. “For months afterwards, whatever war she was talking about, people in the crowd would scream at her about Israel. The fact that women won’t defend just one group of women – Israelis – can only be anti-Semitism.”

Witnessing such behaviour convinced her and her husband to do more to engage with Jewish communities around the world. “Seeing the demonstrations, some of them fierce, some violent, just made us realise how important that mission is,” she says. “I think people realise that whatever begins with the Jews never ends with them.”

Herzog, 63, a former top lawyer and the daughter of a celebrated military hero, was born on a kibbutz in Israel, but spent part of her childhood in Brazil and Argentina, where her father was a military attaché. It means she has an idea of life as a diaspora Jew and the anti-Semitism that can accompany it – something many of her fellow Israelis are only just beginning to grasp.
Jake Wallis Simons: Jews have Israel. It’s the future of Britain that I fear for
Jews are also deeply patriotic. My Jewish grandfather, who was hugely proud of serving for the RAF in the War, was typical. It has been some years since I attended a Sabbath service, which invariably takes place against the hum of gossip (and the occasional SSSSH!), but once you have passed through security and sat through the Torah reading, there is always a prayer for the Royal family, the only part that is recited in English.

These are the people who have been betrayed by Britain. The awful truth is that successive governments have preferred to placate the country’s most bigoted minorities rather than protect its most patriotic ones. Can nobody draw a line between the jihadis of Hamas and those who blew up the Manchester Arena and the Tube, or who stabbed people on London Bridge? Does nobody draw the obvious conclusion when the statue of Winston Churchill is defaced by Gaza thugs, or when they attack RAF Brize Norton? Did the Prime Minister, who expended far more energy criticising Israel during the war than condemning Hamas, not understand that he was emboldening the enemy?

Truly, Britain has been fanning the flames with one hand and funding more fire extinguishers with the other. In addition to Israeli-style security measures, we need a counter-propaganda campaign to overcome incitement in universities and schools, the NHS, the media and the arts, the Civil Service and even Parliament. We need to suppress the hate marches, starting with a moratorium, as Jonathan Hall KC, the independent reviewer of terror legislation, has argued.

We need systemic reform – a dedicated anti-Semitism unit for the CPS, for instance, as former attorney general Michael Ellis has proposed – and we need no-questions-asked deportations of foreign nationals who offend. We need an end to uncontrolled immigration, both legal and illegal, a robust programme of assimilation, and careful measures to suppress extremist entryism. We need to crack down on dodgy charities. We need to ban the Muslim Brotherhood, the Revolutionary Guards and other terror groups, and a revolution in education that restores our sense of national pride.

But now I’m doing Starmer’s job for him. Don’t get me wrong: it isn’t the Jews who need all this. They may be first in the firing line, but there is a reason they have survived for thousands of years. We’ve got Israel. It is the future of Britain and the West that is the worry.
How Wokeness Came for the Jews By Abe Greenwald
Via Commentary Newsletter, sign up here.
If you’re looking to stir up mob hatred of a designated enemy, you can’t do better than the Jews. Three years of whiny anti-whiteness made woke into a punchline, but anti-Semitism is serious business. The committed Jew-hater enters an ancient tradition with a long instructional literature and counter-history. There are mentors and potential sympathizers around the globe. Just follow the playbook: Accuse the Jews of blood libel, hidden influence, and ill-begotten gains. Establish them as the motive force behind everything that’s wrong, and don’t let up. You’ll even find fellow travelers on the right.

When the woke replaced whites with the Jews, they were back in business. “White privilege” became “Jewish supremacy”; “white fragility” was dropped for the supposed Jewish hypervigilance over anti-Semitism and intolerance for criticism of Israel.

Jews, unlike whites, are associated with an ideology and political movement of their own: Zionism. That makes things a lot easier for the woke. They can attack Zionism—already mischaracterized and demonized for ages—as one of history’s great evils. And they can, when they even bother, hide behind anti-Zionism to disguise their Jew-hatred.

This all began way before Israel launched its ground invasion into Gaza. But once that happened, the anti-Jewish campaign exploded. Now there were images (fake or out of context) and reports (false or slanted) to bolster the grisly accusations. On campuses, at rallies, and on social media, the woke jihad produced leaders and spokespeople. The Biden administration and the Democrats began to pay them heed.

Eventually, the woke jihad threw up political contenders. New York’s sitting mayor was the first to reach office. Now there’s Michigan’s Abdul El-Sayed running for the Senate and Graham Platner (complete with a giant Nazi tattoo) doing the same in Maine.

And just as the liberal Democrats once took up the woke cause of anti-whiteness, they’ve now fully accommodated the left’s naked anti-Semitism. The Democratic establishment, along with the liberal commentariat, has come around to endorsing every leftist anti-Semitic candidate or influencer that comes their way.

The war in Gaza has been stalled for months, and the left barely mentions it anymore. But they don’t have to because this was never about Palestinians or liberation. It was about siccing the mob on the Jews, once again, and turning Jew-hatred into political power. You don’t need Gaza when you can talk about the dark hand of AIPAC, the immorality of U.S. aid to Israel, and Benjamin Netanyahu dragging us into war. The new woke and their establishment enablers have an array of anti-Jewish lies to choose from. Believing the wind at their backs, they’re going with all of them at once.
ABC panel discusses Bondi massacre without any mention of Jewish community or radical Islam
Michael Gawenda Outs Australia’s left-liberal media quartet
There was a time when The Age in Melbourne and the Sydney Morning Herald were fine newspapers of record. This was especially the case after the arrival of The Australian as a national newspaper in 1964 – since it put pressure on the (then) broadsheets in Melbourne and Sydney to improve. Both became strong performers in the 1970s and 1980s. But not anymore. Now in tabloid size [Nine Newspapers calls it “compact”, I believe. – MWD Editor] they are essentially expressions of the left (or “liberal” in the North American sense of the term) political point of view.

This was demonstrated in the article on 29 April in The Australian by James Dowling and Stephen Rice titled “Age legend to air left-wing media’s failure on anti-Semitism at Royal Commission”. The reference was to Michael Gawenda.

Michael Gawenda was a man of the moderate left – until anti-Semitism became an increasing reality in Australia. A former contributor to leftist The Digger magazine, he became, in time, editor of the left-of-centre Melbourne Age.

As The Australian revealed last Wednesday, Michael Gawenda has provided a submission to the Royal Commission on Anti-Semitism and Social Cohesion. In it he has identified Australia’s influential left-liberal media quartet. Namely, in alphabetical order, the ABC, The Age, The Guardian Australia and the Sydney Morning Herald.

Reflecting on the fact that the anti-Semitism spike in Australia occurred after Hamas’ terrorist attack on Israel on 7 October 2023, Gawenda had this to say:
I think the left liberal media – the Sydney Morning Herald, The Age, the ABC, the Guardian – have basically not done the sort of job that I would expect mainstream media organisations to do. They have minimised in their commentary the effect on Jews of what is clearly an increase in antisemitism. They have favoured minority Jewish organisations and used them as if they represent some sort of mainstream Jewish opinion. That media was shocking in its treatment of the antisemitism envoy’s [Jillian Segal] report. So I think they’ve done a ­terrible job. I think it’s got to do with the fact that journalists see themselves now, not as reporters, but as social activists wanting to change the world rather than report the world.

And so, it has come to pass that Michael Gawenda, a one-time successful Age editor, cannot get published in the newspaper he once edited on account of his support for Israel’s right to exist within secure borders and outspoken opposition to anti-Semitism in Australia. Can You Bear It?
From Ian:

Trump ‘not satisfied’ with latest Iranian proposal to end war
U.S. President Donald Trump told reporters at the White House on Friday that he is “not satisfied” with Iran’s latest proposal to end the ongoing conflict.

“They want to make a deal, but I don’t. I’m not satisfied with it, so we’ll see what happens,” Trump said. “Iran wants to make a deal, because they have no military left.”

“They’re asking for things that I can’t agree to,” he added.

Iran sent the proposal through mediators on Thursday, though details remain unclear. “They want to make a deal so badly, but they’re not there yet,” Trump told reporters. “In my opinion, they’re not there.”

“Do you want to go blast the hell out of ’em and finish them forever, or do we want to try and make a deal?” he said.

The president added that he’d prefer not to continue military strikes. “On a human basis, I’d prefer not, but that’s the option,” he told reporters.

Asked if he was considering new strikes on Iran, Trump said, “Why would I tell you that?

“Right now, we have negotiations going on,” the president said. “They’re not getting there. They are very disjointed. They’re extremely disjointed. They’re not able to get along with each other as leaders. They don’t know who the leader is.”

Trump noted that this puts the United States “in a bad position,” because separate groups in Iranian leadership want different deals.

The president dismissed the need for congressional authorization for further U.S. military action against Iran, arguing that other presidents have considered the War Powers Resolution “unconstitutional” and “exceeded” the law’s 60-day limit. Trump added that the current ceasefire reset the timeline.


US pulling 5,000 troops from Germany amid spat with Trump over Iran war
The United States is withdrawing 5,000 troops from NATO ally Germany, the Pentagon announced on Friday, as a rift over the Iran war widens between US President Donald Trump and Europe.

Trump had threatened a drawdown in forces earlier this week after sparring with German Chancellor Friedrich Merz, who said on Monday the Iranians were humiliating the US in talks to end the two-month-old war and that he did not see what exit strategy Washington was pursuing.

A senior Pentagon official, speaking on condition of anonymity, said recent German rhetoric had been “inappropriate and unhelpful.”

“The president is rightly reacting to these counterproductive remarks,” the official said.

The Pentagon said the withdrawal was expected to be completed over the next six to 12 months. Germany is home to some 35,000 active-duty US military personnel, more than anywhere else in Europe.

The official said the drawdown would bring US troop levels in Europe back to roughly pre-2022 levels, before Russia’s invasion of Ukraine triggered a buildup by then-president Joe Biden.

The official also cast the decision in terms of the Trump administration’s push for Europe to become the main security provider on the continent. But it is nonetheless another potent reminder of Trump’s willingness to respond to perceived disloyalty by allies.
IDF official says Iran war will be ‘one big failure’ if enriched uranium not removed
A senior Israeli military official said on Friday that if Iran’s stockpile of more than 400 kilograms of highly enriched uranium is not removed from the country in the wake of the recent war, the campaign could be considered “one big failure.”

Israeli officials have said that this stockpile is sufficient for 11 nuclear bombs if enriched further. Iran has long maintained that its program is peaceful, despite enriching uranium at near-weapons-grade levels.

Israel launched its campaign against Iran on February 28, alongside the United States, to degrade the Iranian regime’s military capabilities, distance threats posed by Iran — including its nuclear and ballistic missile programs — and “create the conditions” for the Iranian people to topple the regime, the military and other Israeli leaders have said.

The senior officer said that if, under the ongoing negotiations between the US and Iran, no agreement is reached to remove the uranium stockpile and halt enrichment in the country, the achievements of the 40 days of fighting will have been for nothing.

“If the nuclear objective is not achieved, then everything we did in Iran will be one big failure. The evil Iranian regime can pounce on the nuclear program,” the official said during a briefing for reporters, speaking on condition of anonymity.

The officer added that “if the uranium is removed from Iran through diplomatic means, we have done our part.” However, if that does not happen, Israel would need to launch another operation in Iran to achieve the objective.
The same argument keeps coming up every time diaspora Jews are attacked. It usually sounds something like this: no one supports antisemitism, no one wants Jews to be harmed, but given what Israel is doing, a rise in anger and even violence is an inevitable reaction. So let me ask a few questions.

Isn’t that just a justification with a polite disclaimer attached? When you tell the world that violence against Jews is an inevitable consequence of Israeli behavior, are you reporting on reality or are you constructing it? Because when you hand someone a grievance and tell them their anger is understandable, what exactly do you think is going to happen?

And if this is really about Israeli policy producing an inevitable outcome, why aren’t Russians being stabbed on the streets of London? Russia has committed a staggering amount of documented war crimes and is responsible for hundreds of thousands of deaths at a minimum. Where’s the inevitable backlash against Russians?

The Chinese Communist Party runs an authoritarian repressive system with documented abuses on a massive scale. Where’s the inevitable violence against Chinese people in London? The inevitability only ever seems to apply to Jews. So is it really about the behavior of governments, or is something else going on?

And if the violence is a rational response to Israeli policy, shouldn’t it at least be directed at people who actually support that policy? Do you think the attackers stop and ask their victims where they stand on Israeli settlement policy before they act? Do they check whether the person wearing a kippah supports Netanyahu or opposes him? Because who tends to get targeted in these attacks? Visibly Orthodox Jews. And which Jewish group tends to be among the most critical and ideologically opposed to the Israeli government? Ultra-Orthodox Jews. There are some Hasidic sects who oppose the political state of Israel entirely on religious grounds. Did the attacker in Golders Green know that? Did he care? So what exactly does Israeli government policy have to do with any of this? If this were really an inevitable political response to Israeli actions, wouldn’t the attackers at least be going after the “right Jews”?

When people say Israel is responsible for antisemitism, which Israel do they mean? The State of Israel, meaning the Jewish people governing themselves in their ancestral homeland? Or are they talking about Netanyahu specifically? Because Netanyahu can barely hold a coalition together in his own Knesset. Do you really think he speaks for world Jewry?

When people get accused of fostering hatred toward Jews, they immediately point to Jews like Zack Polanski and say Jews aren’t a monolith, they don’t all support Israel, stop painting us as antisemitic. So then why, when they want to explain away attacks on Jews, do they turn around and treat every Jew as a unified pro-Israel bloc? Which is it? Either Jewish opinion on Israel is diverse and cannot be used to justify targeting Jews, or it isn’t. You don’t get to use that argument in both directions depending on what’s convenient.

And before we even get to policy, is there any other country on earth where the debate isn’t about government policy but about whether the country has a right to exist at all? Any other country where that question is treated as a serious and legitimate one? Because that conversation only ever comes up about Israel. So when people say they’re just criticizing Israeli policy, are they being honest with themselves?

Consider Donald Trump. Arguably the most hated political figure in Europe, certainly in London. Does anyone accuse Londoners of being anti-American for despising him? Does anyone accuse Americans of being unpatriotic for disagreeing with his policies, just as nobody did with Joe Biden? Why does opposition to a government become a justification for Jews, anywhere, to bear the consequences? Why does that logic exist nowhere else on earth? Why only Israel? Why only us?

Even if you accept, for the sake of argument, the premise being pushed, that Jews broadly support the worst accusations leveled at the Israeli government, since when does holding a political opinion about a conflict thousands of miles away justify being stabbed in the street? Reprehensible views exist among British citizens, as they do in any society. They do not get hunted down for it. Jews in England are openly anxious about their safety right now, and yet nobody expects them to retaliate by attacking random people who disagree with them. No one who spends their time demonizing Jews is looking over their shoulder, worried that the Jewish community will respond in kind.

What’s really happening is a reversal of cause and effect. Does Israel cause antisemitism? Or does antisemitism, ancient and adaptable, always finding a new justification, cause these attacks? And when every Jew stabbed in the diaspora is another rung on the ladder of Aliyah, when Jews watch the government response and the public response and find it abysmal, can you really blame them for drawing the obvious conclusion? That there is one country on earth where the government is constitutionally committed to protect them? Is it really a mystery why that country keeps looking more appealing?

So what does England want to do? Does it want to keep blaming Israel, muddying the waters, treating Jewish safety as a geopolitical debate, while things get worse and worse until it isn’t only Jews bearing the consequences? Or does it want to say clearly that it will not allow its citizens to be stabbed in the streets?

If England can’t say that and mean it, then it should at least be honest with its Jewish community. Why keep them waiting in limbo for a protection that isn’t coming? Why not just tell them the truth?




Buy EoZ's books  on Amazon!

"He's an Anti-Zionist Too!" cartoon book (December 2024)

PROTOCOLS: Exposing Modern Antisemitism (February 2022)

   
 

 

  • Friday, May 01, 2026
  • Elder of Ziyon


New York mayor Zohran Mamdani tweeted a video showing two people, one wearing a keffiyeh, knocking on doors in New York City to get people more involved in rent discussions.

Jews immediately recognized the keffiyeh as a symbol of hate. Meanwhile, fans of the scarf claim that it is merely a symbol of solidarity.

We've looked at this question before. There is not even a doubt - Palestinians and Palestinian activists recognize the keffiyeh to symbolize terrorism, which they call "resistance." 



About 15 years ago there was a popular Palestinian song called "Ali Al-Kufiya," or "Raise Your Keffiyeh." It is a dance tune that includes lyrics like 
Let the gunpowder rejoice and sweeten it
Let the gunpowder rejoice and raise its voice
The first bullet tells the story of the journey,
On the day of battle, we light the paths of victory.
There is no ambiguity in Arabic as to what the keffiyeh symbolizes. It is violence and terrorism. 

Everything else is meant to gaslight Westerners. 

Mamdani knows what it means. He is trying to normalize terror against Jews in New York - to "globalize the intifada."




Buy EoZ's books  on Amazon!

"He's an Anti-Zionist Too!" cartoon book (December 2024)

PROTOCOLS: Exposing Modern Antisemitism (February 2022)

   
 

 


  • Friday, May 01, 2026
  • Elder of Ziyon



The Caledonian Mercury, May 24, 1726, relayed a dispatch from Warsaw dated May 4:
A Priest of this City who was going to Cracow to gain the Benefit of the Jubilee, having found a Christian Infant on the Road, which was stabbed through and through, took it up and carried it before a Court of Justice: And the Students of this City thinking that the Jews were the Murderers, got the Mob together to be revenged on that People, of whom they killed severals, and would have proceeded to greater Mischief, had they not been restrained by the Garrison.

An antisemitic claim circulates. It is unverified and almost always fabricated. 

Jews as a whole are presumed collectively responsible. 

University students are in the forefront of the mob.

Anti-Jewish violence follows, or is attempted — and nobody is surprised.

Poland in 1726 was considered one of the more tolerant environments for Jews in Europe. The laws protected them.  The garrison/police showed up but not in time to stop the violence. And really, no amount of police will ever stop a motivated mob that can attack anywhere at any time. 

This sounds a lot like England is in 2026.  

In Golders Green on Wednesday, it took police four minutes to arrive. They could never have prevented the attacks.  Even if they were on every street corner, a murderer can strike. 

The attacks were prompted not by facts nor by concern of innocent lives. Then, like now, they are prompted by hate which uses morality as a pretext.






Buy EoZ's books  on Amazon!

"He's an Anti-Zionist Too!" cartoon book (December 2024)

PROTOCOLS: Exposing Modern Antisemitism (February 2022)

   
 

 

Thursday, April 30, 2026

From Ian:

Brendan O'Neill:Anti-Zionism is a menace to every Jew on Earth
It is staggering the extent to which anti-Zionists refuse to be bound by the linguistic rules they enforce on everyone else. These are people who think JK Rowling is responsible for anti-trans violence because she says men aren’t women, and who will accuse you of playing with ‘Islamophobic’ fire if you comment on the rape gangs. And yet apparently their cruel, ceaseless, voluble and entirely disproportionate loathing for the world’s only Jewish nation – and for everyone who supports it, which includes most British Jews – has no impact whatsoever. It magically exists above the grubby fray of cause and effect that the lowly speech of us riff-raff is compelled to inhabit.

Apparently, our measured opinions cause violence, whereas their meticulously constructed and ruthlessly enforced culture of burning animus for the Jewish nation causes nothing. And woe betide the Jew who says it does. He shall be found guilty of ‘weaponising anti-Semitism’ to silence ‘critics of Israel’. See how cynical the Jews are? They will even marshall and monetise their own historic suffering – the Holocaust, 7 October, recent atrocities in Britain – to the end of protecting their precious genocidal homeland from the decent-hearted critique of pacifist Brits. They lie, and they do so for slippery reasons of dual loyalty – that’s what anti-Zionists are saying when they tar Jews as ‘weaponisers’ simply for saying something they themselves say every day: that words have consequences.

Can we cut the crap? Our moral emergency is too pressing. This is the truth: the industry of hatred for the Jewish nation is endangering Jewish people everywhere. It is not merely opinion – it is a vast system of moral instruction enforced through the institutions of education and culture which singles out Zionism as the most repulsive ideology of our time, and Zionists as enablers of apartheid, settler-colonialism and genocide. Golders Green is full of Zionists. I know some of them. They are good people. Yet according to the ideological superstructure of anti-Zionism, they are agents of chaos, facilitators of crime and simps for a regime whose crimes are so uniquely barbarous that even just reflecting on them can feel like ‘opening a door to the darkest recesses of Hell’. It is utterly untenable to say anti-Zionism is not the cause of anti-Jewish violence.

‘It is morally consistent to oppose both anti-Semitism and Israel’s genocide’, said armies of leftists after Golders Green. Actually, it isn’t. For it is the latter – the ceaseless defamation of ‘the Zionist entity’ as a genocidal machine that lusts after the blood of innocents – that inflames the former. There is a determined effort to draw a moral distinction between ‘real anti-Semitism’, like that in Golders Green, and anti-Zionism. No, no, no. Anti-Zionism is the foul soil in which violent Jew hate has taken root. It is the most menacing hate movement of our time. It has power and clout. It is the ideology of the new ruling class. It is ruthlessly communicated through the digital highways and popular culture. And it is hanging a target sign around the necks of Jews everywhere on Earth. It must be defeated, urgently.
Being Jewish in Britain means living in a security ghetto
Don’t you just hate it when your kids need a security briefing to go to primary school? Isn’t it annoying to have airport-style security at your place of worship so that congregants aren’t murdered?

If you’re Jewish in Britain, this is the reality. We don’t live our lives like normal British citizens any more. We live in a security ghetto – one where tolerant Britain is fading away.

This week – before two Jewish men were stabbed in Golders Green, north London, in an attack police declared a terrorist incident – my better half and I were due to attend a documentary screening by a Jewish-Israeli journalist. We worked out that, given the risk, only one of us should go, so our child would still have a parent if something happened. These are the kind of calculations British Jews now make.

The security services have advised friends’ children to hide their school uniforms when travelling to and from their fortified Jewish schools. Children are asked to conceal what they are in case it upsets racists.

I don’t hide my Star of David on public transport – I don’t mind the glares. The exception is medical appointments. Almost every Jew I know does the same. It is hard not to, when doctors feel free to post Nazi-grade racism under their own names on social media (I’ve been shown a private Facebook group of nearly 17,000 GPs, where anti-Jewish hatred was expressed openly and seldom challenged). And we’re to trust these people to treat us when we are at our most vulnerable?

Soon, it will be my turn again. My turn to put on a stab-proof vest, stand alongside a paid security guard, and guard the gates of my own synagogue. Everyone in the community who can will take a turn. Every synagogue in Britain that I know of runs the same rota. Metal gates. CCTV. Volunteers in body armour. This is what worship looks like now.

Incidents happen when you least expect them. The day before my son’s bar mitzvah, I went to the synagogue to drop off wine. As I left and the gate shut behind me, I turned and saw a man I didn’t know inside the grounds. Scruffy, well-built, tattooed, wearing a vest. He had scaled the perimeter fence as I was leaving and was heading for the door.

I went back in and confronted him. I barely had time to register the backpack.

He was looking around, taking in the layout. I took his picture and shepherded him out. On the pavement, he dropped into the Islamic prayer position. The rest of my day was spent with the police and the Community Security Trust, the Jewish security charity.
DOJ’s Harmeet Dhillon compares contemporary antisemitism of ‘educated elites’ to 1930s Germany
In a speech at a federal government commemoration of the Holocaust on Thursday, Assistant Attorney General for Civil Rights Harmeet Dhillon argued that the post-Oct. 7 wave of antisemitism in the U.S. resembles 1930s Germany and warned that modern bigotry is often perpetrated by “educated elites” under the cover of intellectual language.

Dhillon, drawing on a speech that the late Supreme Court Justice Antonin Scalia gave at a Holocaust remembrance event nearly three decades ago, said that Germany’s reputation as an intellectual and scientific hub in the 1920s and 1930s is closely connected to the development of the Holocaust.

“The road to Auschwitz was incremental and methodical. It began with excluding Jews through the legal, political, economic and social life of everyday society,” Dhillon said. “Many perpetrators of the Holocaust were often the most educated intelligentsia in Germany.”

She was speaking at the 33rd annual Federal Interagency Holocaust Remembrance Program, an event organized by and for federal government employees. It took place in the Justice Department’s Great Hall, and as attendees arrived, they walked up a staircase lined with portraits of historic legal experts, like the Babylonian king Hammurabi. One showed Moses, pictured with the twin tablets of the Ten Commandments.

The fact that the perpetrators of the Holocaust often had advanced degrees and impressive credentials is relevant for our understanding of contemporary antisemitism, Dhillon said.

“Today we are experiencing a rise in antisemitism in the world, including right here at home. As in the past, it often begins with social exclusion. On some university campuses, Jews have been blocked by mobs from entering certain spaces,” said Dhillon. “As in 1930s Germany, these actions are often perpetrated by the educated elites of our nation, framed in intellectual language, giving them a veneer of legitimacy.”

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This blog may be a labor of love for me, but it takes a lot of effort, time and money. For 20 years and 40,000 articles I have been providing accurate, original news that would have remained unnoticed. I've written hundreds of scoops and sometimes my reporting ends up making a real difference. I appreciate any donations you can give to keep this blog going.

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