A new report from the UK-based advocacy group Freedom in the Arts, "The New Boycott Crisis," documents that the UK arts sector has developed interlocking mechanisms that exclude Jewish artists systematically — and these methods work precisely because they never name what they're doing.
The report, based on surveys and interviews with 194 artists, venue leaders, agents and promoters, identifies antisemitism as "the dominant form of identity-based exclusion documented across the data, operating at every level from overt to institutional, frequently unrecognised by the very frameworks designed to prevent discrimination." That last clause is the key one.
The first mechanism is the reversal of where pressure originates. The conventional picture of a boycott crisis is external: protesters outside the door, audiences threatening to stay home. What the data shows is the opposite. "There was no audience backlash. The pressure came from staff." Across venue after venue, the force driving cancellations came from inside — overwhelmingly far-Left staff complaints, internal networks, and advisory bodies — while audiences remained largely indifferent or actively wanted the work. The sector is responding not to its public but to a small number of internal ideological enforcers.
Which leads to the second mechanism: the weaponization of safety language. Once a staff member frames a political objection as a welfare concern — "I don't feel safe with this performer booked" — the word "safeguarding" does for institutional antisemitism what "anti-Zionism" does at street level: it launders a discriminatory outcome into an ostensibly neutral concern. Jewish identity itself becomes a "reputational risk." Jewish-themed art becomes "too sensitive." A klezmer band gets its gig cancelled not because anyone articulated a problem with the music, but because Jewish identity and an Israeli singer had been absorbed into the venue's ambient danger calculus. Strange Brew in Bristol later acknowledged in its apology that the band "was likely only subjected to this level of scrutiny… because they are a Jewish band performing with an Israeli singer." That's the mechanism caught on paper — which almost never happens. The internal Israel-haters claim that they would be endangered if the Jewish artists performs, even though there is no evidence that this would in fact happen. But safety must be taken seriously by every institution. They game the system.
Most cases produce no paper trail. That's the third mechanism — what the report calls the silent boycott. "Opportunities dry up. Invitations stop coming. Communications go unanswered. Projects stall indefinitely." Jewish artists describe this pattern post-October 7: their loss of gigs came not from anything they said or did, it simply happened, undocumented and unchallengeable. The mechanism is engineered for impunity: if an artist receives a termination letter, she can consult a lawyer; an artist who receives silence can challenge nothing. Agents, knowing this, advise concealment — steer clear of certain festivals, make the Jewish identity less visible, don't put the artist forward where rejection is anticipated. Self-censorship becomes a professional service delivered under duress, converting institutional discrimination into career advice. the result is that overtly Jewish art or lectures have virtually disappeared because the entire art infrastructure has no way (and seemingly little desire) to fight the invisible boycott.
The EDI and "values" frameworks that were supposed to prevent discrimination become, in this environment, the mechanisms that enable it. A political demand framed as a diversity concern gains access to formal institutional complaint machinery. "Values-led" organizations reserve the right to refuse bookings on grounds they define, with the definition expanding under pressure until Jewish association itself falls outside the ethical boundary. The report documents a Bristol arts venue whose CEO described, as institutional achievements: signing a pledge not to stock Israeli products — under the banner of institutional values. The circular logic completes itself: the framework designed to protect diverse voices now ejects anyone who questions the framework.
The report documents a consistent pattern through the case studies: when organizations held their ground and followed well-defined procedures protecting their artists and art, the predicted catastrophe failed to materialize. Example after example of book festivals, music events and theatres that held their ground and calmly explained that they are following their own procedures and support artistic expression usually held the events without serious incident.
The report's conclusion from these cases is direct: institutions that appease do not purchase peace but permanent vulnerability, while institutions that resist frequently discover the threat was largely phantom. The antisemitic pressure within the arts sector is, for now, a minority phenomenon that has learned to punch far above its weight — exploiting the sector's conflict-aversion, its "safety" language infrastructure, and the rational calculation of precarious freelancers that silence is cheaper than resistance. The open letters threaten, but in the end the protests either don't appear or remain small and peaceful. The audiences show up.
That asymmetry between perceived threat and actual threat is the most actionable finding in the report. Jewish artists are being excluded, Jewish culture is being suppressed, and careers are being ended — not because the sector's audiences demand it, but because a small number of internal actors have learned to operate mechanisms that produce discriminatory outcomes without ever requiring the institution to say the word "Jew."
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"He's an Anti-Zionist Too!" cartoon book (December 2024) PROTOCOLS: Exposing Modern Antisemitism (February 2022) |
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Elder of Ziyon




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