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EXCLUSIVE: Lansman’s Lies Revealed in Leaked Memo

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Oh What a Tangled Web Lansman Weaves as  He Practises to Deceive and Expel Me

People will be familiar with the lines from Sir Walter Scott’s Marmion:
Oh! what a tangled web we weave
When first we practise to deceive!

It is a poem that describes Jon Lansman’s behaviour down to a tee as he tries to expel me from Momentum. Lies and deception, saying one thing to one person and another thing to another person, seem to have become a seamless part of Lansman’s political tapestry. It almost seems as if Momentum’s führer, because he is an unelected dictator, has forgotten what the word socialism means.
Tony Benn - Turning in his grave at Lansman's treachery
Tony Benn must be turning in his grave as his former student has turned into a latter day Napoleon Bonaparte. Lansman’s trade is treachery. Tony Benn, unlike his former devotee, was an anti-colonialist and a strong supporter of the Palestinians. Since Lansman claims his political inheritance from Tony Benn we should remind ourselves of Benn’s 5 questions:

If one meets a powerful person--Rupert Murdoch, perhaps, or Joe Stalin or Hitler--one can ask five questions: what power do you have; where did you get it; in whose interests do you exercise it; to whom are you accountable; and, how can we get rid of you? Anyone who cannot answer the last of those questions does not live in a democratic system.”

This is why Momentum is not democratic.  There is no obvious way to get rid of Lansman. If it wasn’t clear already it should be clear now. Lansman’s desire to succeed McNicol was motivated by his desire to continue with the ancie regime, the witchhunt included and using much the same methods. 
The Spider at the Centre of the Web
Below I detail how Lansman, when given the choice between being honest and open, lying and transparency chooses the former without fail. Lansman seems to have become so used to wheeling and dealing that he is incapable of behaving in any other way.  Power seems to have gone to his head at the same time as any modicum of socialist principles have left it. In short Lansman has become a classic machine politican devoid of any real ideological commitment.

As people will be aware, I was expelled by the National Kangaroo Court a month ago for crimes such as ‘abusing’ Louise Ellman MP who, in the name of security, supports Israel’s shackling, beating and incarceration of (Palestinian) children.  (see Parliamentary debate on Palestinian child prisoners and detainees, 6.1.16.).

Even the worst New Labour traitors like Blairite John McTernan, who wants the rail unions 'crushed' by the Tories is welcomed into Momentum whereas Lansman is quite happy to carry on with McNicol's witchhunt

John McTernan has not been expelled - on the contrary this New Labour supporter who appeals to the Tories to crush the rail unions is welcomed whereas Lansman seeks the expulsion of socialists 

Despite all the heated rhetoric of Labour’s Zionists, the NKC refrained from accusing me of anti-Semitism.  I have covered the details in the following posts so I won’t rehearse the arguments again. Tony Greenstein - Expelled for Opposing Zionism and the Israeli State – The Fight Goes On, How to Cure the Labour Party of anti-Semitism – Expel a few Jews!

Collaborating with the false anti-Semitism smear campaign

If it wasn’t clear up till now it should be blindingly obvious that the false anti-Semitism campaign which led to my expulsion is directed primarily at Jeremy Corbyn himself.  Jackie Walker, Marc Wadsworth, myself and others are mere collateral damage. This week there have been two attacks on Jeremy Corbyn suggesting that he tolerates anti-Semitism.  One was about an absurd mural whose ‘anti-Semitism’ is highly debatable and the other is the dodgy dossier of David Collier, much of which is forged, about the Palestine Live Facebook page.  The Zionist ‘charity’ Campaign Against Anti-Semitism has made a second complaintof anti-Semitism against Corbyn.
Right-wing MP Wes Streeting defends Lansman 
It should also be obvious, even to Lansman, that the false anti-Semitism smear campaign has nothing to do with anti-Semitism and everything to do with removing Corbyn.  Why else would the Express, Mail, Sun give such enthusiastic support to the idea that Labour is anti-Semitic?   Yet Lansman is determined to finish off what McNicol began and expel me from Momentum.  Presumably he will do the same to Jackie Walker and Marc Wadsworth if they are expelled.  Momentum has signally failed to oppose the anti-Semitism witchhunt thus far.  It is now proposing to collaborate with it.

Constitution

Momentum has a Constitution, which was imposed by Lansman over a year ago.  It has never been approved, still less debated by Momentum’s membership.  People were given a simple choice when Lansman destroyed the democracy of Momentum – take it or leave it.

The relevant part of the Constitution dealing with members who have been expelled are the following:

5.8     Any member who does not join the Labour Party by 1 July 2017, or ceases to be a member of the Labour Party, or acts inconsistently with Labour Party membership, may be deemed to have resigned.

5.10   Where a member may be deemed to have resigned in accordance with Rules 5.7, 5.8 or 5.9 there will be a right to be heard by the NCG or a delegated panel before a final decision is made.

On 18th March I e-mailed Momentum nationally asking why they had ceased taking my subscription and assuming that they had done so because I had been expelled.

On 22nd March a Santiago Bell-Bradford emailed informing me that I was wrong and the fault lay with Pay Pal. I was happy to accept this and I said I would contact Pay Pal directly.

17 minutes later another email arrived, from Momentum Info, informing me that it had come to their attention (in fact I pointed it out) that I had been expelled and I had 6 days to make written representations and a panel of the National Co-ordinating Group, the mainly unelected group that runs Momentum, or a panel thereof would meet to determine my fate.

Laura Parker - Momentum Co-ordinator - entered into the lying and deception with ease
I wrote back almost immediately complaining that an email such as this should have a name attached to it and attacking their impersonal corporate culture.  In my naivety I didn’t expect that this process was one of dirty tricks but merely the consequence of my expulsion. I pointed out that there seemed to be an omission in their letter, viz. that I had a right to be heard in person.

I also stated that child care responsibilities prevented me from attending on Thursday and I suggested alternative dates. I also stated that ‘Your email gives the distinct impression that this is merely a matter of going through the motions.’ and pointed out that the constitution merely stated that Imay be deemed to have resigned.’  At this stage I was still assuming that the email was sent in good faith.
What changed this was a phone call I received about 15 minutes later from a member of staff Laura Parker.  She phoned me to ‘explain’ why names are never used on emails because of the abuse staff get from Momentum members! This was wholly untrue since I had just received an email in the name of Santiago Bell Bradford. Laura too had recently appended her name to an International Womens Day email. I therefore found it difficult to take her claims seriously and when I tried to discuss the main content of the email she put the phone down.  It was almost as if she was phoning me up to put me off the scent.

I responded to this email rejecting her explanation and making the point that ‘If what you are saying is that large numbers of Momentum members are abusive then you might ask yourself whether it has anything to do with the way you treat people.’

I also received an anonymous email with copies of internal Momentum emails which put everything into context.  The first email was at 00.34 on the morning of Monday 19th March.  Lansman wrote, in his capacity of Chair of the NCG that:

‘We do have to get rid of Greenstein but I am a bit concerned by the process which he will make a big deal out of possibly including lawyers - sorry if I didn’t say this earlier.The bits of the constitution which are relevant here are....

What Lansman was saying was that we may deem me to have resigned but there has to be a process involving the NCG or one they have agreed in which I have the right to be heard (not necessarily in person) before a final decision is made.’

It couldn’t have been clearer.  There was nothing about due process and the right to a fair hearing.  The aim was to be rid of me but they would have to go through the charade of a hearing.  I had the right to be heard but ‘not necessary (sic) in person.’ Quite how Lansman can square having a right to be heard with not being present in person is something I haven’t yet got my head around.  If the constitution didn’t mean in person then it would have used a different formula such as ‘the right to make written submissions.’ It didn’t.

I followed this up with a further email to Lansman stating that if he wishes to engage in these tricks and deceptions then I shall be forced to treat him as I did the Labour Party and apply for an injunction. 

One thing that has puzzled me is the reference in Laura Parker’s email to Lansman:  Santi (in cc) & I already discussed need for Guillame due process’ what is a Guillame due process?  It appears to be some form of internal Momentum office jargon. It has been suggested by a friend that it refers to a Pierre Guillame (Peter Guillam) a character in John le Carré's Tinker Tailor Soldier Spy who was described by Smiley as ‘cosh and carry.’ In other words it is merely emphasising the fake and fraudulent nature of any hearing I may have.  It’s a case of Iain McNicol eat your heart out!
Far from Lansman stopping the witchhunt and democratising Labour’s disciplinary processes it would appear that if he had been selected as General Secretary he might have made Iain McNicol’s reign seem like the Prague Spring.

What I find most surprising is that I am a relative minnow politically.  If this is how Lansman behaves to me, with a complete lack of any integrity and honesty, how does he treat those he deals with on a day to day basis?

What conception of socialism does Lansman adhere to that causes him to play these deceitful games?
Is the expectation that staff members will lie an implied part of their contracts or is Laura Parker lying of her own accord?

I haven’t received any response yet and on Monday I shall be seriously considering going to the High Court again to obtain an injunction against Lansman and Momentum.

Tony Greenstein


EXCLUSIVE: Lansman’s Lies Revealed in Leaked Memo

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Oh What a Tangled Web Lansman Weaves as  He Practises to Deceive and Expel Me

People will be familiar with the lines from Sir Walter Scott’s Marmion:
Oh! what a tangled web we weave
When first we practise to deceive!

It is a poem that describes Jon Lansman’s behaviour down to a tee as he tries to expel me from Momentum. Lies and deception, saying one thing to one person and another thing to another person, seem to have become a seamless part of Lansman’s political tapestry. It almost seems as if Momentum’s führer, because he is an unelected dictator, has forgotten what the word socialism means.
Tony Benn - Turning in his grave at Lansman's treachery
Tony Benn must be turning in his grave as his former student has turned into a latter day Napoleon Bonaparte. Lansman’s trade is treachery. Tony Benn, unlike his former devotee, was an anti-colonialist and a strong supporter of the Palestinians. Since Lansman claims his political inheritance from Tony Benn we should remind ourselves of Benn’s 5 questions:

If one meets a powerful person--Rupert Murdoch, perhaps, or Joe Stalin or Hitler--one can ask five questions: what power do you have; where did you get it; in whose interests do you exercise it; to whom are you accountable; and, how can we get rid of you? Anyone who cannot answer the last of those questions does not live in a democratic system.”

This is why Momentum is not democratic.  There is no obvious way to get rid of Lansman. If it wasn’t clear already it should be clear now. Lansman’s desire to succeed McNicol was motivated by his desire to continue with the ancie regime, the witchhunt included and using much the same methods. 
The Spider at the Centre of the Web
Below I detail how Lansman, when given the choice between being honest and open, lying and dishonest chooses the latter without fail. Lansman seems to have become so used to wheeling and dealing that he is incapable of behaving in any other way.  Power seems to have gone to his head at the same time as any modicum of socialist principles have left it. In short Lansman has become a classic machine politican devoid of any real ideological commitment.

As people will be aware, I was expelled by the National Kangaroo Court a month ago for crimes such as ‘abusing’ Louise Ellman MP who, in the name of security, supports Israel’s shackling, beating and incarceration of (Palestinian) children.  (see Parliamentary debate on Palestinian child prisoners and detainees, 6.1.16.).

Even the worst New Labour traitors like Blairite John McTernan, who wants the rail unions 'crushed' by the Tories is welcomed into Momentum whereas Lansman is quite happy to carry on with McNicol's witchhunt

John McTernan has not been expelled - on the contrary this New Labour supporter who appeals to the Tories to crush the rail unions is welcomed whereas Lansman seeks the expulsion of socialists 

Despite all the heated rhetoric of Labour’s Zionists, the NKC refrained from accusing me of anti-Semitism.  I have covered the details in the following posts so I won’t rehearse the arguments again. Tony Greenstein - Expelled for Opposing Zionism and the Israeli State – The Fight Goes OnHow to Cure the Labour Party of anti-Semitism – Expel a few Jews!

Collaborating with the false anti-Semitism smear campaign

If it wasn’t clear up till now it should be blindingly obvious that the false anti-Semitism campaign which led to my expulsion is directed primarily at Jeremy Corbyn himself.  Jackie Walker, Marc Wadsworth, myself and others are mere collateral damage. This week there have been two attacks on Jeremy Corbyn suggesting that he tolerates anti-Semitism.  One was about an absurd mural whose ‘anti-Semitism’ is highly debatable and the other is the dodgy dossier of David Collier, much of which is forged, about the Palestine Live Facebook page.  The Zionist ‘charity’ Campaign Against Anti-Semitism has made a second complaint of anti-Semitism against Corbyn.
Right-wing MP Wes Streeting defends Lansman 
It should also be obvious, even to Lansman, that the false anti-Semitism smear campaign has nothing to do with anti-Semitism and everything to do with removing Corbyn.  Why else would the Express, Mail, Sun give such enthusiastic support to the idea that Labour is anti-Semitic?   Yet Lansman is determined to finish off what McNicol began and expel me from Momentum.  Presumably he will do the same to Jackie Walker and Marc Wadsworth if they are expelled.  Momentum has signally failed to oppose the anti-Semitism witchhunt thus far.  It is now proposing to collaborate with it.

Constitution

Momentum has a Constitution, which was imposed by Lansman over a year ago.  It has never been approved, still less debated by Momentum’s membership.  People were given a simple choice when Lansman destroyed the democracy of Momentum – take it or leave it.

The relevant part of the Constitution dealing with members who have been expelled are the following:

5.8     Any member who does not join the Labour Party by 1 July 2017, or ceases to be a member of the Labour Party, or acts inconsistently with Labour Party membership, may be deemed to have resigned.

5.10   Where a member may be deemed to have resigned in accordance with Rules 5.7, 5.8 or 5.9 there will be a right to be heard by the NCG or a delegated panel before a final decision is made.

On 18th March I e-mailed Momentum nationally asking why they had ceased taking my subscription and assuming that they had done so because I had been expelled.

On 22nd March a Santiago Bell-Bradford emailed informing me that I was wrong and the fault lay with Pay Pal. I was happy to accept this and I said I would contact Pay Pal directly.

17 minutes later another email arrived, from Momentum Info, informing me that it had come to their attention (in fact I pointed it out) that I had been expelled and I had 6 days to make written representations and a panel of the National Co-ordinating Group, the mainly unelected group that runs Momentum, or a panel thereof would meet to determine my fate.

Laura Parker - Momentum Co-ordinator - entered into the lying and deception with ease
I wrote back almost immediately complaining that an email such as this should have a name attached to it and attacking their impersonal corporate culture.  In my naivety I didn’t expect that this process was one of dirty tricks but merely the consequence of my expulsion. I pointed out that there seemed to be an omission in their letter, viz. that I had a right to be heard in person.

I also stated that child care responsibilities prevented me from attending on Thursday and I suggested alternative dates. I also stated that ‘Your email gives the distinct impression that this is merely a matter of going through the motions.’ and pointed out that the constitution merely stated that Imay be deemed to have resigned.’  At this stage I was still assuming that the email was sent in good faith.
What changed this was a phone call I received about 15 minutes later from a member of staff Laura Parker.  She phoned me to ‘explain’ why names are never used on emails because of the abuse staff get from Momentum members! This was wholly untrue since I had just received an email in the name of Santiago Bell Bradford. Laura too had recently appended her name to an International Womens Day email. I therefore found it difficult to take her claims seriously and when I tried to discuss the main content of the email she put the phone down.  It was almost as if she was phoning me up to put me off the scent.

I responded to this email rejecting her explanation and making the point that ‘If what you are saying is that large numbers of Momentum members are abusive then you might ask yourself whether it has anything to do with the way you treat people.’

I also received an anonymous email with copies of internal Momentum emails which put everything into context.  The first email was at 00.34 on the morning of Monday 19th March.  Lansman wrote, in his capacity of Chair of the NCG that:

‘We do have to get rid of Greenstein but I am a bit concerned by the process which he will make a big deal out of possibly including lawyers - sorry if I didn’t say this earlier.The bits of the constitution which are relevant here are....

What Lansman was saying was that we may deem me to have resigned but there has to be a process involving the NCG or one they have agreed in which I have the right to be heard (not necessarily in person) before a final decision is made.’

It couldn’t have been clearer.  There was nothing about due process and the right to a fair hearing.  The aim was to be rid of me but they would have to go through the charade of a hearing.  I had the right to be heard but ‘not necessary (sic) in person.’ Quite how Lansman can square having a right to be heard with not being present in person is something I haven’t yet got my head around.  If the constitution didn’t mean in person then it would have used a different formula such as ‘the right to make written submissions.’ It didn’t.

I followed this up with a further email to Lansman stating that if he wishes to engage in these tricks and deceptions then I shall be forced to treat him as I did the Labour Party and apply for an injunction. 

One thing that has puzzled me is the reference in Laura Parker’s email to Lansman:  ‘Santi (in cc) & I already discussed need for Guillame due process’ what is a Guillame due process?  It appears to be some form of internal Momentum office jargon. It has been suggested by a friend that it refers to a Pierre Guillame (Peter Guillam) a character in John le Carré's Tinker Tailor Soldier Spy who was described by Smiley as ‘cosh and carry.’ In other words it is merely emphasising the fake and fraudulent nature of any hearing I may have.  It’s a case of Iain McNicol eat your heart out!
Far from Lansman stopping the witchhunt and democratising Labour’s disciplinary processes it would appear that if he had been selected as General Secretary he might have made Iain McNicol’s reign seem like the Prague Spring.

What I find most surprising is that I am a relative minnow politically.  If this is how Lansman behaves to me, with a complete lack of any integrity and honesty, how does he treat those he deals with on a day to day basis?

What conception of socialism does Lansman adhere to that causes him to play these deceitful games?
Is the expectation that staff members will lie an implied part of their contracts or is Laura Parker lying of her own accord?

I haven’t received any response yet and on Monday I shall be seriously considering going to the High Court again to obtain an injunction against Lansman and Momentum.

Tony Greenstein

The Growing Divorce Between American Jewish Youth and Israel

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This is one of the most positive stories yet to come out of America and indeed the Jewish community as a whole.  Before 1945 the majority of Jews world wide rejected Zionism.  The reasons were quite simple.  Most Jews assert that they are part of the nations amongst whom they live.  Zionism posits that they are members of another nation- the Jewish nation.  Since you can’t be a member of 2 nations at the same time, what this means in practice is that Zionism alienate people from the nations amongst whom they live.

It was the Holocaust, the failure to defeat fascism, which led to support for Zionism and the Israeli state.  It seems as if Zionism had been right all along when it said that anti-Semitism is inherent in the non-Jew, that it could not be fought.  Germany was a terrible example of the truth of this.
However in the 72 years of its existence Israel has been in a permanent state of emergency, an artificial war-like nation that is always seeking an excuse to make war on somebody somewhere.  Israel is a state in search of enemies and where it has none it does its best to invent them.
So in its time we have had Gamel Abden Nasser, the President of Egypt called the Hitler on the Nile, Arafat/Ahmedinajad and anyone else Zionism doesn’t like has been called a new Hitler.  Hamas are genocidal Jewish baby eating monsters as are Hezbollah.  At the same time Israel has dropped the verbal attachment to collectivism as it has adopted neo-liberalism with an enthusiasm not matched anywhere in the world.

Combine all this with the Occupation, the daily human rights abuses, Ahed Tamimi, the racist laws and house demolitions and it is not easy to be a supporter of Israel and yet demand equality at home.
When you find that those in society who are most anti-Semitic, like neo-Nazi Richard Spencer of the alt-Right, Steve Bannon, Le Pen, Geert Wilders, Nick Griffin of the BNP, Pastor John Hagee and assorted racists and fascists all love Israel whilst, at the same not liking Jews then it begins to occur to young Jews that Israel is not all that it is cracked up to be.  In addition a Jewish state suggests that Jews don’t belong in America.
It is therefore not surprising that in this survey of the Bay Area district in California, only 11% of Jews between 18 and 34 were ‘very attached to Israel’.  Even better only 40% of young American Jews are ‘comfortable with the idea of a Jewish state.’

 It is becoming ever clearer that it isn’t Jews but racist non-Jews who most love Israel.  In Fire & Fury it describes how Jared Kushner felt Steve Bannon’s support for Israel was a cover for his anti-Semitism.  Today the normal response from anti-Semites is that they love Israel.

Tony Greenstein

Young Jews Are Actually Winning The Generational War Over Israel

By Batya Ungar-Sargon, The Forward, February 13, 2018
Ever since the late 1960s, Israel has been a defining feature of American Jewish identity. But for the first time in fifty years, this is changing.

Wedge issues have been alienating liberal Jews from Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu’s hawkish, pro-Orthodox, pro-settlement platform, issues like prayer accommodations for Reform and Conservative Jews at the Western Wall and the treatment of the Palestinians in the West Bank and Gaza.
Now, a new study joins mounting evidence that young American Jews are abandoning Israel. And unless this trend is somehow reversed, American Jews in their newfound ambivalence towards Israel will lose a key part of who they are, or at least, who they have been for the past half century.
The study, conducted by Steven Cohen and Jack Ukeles, was commissioned by the Jewish Community Federation of San Francisco, the Peninsula, Marin, and Sonoma Counties. In it, over 3,000 respondents from the Bay Area took an online survey in which they were asked questions about Jewish life.

This is what Cohen and Ukeles found: Only 11% of Jews age 18-34 said they were “very attached to Israel,” as opposed to 25% of those 50 and older. Only 37% of American Jews age 18-34 said the Jewish state was “very important,” compared to 61% of American Jews 50-64 and 68% of American Jews 65 and older.

More shockingly, only 40% of American Jews age 18-34 said they were “comfortable with the idea of a Jewish state,” compared to 64% of American Jews 50-64 and 73% of American Jews 65 and older. And only 30% of American Jews age 18-34 said that they sympathized more with Israel than with the Palestinians when it came to the Israeli-Palestinian conflict, compared to 47% of American Jews 50-64 and 56% of American Jews 65 and older.

A Portrait of Bay Area Jewish Life and Communities

Now, California is the most liberal state in the union, and the Bay Area is its most liberal area, and Jews are the most liberal of America’s ethnic groups, all of which is to say, the data might not be completely representative of the larger Jewish community. But the findings are compatible with a recent Stanford study, which found that Jewish college students don’t want to engage in debates or conflict around Israel, and resist being labeled as pro-Israel either by Israel advocates or by those critical of Israel.

These results were also consistent with the Pew Research Center’s survey of American Jewish life from 2013, as well as with a Pew study that came out last month, which found a deep political polarization and generational divide among Americans generally on the subject of Israel. A full 79% of Republicans say they sympathize more with Israel than the Palestinians, compared to just 27% of Democrats. And while 56% of Americans 50 and over sympathized more with Israel than with the Palestinians, only 32% of 18-29 year olds did.

Just as it’s dividing Americans, Israel is dividing American Jews. The Bay Area study’s researchers concluded that there are four main predictors for feeling a connection to Israel: age, politics, your level of Jewish engagement more generally, and affluence. “People who are conservative, older, more Jewishly engaged or wealthier feel more attached to Israel than people who are liberal, younger, less Jewishly engaged and less affluent,” Steven Cohen, one of the researchers, told me. “All these factors are interrelated.”
Which brings us to young Jews. “What we’re seeing in comparing younger with older Jews is that younger Jews are moving towards a more neutral position regarding Israel,” explained Cohen.
The reason for this is twofold, says Cohen. The first stems from the fact that American Jews are defining their identity in more personal and less collective terms. “They are more spiritual and less ethnic,” he explained. “And Israel falls in the ethnic compartment.”

The second reason younger Jews are less invested in Israel has to do with Israel itself. “Israeli policies are far more appealing to political conservatives and more alienating to political liberals,” said Cohen. “American Jewry outside Orthodoxy remains overwhelmingly liberal and overwhelmingly associated with the Democratic Party.”

But Jews stand to lose a lot more than non-Jewish Democrats when they lose their ability to proudly identify with Israel. The Israeli policies which appeal to conservatives and alienate liberals are actually costing American Jews a core piece of their identity. When young Jews stop identifying with Israel or caring about it, this reinforces a lack of engagement with their Jewish identity overall. Which means that losing our connection to Israel is catastrophically, existentially dangerous for the Jewish diaspora community.
“Israel’s policies are depriving American Jewry of a major pillar of inspiration and mobility,” Cohen said.
Others are worried, too.
“It’s a huge concern,” said Jason Isaacson, Associate Executive Director for Policy of the American Jewish Committee. It’s why AJC puts an emphasis on contrasting Israel with what Isaacson called Israel’s “more autocratic neighbors” and stresses Israel’s “hunger for peace with the Palestinian people whose leadership has resisted the course of the negotiations.”

But Isaacson admits that it’s a case that’s becoming increasingly difficult to make, thanks to the inherent tension between some of Israel’s actions and the liberal values that matter to American Jews – especially young Jews. “Obviously the actions of the government on matters relating to the Palestinians color this,” Isaacson said.
Then you have the Israeli government’s embrace of the Trump administration, which is hardly popular among liberal youngsters. “All this is part of this mix, so cutting through that and introducing the reality of Israel and the reality of Israel’s situation is a challenge,” Isaacson said.

And it’s not just young Jews. Based on polls the AJC regularly conducts, Isaacson says that the mainstream American Jewish community is “uncomfortable with the occupation.” “It’s not in our nature and it’s not the destiny of the Jewish people to occupy another people,” Isaacson said.
But the days when American Jews will support Israel in spite of illiberal policies are coming to an end. Other data strongly suggests that that when American Jews perceive a tension between Israel and leading an ethical life, they will choose their ethics.

Take, for example, the poll that found that American Jews ranked remembering the Holocaust, leading an ethical and moral life, being intellectually curious, and working for justice and inequality as more important to their Jewish identity than Israel. The same poll found that as important as Israel to being Jewish is having a good sense of humor (Israelis disagreed – strongly).

In other words, for huge amounts of Jews, their core beliefs about what is ethical and just — beliefs which preclude the occupation of the Palestinians — are more definitive of who they are as Jews than the nationalism represented by the fact of a Jewish state.
Indeed, nationalism has been tainted by the rise of white supremacists in the US, and its stain is spreading through President Donald Trump to everything he touches – which now includes Israel. And while there is still a minority willing to support Israel on its own terms, the younger generation and the majority of Jews no longer fit into that category.

And yet, we know from the past that American Jews want an Israel they can identify with — fiercely. What’s more, they need it to survive in America as Jews, as Cohen pointed out. Absent the strong ties of community and religion, Israel has provided a source of inspiration that kept Jews connected to each other even in the Diaspora.

Values-driven millennials wont endorse something that doesn’t fit within their belief system. If moneyed American Jews want to strengthen Jewish continuity, they should stop spending money trying to convince American Jews that they aren’t seeing what they say they are seeing when they look at Israel, and start convincing Israeli leaders to pursue policies that American Jews can be proud of.

In fact, this does seem to be happening. Recently, Jonathan Greenblatt of the Anti-Defamation League criticized Netanyahu’s efforts to deport African refugees on the ground that it seems racist. “African refugees, who seem like the Dreamers in the US — young people who by dint of their parents’ decisions have grown up in this country — who speak fluent Hebrew, when you start physically picking them up and sending them over the border back to South Sudan or Rwanda all the while, while you don’t do the same to Ukrainians or Eastern Europeans who overstay their visas, guys, this is not going to end well,” Greenblatt said.
And the AJC’s Isaacson told me he, too, speaks to Israeli officials and leaders about the ways in which they are alienating young Jews. He sees his work as cutting both ways. “It’s hasbara, but it’s not just hasbara,” Isaacson said, referring to Israeli government propaganda presented in a positive light. “It’s action. It’s policies. And obviously these are issues that we discuss intensively and continuously with our friends and brethren in Israel.”

Young American Jews are having an effect on the American Jewish leadership. By refusing to endorse Israel’s shortcomings, they are pushing their leaders to demand change.
It’s a good thing. Our future as Jews – even in the Diaspora – depends on it.

Batya Ungar-Sargon is the opinion editor of the Forward.

As Zionism's Vultures Circle Lansman and Momentum Fall Silent - It’s time to fightback NOT apologise for fake 'anti-Semitism'

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Message to Corbyn – Don’t appease Apartheid – the Zionists will only be satisfied when you are gone

Jewish Voice for Labour banners at demonstration tonight as hundreds of Jews showed that they did not agree with the false 'antisemitism' campaign of the Zionists
Last week Corbyn was the friend of Putin. This week Corbyn is an anti-Semite.  The charge of the false anti-Semitism brigade has been led by Jonathan Arkush, President of the Board of Deputies of British Jews and various right-wing Labour MPs.
  
Could this be the same Jonathan Arkush who welcomed Donald Trump and Steve Bannon, his anti-Semitic alt-Right Advisor, to power?  As the Jewish Forward in America reported ‘Anti-Semitic incidents, from bomb threats and cemetery desecration to assaults and bullying, have surged in the United States since the election of President Donald Trump.’

Throughout his campaign Trump gave a nod and a wink to blatant anti-Semitic messages and caricatures.  As the New Republic 
observed ‘Donald Trump is doing a very strange pro-Israel, anti-Semitic dance.’  And therein lies the clue.  Trump and the alt-Right combine anti-Semitism with vehement support for Zionism.  The alt-Right might not like American Jews very much but they love Israel.
Jonathan Arkush didn't let his opposition to 'antisemitism' prevent him from welcoming Trump as the new President
Naomi Zeveloff of the Forward wrote,an article, in shock and surprise, in the Jewish Forward, How Steve Bannon and Breitbart News Can Be Pro-Israel — and Anti-Semitic at the Same Time.
Historically Zionism and anti-Semitism were two sides of the same racist coin. As the founder of Political Zionism Theodor Herzl wrote:

‘“In Paris ... I achieved a freer attitude towards anti-semitism, which I now began to understand historically and to pardon. Above all I recognise the emptiness and futility of trying to ‘combat’ anti-semitism.”  Zionism has never fought anti-Semitism because it starts from the basis that anti-Semitism is a hereditary disease that all non-Jews possess.  That is what makes this false anti-Semitism
campaign no nauseating.

We have the phenomenon today of people like Richard Spencer, the neo-Nazi founder of the alt-Right declaring that he is a White Zionist.  If you are a white supremacist what is there not to like about Israel. It is the ideal ethno-racial state.  That is the clue to Arkush’s outbursts – it’s not anti-Semitism that he is concerned with but opposition to Israel. If Corbyn had been like Tony Blair, a supporter of Israel and Zionism then he would not have received such treatment.  It is no accident that Arkush demanded today that Jackie Walker, a Black Jewish anti-racist activist be expelled.  This is the logic of the false anti-Semitism campaign – it is anti-Zionist and anti-racist Jews who are their primary targets.  That was why I was expelled.
Chris Williamson is coming under increasing attack by the Zionists
And it’s not only Jewish anti-Zionists and anti-racists.  Chris Williamson MP is also being targeted by this racist scum.  It is the left which is under attack and it is people like Lansman who are scabbing on them.

There is also a certain irony in the Board calling a demonstration to criticise Corbyn's antisemitism.  Throughout its history the Board has done its best to avoid confrontations with  fascists and anti-Semites.

If you want to see a real anti-semitic cartoon then the one above by Netanyahu's son, Yair, is a good example.  Praised by two holoaust deniers, David Duke ex-KKK Grand Wizard and Andrew Anglin, editor of the Daily Stormer
The allegedly anti-Semitic mural that was erased 6 years ago
Only a complete idiot or a Guardian journalist (e.g. Owen Jones) could really believe that this is about a mural that was erased 6 years ago.  Even the Jewish Chronicle some  2½
years ago mentioned this mural as ‘having anti-Semitic undertones’ in other words it wasn’t at all obvious that it was anti-Semitic at all.  It is about bankers living off sweated Black labour. The figures in it are not obviously Jewish and nor do they have the usual features of anti-Semitic cartoons – hooked noses etc. It is more about freemasonry than Jews.

If we are to believe the Mail and Express and the usual gaggle of right-wing Labour MPs – Louise ‘child abuser’ Ellman, Liz Kendall, John Mann etc. then Corbyn has given his support to anti-Semitism in the Labour Party.  It is strange that a Tory tabloid press, which consistently demonises refugees and asylum seekers and Muslims is so hot on ‘anti-Semitism’.
What we are seeing is a frenzied and co-ordinated attack on the Corbyn leadership of the Labour Party.  There is little doubt that this latest campaign has been planned for some time.  It is deliberately intended not merely to derail the local election campaign but to destabilise the Corbyn leadership itself.  We see the same MPs – Streeting, Owen Smith, Chuku Ummuna get up to attack Corbyn. People who normally have no interest in opposing racism suddenly find their voice when it is a privileged white minority that is the centre of attention.
Demonstration on College Green

This is not about hatred of Jews but hatred of Israeli Apartheid

Nothing is more sickening than to see the Board of Deputies pose as opponents of anti-Semitism. This is the same Board of Deputies that in 1936, when the British Union of Fascists tried to march through the Jewish East End of London, told Jewish people to stay at home and keep their heads down.  In the 1970s and 1980’s it did the same when we were fighting the National Front and British National Party.  The Board of Deputies is the equivalent of the Judenrat (Jewish Councils) in Nazi occupied Europe which everywhere helped round up the Jews for the Nazis. 

When it comes to real anti-Semites the Board of Deputies policy has always been to avoid confrontation and public clashes - only anti-Zionism merits their opposition
The Board of Deputies is an undemocratic petit-bourgeois body representing the most reactionary, synagogue going Jews. It does not represent Britain’s secular Jews.  It has never had an interest in opposing racism.  Its sole concern is with support for Israel and Zionism.
The campaign of the Board has nothing to do with anti-Semitism and everything to do with Israel.  Hence why their targets in the Labour Party are mostly Jewish anti-Zionists like Jackie Walker and myself or anti-racists such as Marc Wadsworth.
Anti-Semitism in Britain is the most marginal form of racism. Jews are not subject to state racism. There are no Jewish deaths in custody. Jews are not subject to immigration controls, police violence, economic discrimination or racial attacks.  Anti-Semitism is at an all-time low despite the Zionist attempts to manipulate the statistics.  We don’t see fascists trying to mow down worshippers outside synagogues or firebombing them.  This is the lot of Muslims.
What this campaign is about is Israel.  The Board of Deputies is a notorious supporter of Israel in the name of Jewish people.  The far-Right Campaign Against Anti-Semitism attacks any and all opponents of Zionism and Israel. 

This is why the statement of Jeremy Corbyn apologising for his view 6 years ago that the mural should not be taken down in the interests of free speech was a mistake. Even worse was his apology for the ‘hurt’ caused by ‘anti-Semitism’ in the Labour Party.  

Jeremy Corbyn has nothing to apologise for.  There is no anti-Semitism in the Labour Party.  There may be a few people with anti-Semitic ideas in their heads but that is caused by Zionism primarily.  If you tell people repeatedly that everything Israel does is as a Jewish state in the name of Jewish people, some idiots will believe them.  However the cause of their ‘anti-Semitism’ is the actions of Zionism and its apologists.

Corbyn and his advisers such as Eton educated Seamus Milne don’t seem to recognise that because the Zionists are not interested in anti-Semitism, they are not interested in Corbyn’s apologies for anti-Semitism either.  They have one concern and one concern only.  Seeing an end to Corbyn’s leadership of the Labour Party.

Unfortunately Momentum, which is led by Jon Lansman nationally has continually given credence to the idea that the Labour Party is overrun by anti-Semitism.  Momentum's political paralysis at the present time is shocking and is almost entirely due to Lansman's soft Zionism.

Corbyn’s reaction to this campaign should be simple. He opposes anti-Semitism but he also opposes the weaponisation of anti-Semitism against people who are neither anti-Semitic or racist. Instead of standing up to Zionism and the apologists for Israel’s apartheid system Corbyn has prostrated himself before them. Having begged their forgiveness he has been kicked in the teeth. It is as embarrassing as it is futile.  Corbyn has a fine record of opposition to racism and support for anti-imperialist causes which he is squandering. 


You cannot appease racists or reactionaries.  Everytime Corbyn apologises or says that he is not an anti-Semite Arkush and his people laugh at him.  They are not interested in fighting anti-Semitism but in eradicating support for the Palestinians.  If Seamus Milne had his wits about him he would realise that there is nothing Corbyn can do, bar resigning, that will please the Zionist movement in this country.

What is most significant is the silence of Momentum.  You might think that at this of all times that Momentum’s 36,000 members would be called upon to demonstrate against the Zionists tonite.
Not a bit of it.  Lansman, having given credence to the Zionists’ false anti-Semitism campaign has nothing to say.  Having buttered up the corrupt Jeremy Newmark, Momentum’s Dictator is at a loss for words.
Fake Zionist 'charity' calls a demonstration against Corbyn
It is crucial that Momentum groups ignore Lansman and the undemocratic structures he has created and mobilise to counter the demonstration of the CAA.  The vultures are circling and we should be doing our best to oppose them, not pretending they are not here.

The time has come to fight back not appease these racist bastards.  The first thing we should do is to ensure that there is a massive opposition to the proposed demonstration on April 8thwhich the misnamed Campaign Against Anti-Semitism has called.  Jon Lansman will do his best to ignore it or pretend that nothing is happening but we should ignore Lansman.


Below is a statement from Labour Against the Witchhunt and then there is an excellent article by Jonathan Cook, a journalist who lives in Nazareth on the implications of what is happening.  Beneath that is a short article from Tom Pride on the false accusations of anti-Semitism.   
But above all the Left in Labour has got to wake up and realise that the MPs who are today attacking Corbyn are not going to give up.  Either we replace them or they will replace us.  If the bulk of the Parliamentary Labour Party is left in place, then if Corbyn comes to power they will, at a time of their choosing rebel and wield the knife.  Corbyn has not, as Jonathan Cook says below, demonstrated that he has a backbone.  He has once again caved in instead of standing up to theses racists.  We have to therefore do what he refuses to do which is to confront Zionism head on.  In so doing we also have to bypass the increasingly irrelevant national structures of Momentum.

Demonstration outside Parliament today

Statement of Labour Against the Witch-hunt

Defend Corbyn! Anti-Zionism does not equal Anti-Semitism!
We support calls for a counter-mobilisation to the cynical protest called by the so-called Campaign Against Anti-Semitism on April 8.

The CAA is not concerned about anti-Semitism. Their purpose is  to force Jeremy Corbyn to resign as Labour Party leader. Jeremy Corbyn is clearly no anti-Semite. The fact that he and many of his supporters campaign for the rights of Palestinians has been used to constantly undermine his leadership. It has turned out to be the most successful tool in the Right’s armoury in the ongoing civil war in the party.
Anti-Zionism does not equal anti-Semitism. We will continue to fight for the right to criticise the atrocities committed by the Israeli government against the Palestinians. We will continue to stand with oppressed people. And we will continue to speak out on behalf of all of those accused of false and trumped-up charges of anti-Semitism.

We stand with Jeremy Corbyn in this latest dishonest and cynical attack against him. But we also urge him and members of the Labour Party NEC to put a decisive end to the witch-hunt against his left-wing supporters in the Labour Party. The last two years have clearly shown that appeasing the right does not work.  
After a short reprieve following Jeremy Corbyn’s unexpected success in Britain’s general election last year, when he only narrowly lost the popular vote, most of the Labour parliamentary party are back, determined to bring him down. And once again, they are being joined by the corporate media in full battle cry.
Last week, Corbyn was a Soviet spy. This week we’re in more familiar territory, even if it has a new twist: Corbyn is not only a friend to anti-semites, it seems, but now he has been outed as a closet one himself.
In short, the Blairites in the parliamentary party are stepping up their game. Corbyn’s social justice agenda, his repudiation of neoconservative wars of aggression masquerading as “humanitarianism” – lining the coffers of the west’s military-industrial elites – is a genuine threat to those who run our societies from the shadows.
The knife of choice for the Labour backstabbers this time is a wall mural removed from East London in 2012. At that time, before he became Labour leader, Corbyn expressed support on Facebook for the artist, Kalen Ockerman, known as Mear One. Corbyn observed that a famous anti-capitalist mural by the left-wing Mexican artist Diego Rivera was similarly removed from Manhattan’s Rockefeller Centre in 1934.
Interestingly, the issue of Corbyn’s support for the mural – or at least the artist – originally flared in late 2015, when the Jewish Chronicle unearthed his Facebook post. Two things were noticeably different about the coverage then.
First, on that occasion, no one apart from the Jewish Chronicle appeared to show much interest in the issue. Its “scoop” was not followed up by the rest of the media. What is now supposedly a major scandal, one that raises questions about Corbyn’s fitness to be Labour leader, was a non-issue two years ago, when it first became known.
Second, the Jewish Chronicle, usually so ready to get exercised at the smallest possible sign of anti-semitism, wasn’t entirely convinced back in 2015 that the mural was anti-semitic. In fact, it suggested only that the mural might have “antisemitic undertones” – and attributed even that claim to Corbyn’s critics.
And rather than claiming, as the entire corporate media is now, that the mural depicted a cabal of Jewish bankers, the Chronicle then described the scene as “a group of businessmen and bankers sitting around a Monopoly-style board and counting money”. By contrast, the Guardian abandoned normal reporting conventions yesterday to state in its news – rather than comment – pages unequivocally that the mural was “obviously antisemitic”.
Not that anyone is listening now, but the artist himself, Kalen Ockerman, has said that the group in his mural comprised historical figures closely associated with banking. His mural, he says, was about “class and privilege”, and the figures depicted included both “Jewish and white Anglos”. The fact that he included famous bankers like the Rothschilds (Jewish) and the Rockefellers (not Jewish) does not, on the face of it, seem to confirm anti-semitism. They are simply the most prominent of the banking dynasties most people, myself included, could name. These families are about as closely identified with capitalism as it is possible to be.
There is an argument to be had about the responsibilities of artists – even street artists – to be careful in their visual representations. But Ockerman’s message was not a subtle or nuanced one. He was depicting class war, the war the capitalist class wages every day on the weak and poor. If Ockerman’s message is inflammatory, it is much less so than the reality of how our societies have been built on the backs and the suffering of the majority.
Corbyn has bowed to his critics – a mix of the Blairites within his party and Israel’s cheerleaders – and apologised for offering support to Ockerman, just as he has caved in to pressure each time the anti-semitism card has been played against him.
This may look like wise, or safe, politics to his advisers. But these critics have only two possible outcomes that will satisfy them. Either Corbyn is harried from the party leadership, or he is intimidated into diluting his platform into irrelevance – he becomes just another compromised politician catering to the interests of the 1 per cent.
The sharks circling around him will not ignore the scent of his bloodied wounds; rather, it will send them into a feeding frenzy. As hard as it is to do when the elites so clearly want him destroyed, Corbyn must find his backbone and start to stand his ground.
UPDATE:
This piece in the liberal Israeli newspaper Haaretz by their senior columnnist Anshel Pfeffer sums up a lot of the sophistry (intentional or otherwise) underscoring the conflation of leftwing critiques of neoliberalism and globalism with rightwing ultra-nationalism and anti-semitism.
Pfeffer writes:
The conspiracy theories of globalist bankers utilizing mainstream media and corrupt neoliberal politicians to serve their selfish sinister purposes, rather than those of ordinary people, are identical whether from left or right.
And on either side, most of the theorists will never admit to being anti-Semitic. They are just “anti-racist” or “anti-imperialist” if on the left, or “pro-Israel” on the right. And most of them really believe they have nothing against Jews, even while parroting themes straight out of the Protocols [of the Elders of Zion].
Notice the problem here. If you are a radical leftist who believes, as generations of leftists before you have done, that military, political, media, and financial elites operate in the shadows to promote their interests, to wage class war, then not only are you a conspiracy theorist, according to Pfeffer, but you are by definition anti-semitic as well. If you believe that an Establishment or a Deep State exists to advance its interests against the great majority, you must hate Jews.
The logic of Corbyn’s critics has rarely been articulated so forthrightly and so preposterously as it is here by Pfeffer. But make no mistake, this is the logic of his critics.


by Tom PrideMarch 26, 2018

Jonathan Arkush - the President of the Board of Deputies of British Jews  - is smearing Jeremy Corbyn with lies about anti-semitism.

But why would he do that?

Well, you see, what Arkush and the mainstream press is not mentioning, is that Arkush is more than a tiny bit biased when it comes to Jeremy Corbyn.
Because Arkush is a Tory. A right-wing one.

Here's Arkush praising Theresa Mayand her “exceptionally warm and friendly" DUP coalition partners in the Jerusalem Post:



I can't tell you how so, so angry it makes me that someone could cynically use such terrible suffering, such utter, utter tragedy and mass murder for petty party political point scoring.

At this point, it's also worth pointing out that my own great-grandmother and other members of my family were murdered in a Nazi concentration camp for being Jewish.

Here's what my dad wrote about it on Facebook last Holocaust Memorial Day - he puts it so much better than I ever could:

Today is Holocaust Memorial Day.

I can’t help but get upset and very angry about something that happened so many years ago.

My grandmother on my father's side a frail, old, innocent, lady, who never did anyone any harm was stripped naked herded into a “shower room” in front of young German soldiers, probably laughing, then gassed, and dumped in a pit! 

I sadly never had the chance to meet her, but I often think of her and wonder how could any other human do that to an old lady.

Very hard to forgive!


So before anyone starts to accuse me of anti-semitism for supporting Jeremy Corbyn - don't even f*cking think about it.

EXCLUSIVE - The letter that Corbyn intended to send to Jonathan Arkush at the Board of Deputies

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The only way to stop the ‘anti-Semitism’ attacks is to stand up to them and not to throw your friends to the wolves



In the Jewish News last Monday Jonathan Arkush of the Board of Deputies of British Jews called for the removal of the whip from Chris Williamson MP.  Williamson’s crime was saying that it was a pleasure to share a stage with Jackie Walker and for calling for the reinstatement of Ken Livingstone.  Tonight we learn that Christine Shawcroft has been forced to quit as Chair of the Disputes Committee for supporting a suspended member, Alan Bull.

Jeremy Corbyn is in full retreat throwing his political friends to the wolves.  Instead of standing up against this McCarthyist witch-hunt by Israel’s supporters he is like a ship without sails at the mercy of a storm.  We have to be clear.  Appeasement doesn’t work it only encourages them. 
Christine Shawcroft is the latest victim of the anti-semitism purge
We now have demandsthat those who criticised the far-Right ‘Jewish’ demonstration outside Parliament should also be disciplined.  This is a demonstration that included the anti-Catholic DUP and Norman Tebbit.  The little darlings have apparently been subject to abuse.  This is a complete lie.  I was there and I was called a ‘traitor’ repeatedly.  I saw people shouted down and Zionists openly parading their racist contempt for the Palestinians.  Ben Southern-Thomas, a young JVL member “came away crying” after anti-Semitic abuse from Zionist demonstrators who told him he was “not a real Jew” and was just “pretending to be a Jew.”

Last night I had a dream that I had been given the task of drafting a letter from Jeremy in response to Jonathan Arkush of the Board of Deputies letter.
There are some forms of anti-semitism which are perfectly acceptable to Tory Arkush
Dear Jonathan,

Thank you for your letterof 26th March. You wrote about an ‘institutional failure to properly address Jewish concerns’ giving the Chakrabarti Report as ‘the most glaring example.’  I could not agree more.

I have long wanted to implement Chakrabarti’s proposals regarding natural justice and due process. Unfortunately we have only just removed the last remaining obstacle to their implementation, namely Iain McNicol. Try as I might McNicol insisted on retaining the principle of Israeli military courts, namely that you were guilty unless proven otherwise.  Indeed Labour’s National Constitutional Committee has I understand much the same conviction rate as Israel’s military courts – 99.74%.
Even now we are still experiencing problems with Sam Matthews who is refusing to depart.
You speak of my failure to ‘tackle anti-Semitism’ and that I issue ‘empty statements’whilst doing ‘nothing to address or understand it.’.  Let me assure you that I take all racism extremely seriously. That is a consequence of what you call my far left worldview’.

That was why I refused to welcome the election of Donald Trump who, in the words of the Washington Post, had presided over a campaign in which anti-Semitism was not merely an undertone but the melody.  As Dana Milbank observed‘Donald Trump and his surrogates have been playing footsie with American neo-Nazis for months.’  The final ad of Trump’s campaign featured three Jewish bankers – George Soros, Janet Yellen and Lloyd Blankfein alleging that they were part of a ‘global power structure’.
That is why I was so surprised to hear that you had extended such an effusive welcometo Trump. The Jewish Chronicle reported that British Jews have responded angrily’ to your statement. I would be interested to know why you welcomed to power alt-Right politicians, such as Steve Bannon and Sebastian Gorka, who are steeped in anti-Semitism.  Ha’aretz noted that Gorka, despite his links to a Hungarian neo-Nazi group was welcomed by the Jerusalem Post conference last year like a superstar.
What I don’t understand, and perhaps you would help me, is that we all agree that it is anti-Semitic to blame Jews for what Israel does, yet you say that criticism of Zionism, the ideology of Israel, is anti-Semitic.  Both can’t be true.  If you say that criticising Zionism and Israel is anti-Semitic you must also be saying that Jews and Israel/Zionism are synonymous.  Which is it?  You can’t have your matzot and eat them!  You write:

When Jews complain about an obviously anti-Semitic mural in Tower Hamlets, Corbyn of course supports the artist. Hizbollah commits terrorist atrocities against Jews, but Corbyn calls them his friends and attends pro-Hizbollah rallies in London. Exactly the same goes for Hamas. Raed Salah says Jews kill Christian children to drink their blood. Corbyn opposes his extradition and invites him for tea at the House of Commons. These are not the only cases.

The problem with all your letter, in which you say that I have ‘sided with anti-Semites rather than Jews’ is that you give a host of examples – none of which are true.
For example you say that Hizbollah commits terrorist atrocities against Jews. Hizbollah has got nothing to do with British Jews. Hizbollah didn’t even exist until Israel attacked Lebanon in 1982.  Its real crime is defending Lebanon against Israeli invasions and forcing Israel out. 

You demonise Hamas but it was Israel that created Hamas as a counter-weight to secular Palestinian nationalism. See The Washington PostWall Street Journal and The Intercept. 

You mention that I took tea with Raed Salah, who you allege ‘says Jews kill Christian children to drink their blood.  This too is untrue.  Raed in fact said ‘Whoever wants a more thorough explanation, let him ask what used to happen to some children in Europe, whose blood was mixed in with the dough of the holy bread.” There was no reference here to Jews. Raed insists he was referring to the practices of the Inquisition not Jews! That was why he was acquitted by the Jerusalem Magistrates Court and it was only on appeal that he was convicted by the higher colonial District Court. Raed Salah was locked up by Theresa May on the basis of a poem that was changed by the Jerusalem Post so as to make him appear anti-Semitic. Mr Justice Ockleton of the Upper Tribunal freedhim.  You are even more confused when you say I opposed his extradition.  There was no extradition! 

You say that ‘Again and again, Jeremy Corbyn has sided with anti-Semites rather than Jews. At best, this derives from the far left's obsessive hatred of Zionism, Zionists and Israel.  Why when you deny that this is about Israel do you deliberately conflate anti-Zionism with anti-Semitism? 
This poster showing George Soros, saying "Let's not allow Soros to have the last laugh!" was part of Netanyahu's friend Viktor Orban''s campaign. Someone has written "dirty Jew" on his forehead
You say that ‘Rightly or wrongly, Jeremy Corbyn is now the figurehead for an anti-Semitic political culture’.  This is mere hyperbole. I have always opposed racism. My reasons for supporting the Palestinians and opposing Zionism are the same as my reasons for opposing Apartheid in South Africa.  As you will of course know, Israel and South Africa were the best of friends. That is why people like Archbishop Desmond Tutu saythat Israeli apartheid is worse than that in South Africa.
Let me assure you that it is because I am opposed to anti-Semitism that I was appalled when Netanyahu paid a friendly visit to Hungary’s Prime Minister Viktor Orban last July just after he had initiated an anti-Semitic campaign against George Soros, the American Jewish philanthropist and a childhood survivor of the Hungarian Holocaust. Netanyahu supported Orban because he too hated Soros on account of his financing Israeli human rights organisations. According to the Jerusalem Post Netanyahu is now blaming Soros for helping the 40,000 Black African refugees he is trying to deport.  Maybe that too is anti-Semitic?

Orban is currently engaged in trying to rehabilitate the pro-Nazi leader of war-time Hungary Admiral Horthy who presided over the deportation of nearly ½ million Jews to Auschwitz yet Israel has nothing to say on this. 
Yair's cartoon showing Soros as the financial manipulator, complete with Lizard and a stereotypical anti-semitic cartoon of a Jew

The neo-Nazi Daily Stormer welcomes Yair Netanyahu's antisemitic cartoon
What I find strange is that Israel has such friendly relations with all the anti-Semitic regimes in Eastern Europe – from the Czech Republic to Poland. Indeed it is hard to think of a single neo-Nazi or far-Right movement in Europe that isn’t pro-Israel! Netanyahu’s own son Yair produced a genuinely anti-Semitic cartoon attacking George Soros, complete with a Lizard and a stereotypical image of a Jewish financier. Young Yair even received praise from David Duke, ex-KKK Grand wizard and Andrew Anglin, the neo-Nazi editor of the Daily Stormer.

What I find particularly difficult to understand and perhaps you could help me, is that when the fascists tried to march through the Jewish East End of London in the 1930’s, the Board of Deputies told Jewsto ignore them, stay indoors and leave it to the Police.  The same happened with the National Front in the 1970’s.  Why is it that the Board is prepared to stage demonstrations over non-existent anti-Semitism but runs away from the real thing?

Just one last favour Jonathan. You rightly ask me to remove anyone who is anti-Semitic from the Labour Party. Can I ask that you return the favour?  Jonathan Hoffman is a delegate to the Board.  He has been filmed demonstrating alongside Paul Besser, former Intelligence Officer of Britain First as well as with the EDL.  I am sure you will agree with me that the best place to start fighting anti-Semitism is at home.
Kind Regards
 
Jeremy

A Very British Coup – How the British Establishment and the Israeli Embassy are Using ‘anti-Semitism’ to Destabilise Jeremy Corbyn

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What is the purpose of Momentum if, during a political crisis, it remains silent?


Was the most recent false-antisemitism crisis really caused by an erased 6 year old mural?
Blumenthall gives a good background to what is happening at the current moment.  The right-wing of Labour, led by Chuka Ummuna, Wes Streeting and other nonentities, is determined that Corbyn must be ousted.  The only quandary they face is how and when.

The events this week when around 50 Labour MPs joined a Zionist rally outside Parliament, which masqueraded as a Jewish rally against Anti-Semitism, are significant.  This rally had at its core not only the far-Right of British Zionism, people such as David Collier and Jonathan Hoffman – both of them collaborators with Britain’s neo-Nazi right, but more mainstream reactionaries such as Norman Tebbit, Sajid David and the anti-Catholic Democratic Unionist Party. 
Under attack
Such is the totalitarian make-up of the Zionists that they want to make criticism of this rally a disciplinary offence in itself!  Just about everyone who displeases them is now an ‘anti-Semite’.  It is now seriously argued that denying Jews (not anti-Zionist Jews of course) the ‘right to define’ their alleged oppression, is itself anti-Semitic.  Soon coughing in public could become a form of anti-Semitism.

The Jewish Labour Movement and Labour Friends of Israel (which don’t hesitate to demonstrate alongside outright fascists who support Israel) seems to forget that Israeli standards of democracy haven’t yet been imported into Britain!  The Daily Expresscites a letter from the Board of Deputies and the Jewish Leadership Council to Corbyn saying that it was a "disgrace" that people who joined this demonstration had been subjected to "abuse and insults".  In fact it was the other way around.  It was the anti-Zionist Jews who were abused. I was called a ‘traitor’ on 2 occasions (Zionists assume that all Jews owe an automatic loyalty to Zionism and Israel even if you are British).
Momentum's leader Jon Lansman
It would be difficult for the Right to attack Corbyn over austerity.  The cuts are not that popular and Corbyn has succeeded in shifting Labour away from things like cutting benefits to the poor in favour of taxing the rich.  The supporters of neo-liberalism in the PLP such as Chris Leslie find it difficult to motivate people behind the privatisation of the NHS. That is why ‘anti-Semitism’ is such a useful weapon.  Who could possibly not oppose anti-Semitism?  All the Zionists have to do is to redefine anti-Semitism as opposition to or criticism of Israel and hey presto, they can attack the Left with impunity.
An article I wrote at the time of the last anti-Corbyn coup
The only problem the Zionists face is that most people refuse to accept the ridiculous International Holocaust Remembrance Alliance definition of anti-Semitism– a treatise consisting of 450+ words if you include 11 illustrative examples, 7 of which relate to criticism of Israel.  To most ordinary people anti-Semitism is simply hatred or hostility to Jews as Jews.  That is why the demonstration by an alleged 1,500 people last Monday (it was nearer 500) has left most people unmoved.  No one in their right mind accepts the lie that anti-Semitism is on the increase and is now a major danger.  Most Jews let alone non-Jews don’t accept it and that is the problem for the Labour Right.

That is also why Jeremy Corbyn should get a backbone and stop apologising all the time to these racists.  He should stand up to their attacks and defy these creatures to do their worst. If that provokes outright rebellion from within the PLP so much the better.  It is better to get rid of sewer rats like John Mann before rather than after an election.  Corbyn should not hesitate to call out those whose real goal is to remove him from the leadership. 
Lansman entirely at home (for once)
It is a pitiful spectacle to watch Corbyn demeaning and humiliating himself, making repeated apologies for not having recognised that a disputed mural, erased 6 years ago, might have been anti-Semitic.  It is not at all clear that it was directed against Jews at all.

Having built an organisation of 36,000 members, Momentum has proven totally useless in this crisis. Why? Because Momentum is the plaything of one man, Jon Lansman and a handful of cronies on the National Coordinating Committee, the majority of whom are not elected.   Momentum has no democratic internal structures, no policy making conferences, no regional structures, no liberation strands (Black, Women, Youth etc.) and it is owned by one person – Jon Lansman.
Labour's ghost from the past
That is why after this self-inflicted crisis is over people have to demand the democratisation of Momentum and an end to the rule of one man.  If Lansman is seriously concerned with supporting  the Corbyn leadership as opposed to promoting the interests of the Israeli state, then he will bow to the will of the members.  Because there is no doubt that the Right in the PLP is going to strike again – the only uncertainty is whether it is before the election or after it.  That is why we need to be serious about reselection.  If Corbyn wins the election and becomes Prime Minister then he is going to be even more at the mercy of the likes of Hilary Benn.  Either we force them out now or they will force Corbyn out later.

I also include an excellent article by Israeli based journalist Jonathan Cook The sharks circling around Corbyn scent blood

Tony Greenstein
Inside the pro-Israel campaign to crush Labour’s left-wing insurgency.
May 6, 2016, 5:30 AM GMT

Chris Mullins’ 1982 political thriller, A Very British Coup, introduced British readers to a Marxist former steelworker named Harry Perkins who sends his country’s political elite into a frenzy by winning a dramatic election for prime minister. Desperate to foil his plans to remove American military bases from British soil, nationalize the country’s industries and abolish the aristocratic House of Lords, a convergence of powerful forces led by MI5 security forces initiate a plot to undermine Perkins through surveillance and subterfuge. When their machinations fail against a resolute and surprisingly wily politician, the security forces resort to fabricating a scandal, hoping to force him to abdicate power to a more pliable member of his own party.
Joan Ryan - who claimed the maximum expenses in 2006/7 and was runner up in 2005/6
Adapted into an award-winning 1988 television mini-series, Mullins’ script closely resembles the real-life campaign to destroy the Labour Party leader Jeremy Corbyn. A left-wing populist with pronounced anti-imperialist leanings, Corbyn is seen by his opponents in much the same light as Perkins was in Mullins’ treatment: “You’re a bad dream. I could always comfort myself with the thought that socialism would never work,” Percy Brown, an aristocratic MI5 chief sworn to the prime minister’s ruin, told his enemy. “But you, Mr. Perkins, could destroy everything that I’ve ever believed in.”

After years as a backbencher in parliament railing against Tony Blair’s business-friendly agenda and mobilizing opposition to the invasion of Iraq, Corbyn emerged last summer as a frontrunner for Labour leadership. Against vociferous opposition, he stunned his opponents with a landslide victory, winning nearly 60% of the vote with help from a grassroots coalition of Muslim immigrants, blue-collar workers and youthful left-wing activists.

Just as Corbyn’s success stunned the party establishment, his rise infuriated the country’s powerful pro-Israel forces. Corbyn’s parliamentary office has served as a hub for the Palestine solidarity movement and his name has been featured prominently on resolutions condemning Israeli atrocities. At an election forum convened last year by the Labour Friends of Israel, Corbyn redoubled his support for key components of the boycott, divestment and sanctions (BDS) movement that is pressuring Israel to respect the human rights of Palestinians while Blair’s favored candidate, Liz Kendall, said she would fight it with “every fiber in my body.”

Just after Corbyn’s victory, Chris Mullins predicted that Labour’s new leader would face a blizzard of smears not unlike the kind Perkins confronted. “The media will go bananas, of course,” Mullins told the Independent. “There will be attempts to paint [Corbyn] as a Trot[skyite]. I think that may already have started. Every bit of his past life will be raked through and every position he has ever taken will be thrown back under him. Former wives and girlfriends will be sought out. His sanity will be questioned.”

Distracting from inequality

Conservative Prime Minister David Cameron set the tone for the coming smear campaign when he tweeted a day after Corbyn’s election, “The Labour Party is now a threat to our national security, our economic security and your family’s security.”

It was around this time that allegations about Labour’s “antisemitism problem” began to gain steam. As this week’s local elections approached, the chorus of outrage erupted into the mainstream, with outlets from the Daily Mail—the tabloid still owned by the Rothermere family that supported the British Union of Fascists and expressed admiration for Hitler during the 1930s—to the liberal Guardian howling about a plague of Jew hatred spreading through the ranks of Labour since it opened up to the so-called Corbynistas. Even the Israeli government has gotten in the act, with its ambassador denouncing Corbyn on national TV while Israel’s Labor Party threatens a boycott of its sister party in the UK.


Behind the manufactured scandal is a real struggle over the future course of Labour. The right-leaning elements empowered by Tony Blair are determined to suppress the influence of an increasingly youthful, ethnically diverse party base that views the hawkish, pro-business policies of the past with general revulsion. With the British middle class in shambles after three decades of constant benefit cuts and a new generation in open revolt, Labour’s Blairite wing has embraced a cynical strategy to shatter the progressive coalition that brought Corbyn to power.

By branding the solidarity with the Palestinian cause flourishing among British Muslims and radical leftists as a form of antisemitism, the elements arrayed against Corbyn have managed to manufacture a scandal that supersedes more substantive issues. Right-wing bloggers have been dispatched to trawl through the social media postings of newer Labour members to dredge up evidence of offensive commentary about Israel and Jews or invent it when none exists. In the paranoid atmosphere Corbyn’s foes have cultivated, virtually any fulsome expression of anti-Zionism seems likely to trigger a suspension.

For Prime Minister Cameron, the scandal generated by Corbyn’s intra-party foes provides a chance to distract from the row over his family hiding its wealth in an offshore tax shelter, the chaos over the Brexit debate and the disastrous results of his Islamophobic attacks on the Muslim candidate for London mayor, Sadiq Khan. Among the most eager to join the pile-on was London Mayor Boris Johnson, who claimed “a virus of antisemitism hangs over Labour”just days after ranting that Barack Obama’s “part-Kenyan” heritage gave him “an ancestral dislike of the British Empire.”
Suddenly, Corbyn and allies who launched their careers in grassroots anti-racism struggles find themselves on the defensive about bigotry—and from a few accusers who have actual records of racist rhetoric. With nearly 20 party members already suspended for supposedly antisemitic comments, the witch hunt claimed Jackie Walker, a veteran black-Jewish anti-racism activist and leftwing Labour stalwart. Walker’s sin was harshly condemning the transatlantic slave trade as the “African holocaust.” Filched from her social media postings and publicized by a group called the Israel Advocacy Movement, her comments triggered an immediate suspension. “If they can do this to me,” Walker said, “then they can do it to anyone.”

Those behind the escalating crusade will not be satisfied until they claim Corbyn as well. Indeed, the manufactured scandal around antisemitism appears to be just one step on the way to a bloodless coup.
Fabricating a scandal

Far from the gaze of the mainstream British media, a researcher named Jamie Stern-Weiner has conducted perhaps the most thorough investigation into the claims of an “antisemitism problem” within Labour. Stern-Weiner found that out of 400,000 party members, perhaps a dozen had been suspended for supposedly antisemitic remarks.

Surveying the individual cases, he discovered that many, if not most, of the offending comments related to Israel and Israeli policy, not Jews per se. Stern-Weiner went on to demonstrate that Guido Fawkes, the right-wing gossip blogger responsible for a substantial number of the antisemitism outrages that erupted in the British media, had doctored passages from Labour members’ social media postings to make them appear more offensive than they actually were.

The chasm between this proffered evidence and the sweeping condemnations which have appeared in the press…is truly vast,” Stern-Weiner concluded. “Even were all the above charges true, what would it prove? The social media postings of a handful of mostly junior party members have no necessary representative significance, and plainly do not demonstrate widespread antisemitism.”

Antisemitism without evidence

Though British press has framed Labour’s “antisemitism problem” as a recently discovered and entirely organic phenomenon, elements in the party have been pushing it since the race for Labour leadership. And many of the offending social media posts were published during Israel’s assault on the Gaza Strip in 2014, when the party was under the command of Ed Miliband, a Jew who issued stern criticism of Israel at the time.

The issue gained steam in February, when Alex Chalmers resigned last February as the vice-chair of the Oxford University Labour Club. According to Chalmers, Palestine solidarity activists had taken over his school’s Labour chapter and made life unbearable for Jewish students. He rattled off a litany of incidents that constituted antisemitism in his view. Almost all of them related to Israel, from angry remarks about its government and supporters to chants in support of Hamas. Chief among Chalmers’ grievances was “members of the Executive throwing around the term ‘Zio’”— a shorthand for Zionist that he viewed as the very embodiment of antisemitic rhetoric.

Chalmers provided no evidence to support his inflammatory allegations. And none was required for the outrage to make its way across the Atlantic. Within days of Chalmers’ resignation, his claims were repeated in the opinion section of the New York Times by Roger Cohen, a pro-Israel columnist who favors the permanent forced relocation of millions of Palestinians to countries outside their homeland. Rehashing Chalmers’ unsourced accusations, Cohen proclaimed that the Labour Party had become infected with “an antisemitism of the Left” under the watch of Corbyn.

Unmentioned in Cohen’s column were the ulterior sectarian motives Chalmers had deliberately concealed. As journalist Asa Winstanley revealed, Chalmers had been an intern at BICOM, the main arm of the UK’s pro-Israel lobby, which recently published the following call to arms: “Save your pitch fork for Corbyn.”Chalmers’ online bio noting his position at BICOM was mysteriously deleted around the time he publicized his allegations about antisemitism at Oxford. When Winstanley contacted Chalmers about the internship, he set his Twitter account to “private” and went off the radar.

As Perkins reflected in A Very British Coup, “By the time you prove anything, the damage is done.”

Red Ken’s coup de grace

In late April, the mounting witch hunt claimed its first high-profile victims. First was MP Naz Shah, a rising star in Labour and outspoken Muslim feminist. Shah was outed by a right-wing gossip blogger for promoting a tongue-in-cheek Facebook meme that imagined the geopolitical benefits of moving Israel to the United States. Following her suspension, Former London Mayor Ken Livingstone, a standard bearer of the British left who helped lead the major anti-racism campaigns of the 1980s, took to the airwaves to defend Shah. (Livingstone was among the figures who inspired the protagonist Perkins in Mullins’ novel.)

During an indisputably counter-productive and possibly alcohol-influenced performance, Livingstone rambled that Hitler had, in fact, provided support to the Zionist movement. Within hours, he too was suspended. As with Shah, the allegations of antisemitism that followed his suspension centered around impolitic commentary related to Israel, not Jews as a whole.

Livingstone might have been guilty of going off script, but he was not necessarily incorrect. The history of Nazi Germany’s robust economic and political collaboration with the Zionist movement throughout the 1930s is widely known and well-documented—even Elie Wiesel has openly reeled at the record of Zionist cooperation with Hitler’s minions.

Ignoring the clear context behind Livingstone’s remarks, the Guardian casually dismissed them as “bizarre,” wondering “what point he was trying to make.”MP John Mann, a backbencher from the right wing of Labour, went a step further, hectoring Livingstone before a gaggle of cameras about his supposed ignorance of Hitler’s evil. “There’s a book called Mein Kampf!” Mann bellowed. “You’ve obviously never heard of it.”

A high-level 'civil targeted assassination'

Behind the furore over Israel criticism lay a constellation of political forces exploiting the issue to suppress the grassroots insurgency in Labour.

Under Blair’s watch, powerful pro-Israel elements entrenched themselves in the party, reversing the strong support Labour demonstrated for the Palestinian cause during the Thatcher era. Membership in Labour Friends of Israel (LFI), a pro-Israel lobbying faction, became a must for members of parliament seeking ministerial positions under Blair and his successor, Gordon Brown. Among LFI’s most generous funders is Baron Sainsbury of Turville, a reclusive billionaire who is heir to the Sainsbury supermarket fortune. Sainsbury is also a key funder of Progress, the faction established by pro-Blair elements to promote his agenda in the mid-1990s.

Members of both LFI and Progress have led the crusade to paint Corbyn and his allies as a band of raving antisemites. Lord Michael Levy, a former special envoy to the Middle East under Blair and top funder of LFI, has amplified the attacks with a series of media appearances in which he accused Corbyn of weakness in the face of anti-Jewish bigotry. A new and unusual line of attack holds Corbyn responsible for an alleged dearth of donations to Labour from “Jewish donors” like Levy.
The panic that spread through Labour’s right wing on the eve of Corbyn’s election reverberated in Jerusalem, where the Israeli government has vowed a campaign of "targeted civil elimination" (code for character assassination) against Palestine solidarity activists. By taking the helm of Labour, Corbyn became arguably the most high-profile supporter of BDS in the world. The Israeli government had placed him at the top of its political kill list and was bound to open fire at an opportune moment.

The moment arrived on May 1, as the BBC’s Andrew Marr hosted Israeli Ambassador to the UK Mark Regev for a lengthy interview. Anyone who watched international news coverage of any of Israel’s last three assaults on the Gaza Strip will remember Regev as the face and voice of Israeli propaganda, spinning massacres of besieged civilians as acts of self-defense without batting an eye.
Seated across from an exceptionally receptive host, Regev unleashed a tirade against the pro-Corbyn wing of Labour and the left in general, declaring it had “crossed a line” into antisemitic territory, even accusing it of “embracing Hamas.” Playing on the innuendo that has painted Corbyn as a supporter of Islamist insurgents, Regev demanded that Corbyn send an “unequivocal message” rejecting Hamas and Hezbollah. Marr piled on, baselessly claiming that Corbyn’s press secretary, Seumas Milne, had declared “it is a crime for the state of Israel to exist.” It took Marr over half an hour to retract his falsehood. By then, as usual, the damage was done.

The spectacle of a foreign diplomat from a country with one of the world’s worst human rights records injecting himself into a local electoral contest to brand the leader of a major political party as a bigoted cheerleader for terrorism perfectly crystallized the nature of the campaign against Corbyn.
Conceived by failed politicians backed by billionaire Lords and publicized with negligible skepticism by Fleet Street, those leading the charge against Corbyn recalled the devious aristocrats Perkins singled out during his final televised appeal to voters: “You the people must decide whether you prefer to ruled by an elected government or by people you’ve never heard of, people you’ve never voted for, people who remain quietly behind the scenes….”

There has been no such defiant address by Corbyn. Instead, he has convened an independent inquiry into antisemitism within his party, inviting further attacks even as he acceded to political pressure.

Redefining anti-Semitism for political ends

The upcoming investigation will only be the latest in a series carried out in recent years. In January 2015, the Parliamentary Committee Against Anti-Semitism published a detailed report outlining its findings on anti-Jewish bigotry in the UK. It was authored by David Feldman, a leading expert on the history of British Jewry and the director of the Pears Institute for the Study of Anti-Semitism at Birkbeck College.

As soon as he was chosen to serve as vice-chair of the new inquiry, Feldman fell under attack from the pro-Israel press. His opponents were particularly piqued by the working definition of antisemitism he adopted in his 2015 report, which he sourced to Jewish philosopher Brian Klug: “A form of hostility towards Jews as Jews, in which they are perceived as something other than what they are.”

By rejecting the politicized definition introduced by pro-Israel forces, which considers the adoption of “double standards” toward Israel to be a form of anti-Jewish prejudice, Feldman deprived them of their favorite line of attack against sympathizers with the Palestinian cause.

As Stern-Weiner clinically demonstrated, the vast majority of charges against Labour members related to commentary about the state of Israel, not the Jewish people. In order to paint anti-Zionist members of Labour as dangerous antisemites, Corbyn’s opponents have had to resort to conflating Israel with all Jews. Ironically, they have relied on the same conflation that actual antisemites typically employ to indict world Jewry for Israel’s crimes against Palestinians.

Jonathan Freedland, a veteran columnist for the Guardian, has been among the most aggressive employers of the conflation tactic. An outspoken liberal Zionist, Freedland has insisted on his right to call out antisemitism as he pleases and without any critical scrutiny from Gentiles—just as “black people are usually allowed to define what’s racism.” By extension, he has sought unlimited license to use “Jews” as a floating signifier for Israel and Zionism, to arbitrarily fuse the Jews of the world with a self-proclaimed Jewish state that only a minority of them inhabit.

Echoing Freedland, Ephraim Mirvish, the chief rabbi of the UK, declared that Zionism “can be no more separate from Judaism than the city of London from Great Britain.” Mirvish insisted that non-Jews were out of bounds by challenging the conflation of Jews with the political project of a Jewish state, ignoring opinion polls showing that a full third of British Jews identity as anti or non-Zionist.
John Mann, the member of parliament who chased Livingstone down a hallway while shouting about Hitler, has said that “it’s clear where the line is” on anti-Jewish bigotry. But during his testimony at an unsuccessful tribunal on “institutional antisemitism” on campus, Mann was harshly criticized for his inability to locate that line.

Even as they avoid putting forward a coherent working definition of antisemitism and exploit identity politics to silence those who do, Labour’s pro-Israel elements are pushing a new rule that could amount to a pro-Israel loyalty oath.

A coming coup?

Back in April, members of the right wing of Labour proposed a rule change that would allow the party to ban members for expressing opinions deemed to be antisemitic. Leading the charge were Jeremy Newmark, chair of the pro-Israel Jewish Labour Movement, and Wes Streeting, a member of parliament and former employee of the Blairite Progress faction.

When the furore over Livingstone’s comments about Zionist collaboration with Nazi Germany erupted, the call for a rule change intensified, inadvertently revealing its actual objective: To establish a lever for purging anti-Zionists from the party ranks. If implemented, the rule change could function as a de facto oath of pro-Israel loyalty for new Labour members and might even result in a series of tribunals for those who fail to toe the ideological line.

Though Labour performed far better in the May 5 local elections than a generally hostile media predicted, Corbyn’s opponents are determined to paint him as unelectable, just as they did during last year’s campaign for leadership.

Even before votes were counted, they were dead-set on sacking him. “We have got to get rid of him. He cannot be allowed to continue,” a Labour member described as “moderate” by the Daily Express said on the day of local elections.

The positive results may buy Corbyn some time, but his foes have signaled their intentions. They are determined to bury him in the same way the fictional villain Sir Percy Brown attempted to with PM Harry Perkins. “In South America they’d call this a coup d’etat,” Perkins protested when Brown presented him with scandalous documents forged by his security services.

But no firing squad,” Brown explained with cool confidence. “No torture, no bloodshed. A very British coup, wouldn’t you say?”

Max Blumenthal is the award-winning author of Goliath, Republican Gomorrah, and The 51 Day War. He is also the co-host of the podcast, Moderate Rebels. Follow him on Twitter at @MaxBlumenthal.

Jonathan Cook - married to a non-Jew
After a short reprieve following Jeremy Corbyn’s unexpected success in Britain’s general election last year, when he only narrowly lost the popular vote, most of the Labour parliamentary party are back, determined to bring him down. And once again, they are being joined by the corporate media in full battle cry.

Last week, Corbyn was a Soviet spy. This week we’re in more familiar territory, even if it has a new twist: Corbyn is not only a friend to anti-semites, it seems, but now he has been outed as a closet one himself.

In short, the Blairites in the parliamentary party are stepping up their game. Corbyn’s social justice agenda, his repudiation of neoconservative wars of aggression masquerading as “humanitarianism” – lining the coffers of the west’s military-industrial elites – is a genuine threat to those who run our societies from the shadows.

The knife of choice for the Labour backstabbers this time is a wall mural removed from East London in 2012. At that time, before he became Labour leader, Corbyn expressed support on Facebook for the artist, Kalen Ockerman, known as Mear One. Corbyn observed that a famous anti-capitalist mural by the left-wing Mexican artist Diego Rivera was similarly removed from Manhattan’s Rockefeller Centre in 1934.

Interestingly, the issue of Corbyn’s support for the mural – or at least the artist – originally flared in late 2015, when the Jewish Chronicle unearthed his Facebook post. Two things were noticeably different about the coverage then.

First, on that occasion, no one apart from the Jewish Chronicle appeared to show much interest in the issue. Its “scoop” was not followed up by the rest of the media. What is now supposedly a major scandal, one that raises questions about Corbyn’s fitness to be Labour leader, was a non-issue two years ago, when it first became known.

Second, the Jewish Chronicle, usually so ready to get exercised at the smallest possible sign of anti-semitism, wasn’t entirely convinced back in 2015 that the mural was anti-semitic. In fact, it suggested only that the mural might have “antisemitic undertones” – and attributed even that claim to Corbyn’s critics.

And rather than claiming, as the entire corporate media is now, that the mural depicted a cabal of Jewish bankers, the Chronicle then described the scene as “a group of businessmen and bankers sitting around a Monopoly-style board and counting money”. By contrast, the Guardian abandoned normal reporting conventions yesterday to state in its news – rather than comment – pages unequivocally that the mural was “obviously antisemitic”.

Not that anyone is listening now, but the artist himself, Kalen Ockerman, has said that the group in his mural comprised historical figures closely associated with banking. His mural, he says, was about “class and privilege”, and the figures depicted included both “Jewish and white Anglos”. The fact that he included famous bankers like the Rothschilds (Jewish) and the Rockefellers (not Jewish) does not, on the face of it, seem to confirm anti-semitism. They are simply the most prominent of the banking dynasties most people, myself included, could name. These families are about as closely identified with capitalism as it is possible to be.

There is an argument to be had about the responsibilities of artists – even street artists – to be careful in their visual representations. But Ockerman’s message was not a subtle or nuanced one. He was depicting class war, the war the capitalist class wages every day on the weak and poor. If Ockerman’s message is inflammatory, it is much less so than the reality of how our societies have been built on the backs and the suffering of the majority.

Corbyn has bowed to his critics – a mix of the Blairites within his party and Israel’s cheerleaders – and apologised for offering support to Ockerman, just as he has caved in to pressure each time the anti-semitism card has been played against him.

This may look like wise, or safe, politics to his advisers. But these critics have only two possible outcomes that will satisfy them. Either Corbyn is harried from the party leadership, or he is intimidated into diluting his platform into irrelevance – he becomes just another compromised politician catering to the interests of the 1 per cent.

The sharks circling around him will not ignore the scent of his bloodied wounds; rather, it will send them into a feeding frenzy. As hard as it is to do when the elites so clearly want him destroyed, Corbyn must find his backbone and start to stand his ground.

UPDATE:

This piece in the liberal Israeli newspaper Haaretz by their senior columnnist Anshel Pfeffer sums up a lot of the sophistry (intentional or otherwise) underscoring the conflation of leftwing critiques of neoliberalism and globalism with rightwing ultra-nationalism and anti-semitism.
Pfeffer writes:


The conspiracy theories of globalist bankers utilizing mainstream media and corrupt neoliberal politicians to serve their selfish sinister purposes, rather than those of ordinary people, are identical whether from left or right.

And on either side, most of the theorists will never admit to being anti-Semitic. They are just “anti-racist” or “anti-imperialist” if on the left, or “pro-Israel” on the right. And most of them really believe they have nothing against Jews, even while parroting themes straight out of the Protocols [of the Elders of Zion].

Notice the problem here. If you are a radical leftist who believes, as generations of leftists before you have done, that military, political, media, and financial elites operate in the shadows to promote their interests, to wage class war, then not only are you a conspiracy theorist, according to Pfeffer, but you are by definition anti-semitic as well. If you believe that an Establishment or a Deep State exists to advance its interests against the great majority, you must hate Jews.

The logic of Corbyn’s critics has rarely been articulated so forthrightly and so preposterously as it is here by Pfeffer. But make no mistake, this is the logic of his critics.

Why Israel is an Apartheid State

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How often have you heard an apologist for Zionism declare that Israel is a democracy, indeed the only one in the Middle East because ‘even’ the Arabs have a vote.  This is of course true but merely possessing a vote in a society which is an ethnocracy does not a democracy make.  In recent years strenuous attempts have been made to exclude Balad, an Arab nationalist party with 3 MKs.  Indeed Avigdor Lieberman, the far-Right Defence Minister who spoke of his desire to drown thousands of Palestinian prisoners in the Dead Sea, came up with the plan in the last Knesset to raise the threshold for a successful party gaining admission to the Knesset to 3.5%.  It was only because the Arab parties were forced to unite that they defeat this attempt to force them out altogether.
However if you look beneath the surface then you realise that even on the parliamentary level Israel is not a democracy.  Despite forming 20% of the country no Arab party has ever been part of the Israeli government.  In the past year legislation has been passed allowing the Jewish members of the Knesset to expel the Arab MKs.  It needs 90 votes to expel a member but since there are 107 out of 120 Jewish MKs that should not be difficult.  Haneen Zoabi, a Balad member, has just been suspended for calling Israeli soldiers what they are, murderers.
The JNF obliges its tenants only to employ Jewish Labour on penalty of forfeiture if this provision is violated 3 times
It is obvious why the Occupied West Bank  is an Apartheid society.  There are two legal regimes there – one for Jews and one for Palestinians. The Israeli army is there to protect the settlers which it does in a myriad of ways.  All major highways are Jewish only, although there are no signs that say that Palestinians are forbidden to use them.  Israel’s rulers are not stupid like their Afrikaaner counterparts.  Most of the discrimination in Israel is hidden behind formal equality. Para state organisations like the Jewish National Fundare responsible for  implementing apartheid on a day to day basis.  Apartheid resides in long established bureaucratic practice or in laws which are formally non-racist like the Absentee Property Law but which strips the refugees, including internal exiles, of any right to their property.    

These two essays are both by Jonathan Cook, a former Guardian journalist now residing with his wife in  Nazareth, the largest Palestinian city in Israel.
The first article homes in on residential segregation and discrimination.  Hundreds of Jewish communities in Israel are able to keep Arabs out through the use of Admissions or Reception Committees.  The Reception Committee Law allows Jewish communities of up to 500 people to refuse the admission of new people on the basis that they ‘don’t fit in’.  Whilst there is nothing saying that they can bar someone on the grounds of being an Arab, this is what happens in practice.
This article describes the situation in Vradim, a ‘leftist’ town where bids for plots of land were frozen because more than half of them came from Arabs and the people in the town wanted to keep it purely Jewish.

The second article explains why Israel, not the Occupied Territories are just as much an apartheid society as the Occupied Territories.  When people think of Israel they think of a democratic society like those in the West.  Although superficially this appears true Israel defines itself as a Jewish state, a state not just of its own Jewish citizens but of all Jews worldwide.  Hence any Jewish person can just go to Israel and automatically claim citizenship.  However a Palestinian, whose family came from the country, is unable to immigrate solely because Israel is forever trying to maintain a Jewish ethnic domination.  Hence it always welcomes Jewish immigrants but refuses to accept the Palestinian refugees.
Paragraph 13 of the Declaration provided that the State of Israel would be based on freedom, justice and peace... it will ensure complete equality of social and political rights to all its inhabitants irrespective of religion, race or sex;. However, has no legal status. The Supreme Court ruled that the guarantees were merely guiding principles, and that the declaration is not a constitutional law .
The town centre of Kfar Vardim
29 March 2018
Israeli town freezes new housing project to stop entry of Palestinian citizens. But the mayor insists he’s not racist
Middle East Eye – 29 March 2018

How would you describe a white town in a southern state in the United States that froze the tender for plots of land in a new neighbourhood because it risked allowing blacks to move in? As racist?
What would you think of the town’s mayor for claiming the decision was taken in the interests of preserving the “white character” of his community? That he was a bigot?

And how would you characterise the policy of the state in which this town was located if it enforced almost complete segregation between whites and blacks, ghettoising the black population? As apartheid, or maybe Jim Crow?

And yet, replace the word “white” with “Jewish” and this describes what has just happened in Kfar Vradim, a small town of 6,000 residents in the Galilee, in Israel’s north. More disturbing still, Vradim’s policy cannot be judged in isolation. It is a reflection of how Israeli society has been intentionally structured for decades.
Kfar Vardim
Segregation as the norm

Residential segregation between Jewish and non-Jewish citizens is the norm in Israel. In fact, it is such an established fact of life that it is barely ever commented on. There are many hundreds of rural communities controlling almost all of Israel’s land that are exclusively Jewish and have been so since Israel was created 70 years ago.

So one could almost commiserate with Vradim’s mayor, Sivan Yechiel, after he provoked condemnation last week for his decision to freeze construction of a new neighbourhood of more than 2,000 homes, intended to double the size of his town. It emerged that in the first round of tenders, more than half the highest bids for plots of land were placed by Palestinian citizens, not Jews.
Israel’s Palestinian minority, a fifth of its population, are the remnants of the Palestinian people who were mostly expelled in 1948 from their homeland during what Palestinians call the Nakba, the Arabic word for “catastrophe”.

According to Israel and its supporters, Palestinian citizens enjoy full and equal rights with Jewish citizens, unlike Palestinians in the occupied territories, who live under military rule. But the reality – one carefully concealed from outsiders– is very different.
Vradim’s decision briefly illuminates the ugly reality of what a Jewish state means. It provides the context for understanding Land Day, whose anniversary falls this week, marking the day in 1976 when Israeli security forces killed six unarmed Palestinian citizens as the minority held a general strike to protest against the continuing confiscation of their lands.

Vradim and dozens of other Jewish communities were created in response to Land Day – explicitly to “Judaise the Galilee”. The tradition of racism that inspired Vradim’s establishment is simply being honoured and preserved today by Yechiel.

That is why Adalah, a legal group for Israel’s Palestinian minority, accused the mayor of being “motivated by racism”. And why Jamal Zahalka, a Palestinian member of Israel’s parliament, lamented Vradim’s “apartheid” policy.

Liberal and ‘racist’

That said, Vradim is far from the illiberal, intolerant community one might imagine from these criticisms. Three-quarters of its residents voted for left and centre-left parties in Israel’s last election. It has decisively bucked the ultra-nationalist trend that has kept Benjamin Netanyahu and the far-right in power for nearly a decade.

Nonetheless, in a Facebook debate among Vradim residents about the tender, many expressed concern. A local real estate broker, Nati Sheinfeld, warned that it was time to “wake up” to the threat of Palestinians taking over the community.

Yechiel defended the decision to freeze the new neighbourhood on the grounds that he was entrusted to keep Vradim “Zionist and Jewish”. In a further clarification, he said he would lobby the government to provide his community with housing solutions that did not disturb its current “demographic balances” – in other words, solutions that would keep out Palestinian citizens.

No Arabs as neighbours

In fact, Vradim mayor’s response was entirely typical. There have a spate of similar stories in recent years. Towns close by in the Galilee like Nazareth Ilit, Karmiel, Afula, Nofit, Tzfat and Nahariya have all been battling to bar entry to Palestinian citizens with varying degrees of success.

In recent surveys, half of Israeli Jews confess that they do not want “Arabs” as neighbours. The reality, as Vradim illustrates, is that far more feel this way in practice. As Haaretz commentator David Rosenberg observed, almost certainly many respondents “were too embarrassed to tell the pollster what they really think”.

Opposition to having Palestinians as neighbours is not founded on security or economic concerns. Palestinian citizens have proved to be a largely peaceable, if highly marginalised, minority. And those able to afford to move into Jewish communities – especially Vradim, one of the wealthiest in the country – are the most successful among the Palestinian minority. They are business people and professionals like doctors, lawyers, engineers and architects.
Rooted in Zionism

So why is Vradim dead-set against allowing them in? The answer requires an historical analysis of how Israel has structured and organised itself as a Jewish state. In fact, Vradim’s policy is deeply rooted in an ideology, Zionism, whose values are unquestioned by almost all Israeli Jews.

The founders of Israel, men like David Ben Gurion, were East Europeans who viewed themselves as communists or socialists. Before Israel’s creation, under British patronage, they established pioneer farming collectives like the kibbutz and moshav.

But in the spirit of Zionism, they made sure these communities were all exclusively Jewish. They were there to “Judaise” the land through “Hebrew labour”. Zionism’s leaders firmly believed that, through physical toil, Jews could transform both the land, “making the desert bloom”, and themselves, becoming a strong, self-reliant “Volk” or people.

But there was an important corollary. Judaisation would strip the native Palestinian people of the land they depended on as farmers, while Hebrew labour would deny them alternative employment in what would become an exclusively Jewish economy. It was a form of aggressive settler-colonialism.

Land nationalised for Jews

After the Nakba and the expulsion of most of the Palestinian population, the new state of Israel did not abandon these policies and adopt an inclusive, civic notion of citizenship, the basis of liberal democracy. Instead, it expanded and intensified the Judaisation project.

Foreign observers were often charmed by the idea of the socialist kibbutz and the progressive and transformative type of politics it supposedly embodied. They overlooked the fact that all of this was being built on the racist exclusion of native Palestinians.

The lands of the Palestinian refugees were expropriated, as was most of the land belonging to the minority of Palestinians who managed to remain in Israel and eventually received citizenship – the trigger for the Land Day events being commemorated this week.

Israel then “nationalised” almost all of its territory – 93 per cent – holding it collectively in trust for the Jewish people around the world, not Israeli citizens.

As a result, Palestinian citizens were hemmed into some 120 Palestinian communities, on little more than 2 per cent of Israeli territory. These Palestinian communities languish at the very bottom of Israel’s socio-economic tables.

Trapped in ghettoes

In recent decades, Palestinian communities have become massively overcrowded because Israel has refused to free up land for their expansion and has not created a single new Palestinian community since 1948.

Many thousands of Palestinian families have been forced to build homes illegally as a result, and now live with the permanent threat of demolition hanging over their heads.

This is not just about neglect. Israeli officials had a methodology and a goal in mind, little different from the those being applied close by in the occupied territories.

The aim was to make the Palestinian minority poor and internally divided: like children playing a game of musical chairs, they would have to fight over ever-diminishing resources.

In desperation, some would opt to collaborate or turn informer, in return for partial relief from their distress. A weak, dependent society like this would be incapable of organisation to demand its rights. And ultimately, Israeli officials hoped, Palestinian citizens would grow hopeless and emigrate.

Vetting committees

But there was a danger too that wealthier, more successful Palestinians might flee their ghettoes not by leaving Israel but by seeking homes in Jewish communities and trying to integrate. That violated the deepest impulses of a Zionist-Jewish state.

It was not hard to slam shut the door of most communities. The hundreds of rural villages controlling most of Israel’s “national lands” established admissions committees. Their job was to vet applicants and keep out Palestinian citizens. That was integral to their “Judaisation” mission.

To this day, hundreds of collective communities bar access, arguing that Palestinian citizens are “socially unsuitable”. The flimsy logic – echoed now by the mayor of Vradim – has been that it is vital for these communities to preserve a Jewish, Zionist character.

But it was trickier to use such legal chicanery to exclude Palestinian citizens from towns and cities.
A few cities in Israel are misleadingly termed “mixed”, where small numbers of Palestinian families survived the ethnic cleansing of 1948. They usually live in separate neighbourhoods, marginalised from the main Jewish city. Segregation in these areas has taken a different form.

But in ordinary as well as mixed cities, Israel could not easily argue that admissions committees were needed to stop integration and protect the special Jewish character of the city’s life. Doing so risked looking a little too obviously like apartheid South Africa.

Liberation from land shortages

For most of Israel’s history, segregation and exclusion were maintained in the towns and cities, nonetheless. Free-market economics and careful planning was enough to keep Palestinians at bay.
The vast majority of Israeli Jews are raised as ardent Zionists, and hold “Judaisation” – making territory Jewish – as a supreme value. There were no signs saying “No Arabs”, but few were willing to sell their homes to Palestinian citizens, especially when they could find a Jewish buyer.

And few Palestinian citizens could afford homes in Jewish towns anyway. In addition, there were no schools teaching in Arabic for their children, jobs were scarce, and prejudice rife. It was a prospect few Palestinian citizens contemplated. Until recently.

The land shortages in Israel’s Palestinian communities have only intensified since the events of Land Day, as have the overcrowding, the lack of services and infrastructure, the absence of green spaces, and the poor quality of government schools for the Palestinian minority.

Meanwhile, in an increasingly globalised world, Palestinian citizens are much less willing to continue living in their segregated communities. They have aspirations for a better quality of life for their children, and are increasingly “westernised” – they value personal independence over the protection offered by living close to the extended family.

All of these factors have combined to drive those with good jobs and high salaries to liberate themselves from their Palestinian ghettoes and seek housing solutions in Jewish communities.

On the front line

The front line of this battle for housing rights is the Galilee, where Palestinian citizens comprise half the population. For this reason, in the state’s early years Ben Gurion prioritised an official campaign to “Judaise the Galilee”, building Jewish communities on lands confiscated from Palestinians to contain them and deprive them of room for future expansion.

Vradim itself was established in 1984 on part of the lands of the neighbouring Palestinian town of Tarshiha. As in other Jewish communities, many of its residents believe – in line with Ben Gurion’s philosophy – that they are the main bulwark against an “Arab takeover” of the Galilee.

But Vradim has found itself defenceless against a first wave of Palestinian professionals expecting to live the dream they see their Jewish neighbours enjoying at their expense. Already a handful of Palestinian families have managed to move in. Yechiel and other residents are worried that this could soon turn into a flood as it seeks to expand.

Vradim lacks an admissions committee that would have solved its problem. And recent rulings from the Israeli courts have further tied its hands: in most cases, towns and cities are required to include all citizens in the tendering process for new housing projects.
The JNF-KKL owns or control 93% of Israeli land - when Israel's Supreme Court ruled that Arabs could not be barred from such land the JNF posted the above pointing out that 70% of Israeli Jews opposes allowing non-Jews to access their land and over 80% prefer Israel as a Jewish rather than a democratic state
Stopping an Arab influx

At the moment the numbers of Palestinian families that can afford and want to move into Jewish towns is small. But it is growing, and even these small numbers are too many for most Jewish communities.

Yechiel may balk at the solutions adopted by some neighbouring Jewish towns.
For example, Nazareth Ilit, which was built on the lands of Nazareth, the largest Palestinian city in Israel, has tried to halt the influx of Palestinians by planning a large Jewish ultra-Orthodox neighbourhood.

The courts have made an exception that allows for restrictive tenders in the case of religious Jews so that they can live in self-contained communities. Nazareth Ilit’s leaders appear to be hoping that, with high birth rates and intolerant attitudes, a strong ultra-Orthodox presence may dissuade more Palestinians from moving in.

But this approach is likely to be considered a step too far for Vradim’s very secular and wealthy residents.

Yechiel may hope instead that he can rely on a legal remedy. In 2016 a district court ruled in favour of the municipality of Afula after it blocked 48 Palestinian families who had won housing tenders. Palestinian legislators called the court decision “shameful” and “racist”.

Hunt for permanent solutions

But Vradim’s mayor is also appealing to the government to help devise a more permanent solution. He may not be disappointed.

The World Zionist Organisation, an international organisation that enjoys quasi-governmental status in Israel, announced last summer it was reviving Ben Gurion’s Judaisation campaign. It is preparing to establish several new, exclusively Jewish communities.

And this month an Israeli parliamentary committee approved the final draft of new legislation – the Basic Law: Israel as the Nation-State of the Jewish people. It will give constitutional backing to the creation of communities “composed of people of the same faith or nationality to maintain an exclusive community”. In practice, this measure is designed only to help the Jewish faith and nationality.

These moves come as Israel prepares to demolish next month Umm al-Hiran, a Bedouin village in the Negev, so it can be replaced with an exclusively Jewish community, Hiran. The bylaws of Hiran entitle it to admit as residents only those “who observe the Torah and commandments according to Orthodox Jewish values”.

Vradim’s wealthy, liberal residents are no aberration in wanting to keep out their Palestinian fellow citizens. They are the authentic inheritors of a Zionist tradition that has entrenched an apartheid system of rule in Israel over 70 years.

Ben Gurion and Israel’s founders would be proud indeed of Kfar Vradim.




Why Israel is an apartheid state
18 March 2018
More than a decade ago, US President Jimmy Carter warned that Israel was practising apartheid in the occupied Palestinian territories. But in truth, it would be more accurate to say Israel itself is an apartheid state
AMEU – March-April 2018

To read this essay on the Americans for Middle East Understanding website, click here
For a PDF version, click here
Ayelet Shaked - Israel's 'Justice Minister' and member of the far-Right Habayit HaYehudi/Jewish Home Party is an open advocate of the right of Jewish towns to exclude Arabs
North from Nazareth’s city limits, a mile or so as the crow flies, is to be found an agricultural community by the name of Tzipori – Hebrew for “bird.” It is a place I visit regularly, often alongside groups of activists wanting to learn more about the political situation of the Palestinian minority living in Israel.

Tzipori helps to shed light on the core historic, legal and administrative principles underpinning a Jewish state, ones that reveal it to be firmly in a tradition of non-democratic political systems that can best be described as apartheid in nature.

More than a decade ago, former US president Jimmy Carter incurred the wrath of Israel’s partisans in America by suggesting that Israeli rule over Palestinians in the occupied territories was comparable to apartheid. While his bestseller book “Palestine: Peace Not Apartheid” broke a taboo, in many ways it added to the confusion surrounding discussions of Israel. Since then, others, including John Kerry, when US secretary of state, and former Israeli prime ministers Ehud Olmert and Ehud Barak, have warned that Israeli rule in the occupied territories is in danger of metamorphosing into “apartheid” – though the moment of transformation, in their eyes, never quite seems to arrive.

It has been left to knowledgeable observers, such as South Africa’s Archbishop Desmond Tutu, to point out that the situation for Palestinians under occupation is, in fact, worse than that suffered by blacks in the former South Africa. In Tutu’s view, Palestinians under occupation suffer from something more extreme than apartheid – what we might term “apartheid-plus”.

There is a notable difference between the two cases that hints at the nature of that “plus”. Even at the height of apartheid, South Africa’s white population understood that it needed, and depended on, the labor of the black majority population. Israel, on the other hand, has a far more antagonistic relationship to Palestinians in the occupied territories. They are viewed as an unwelcome, surplus population that serves as a demographic obstacle to the political realization of a Greater Israel. The severe economic and military pressures Israel imposes on these Palestinians are designed to engineer their incremental displacement, a slow-motion ethnic cleansing.
Not surprisingly, Israel’s supporters have been keen to restrict the use of the term “apartheid” to South Africa, as though a political system allocating key resources on a racial or ethnic basis has only ever occurred in one place and at one time. It is often forgotten that the crime of apartheid is defined in international law, as part of the 2002 Rome Statute that created the International Criminal Court at The Hague. An apartheid system, the statute says, is “an institutionalized regime of systematic oppression and domination by one racial group over any other racial group or groups and committed with the intention of maintaining that regime”. In short, apartheid is a political system, or structure, that assigns rights and privileges based on racial criteria.

This definition, it will be argued in this essay, describes the political regime not only in the occupied territories – where things are actually even worse – but in Israel itself, where Jewish citizens enjoy institutional privileges over the 1.8 million Palestinians who have formal Israeli citizenship. These Palestinians are the remnants of the Palestinian people who were mostly dispersed by the 1948 war that established a Jewish state on the ruins of their homeland. These Palestinian citizens comprise about a fifth of Israel’s population.

Although it is generally understood that they suffer discrimination, the assumption even of many scholars is that their treatment in no way undermines Israel’s status as a western-style liberal democracy. Most minorities in the west – for example, blacks and Hispanics in the U.S., Asians in the U.K., Turks in Germany, and Africans in France – face widespread prejudice and discrimination. Israel’s treatment of its Palestinian minority, it is claimed, is no different.

This is to profoundly misunderstand the kind of state Israel is, and how it relates to all Palestinians, whether they are under occupation or Israeli citizens. The discrimination faced by Palestinians in Israel is not illegal, informal, unofficial, or improvised. It is systematic, institutional, structural and extensively codified, satisfying very precisely the definition of apartheid in international law and echoing the key features of South African apartheid.

It was for this reason that the United Nations’ Economic Social Commission for Western Asia (ESCWA) published a report in 2017 concluding that Israel had “established an apartheid regime that dominates the Palestinian people as a whole”,including its Palestinian citizens. Under severe pressure from Israel and the US, that report was quickly retracted but the reality of apartheid in Israeli law and practice persists.

This argument is far more controversial than the one made by President Carter. His position suggests that Israel developed a discrete system of apartheid after the occupation began in 1967 – a kind of “add-on” apartheid to democratic Israel. On this view, were Israel to end the occupation, the apartheid regime in the territories could be amputated like a gangrenous limb. But if Israel’s treatment of its own Palestinian citizens fits the definition of apartheid, then it implies something far more problematic. It suggests that Jewish privilege is inherent in the Israeli polity established by the Zionist movement in 1948, that a Jewish state is apartheid-like by its nature, and that dismantling the occupation would do nothing to end Israel’s status as an apartheid state.

Separate and unequal

Tzipori was founded by Romanian and Bulgarian Jews in 1949 as a moshav, a socialist agricultural collective similar to the kibbutz. It specialized in dairy production, though most of its inhabitants long ago abandoned farming, as well as socialism: today its 1,000 residents work in offices in nearby cities such as Haifa, Tiberias and Afula.

Tzipori’s Hebrew name alludes to a much older Roman city called Sephoris, the remains of which are included in a national park that abuts the moshav. Separating the moshav from ancient Sephoris is a large pine forest, concealing yet more rubble, in some places barely distinguishable from the archeological debris of the national park. But these ruins are much more recent. They are the remnants of a Palestinian community of some 5,000 souls known as Saffuriya. The village was wiped out in 1948 during the Nakba, the Arabic word for “catastrophe” – how Palestinians describe the loss of their homeland and its replacement with a Jewish state.

The Palestinians of Saffuriya – an Arabized version of “Sephoris” – were expelled by Israel and their homes razed. The destruction of Saffuriya was far from an isolated incident. More than 500 Palestinian villages were ethnically cleansed in a similar fashion during the Nakba, and the ruins of the homes invariably covered with trees. Today, all Saffuriya’s former residents live in exile – most outside Israel’s borders, in camps in Lebanon. But a proportion live close by in Nazareth, the only Palestinian city in what became Israel to survive the Nakba. In fact, according to some estimates, as much as 40 percent of Nazareth’s current population is descended from Saffuriya’s refugees, living in their own neighborhood called Safafri.

Nowadays, when observers refer to Palestinians, they usually think of those living in the territories Israel occupied in 1967: the West Bank, Gaza and East Jerusalem. Increasingly, observers (and the various peace processes) overlook two other significant groups. The first are the Palestinian refugees who ended up beyond the borders of partitioned Palestine; the second are the 20 percent of Palestinians who managed to remain on their land. In 1948, some 150,000 survived the Nakba – a figure far higher than intended by Israel’s founders.

They included 30,000 in Nazareth – both the original inhabitants and refugees like those from Saffuriya who sought sanctuary in the city during the fighting. They avoided expulsion only because of a mistake. The commander who led the attack on Nazareth, a Canadian Jew called Ben Dunkelman, disobeyed an order to empty the city of its inhabitants. One can guess why: given the high profile of Nazareth as a center of Christianity, and coming in the immediate wake of the war crimes trials of Nazis at Nuremberg, Dunkelman presumably feared that one day he might end up in the dock too.

There were other, unforeseen reasons why Palestinians either remained inside Israel or were brought into the new state. Under pressure from the Vatican, a significant number of Palestinian Christians – maybe 10,000 – were allowed to return after the fighting finished. A further 35,000 Palestinians were administratively moved into Israel in 1949, after the Nakba had ended, when Israel struck a deal with Jordan to redraw the ceasefire lines – to Israel’s territorial, but not demographic, advantage. And finally, in a far less technologically sophisticated age, many refugees who had been expelled outside Israel’s borders managed to slip back hoping to return to villages like Saffuriya. When they found their homes destroyed, they “blended” into surviving Palestinian communities like Nazareth, effectively disappearing from the Israeli authorities’ view.

In fact, it was this last trend that initiated a process that belatedly led to citizenship for the Palestinians still in Israel. The priority for Israeli officials was to prevent any return for the 750,000 Palestinians they had ethnically cleansed so successfully. That was the only way to ensure the preservation of a permanent and incontrovertible Jewish majority. And to that end, Palestinians in surviving communities like Nazareth needed to be marked out – “branded,” to use a cattle-ranching metaphor. That way, any “infiltrators,” as Israel termed refugees who tried to return home, could be immediately identified and expelled again. This “branding” exercise began with the issuing of residency permits to Palestinians in communities like Nazareth. But as Israel sought greater international legitimacy, it belatedly agreed to convert this residency into citizenship.

It did so through the Citizenship Law of 1952, four years after Israel’s creation. Citizenship for Palestinians in Israel was a concession made extremely reluctantly and only because it served Israel’s larger demographic purposes. Certainly, it was not proof, as is often assumed, of Israel’s democratic credentials. The Citizenship Law is better understood as an anti-citizenship law: its primary goal was to strip any Palestinians outside the new borders – the vast majority after the ethnic cleansing of 1948 – of a right ever to return to their homeland.

Two years before the Citizenship Law, Israel passed the more famous Law of Return. This law effectively opened the door to all Jews around the world to immigrate to Israel, automatically entitling them to citizenship.

Anyone familiar with modern US history will be aware of the Supreme Court decision of 1954 in the famous civil rights case Brown v. Board of Education. The judges ruled that the creation of separate public schools for white and black pupils was unconstitutional, on the grounds that “separate is inherently unequal”. It was an important legal principle that would strike a decisive blow against Jim Crow, the Deep South’s version of apartheid.

If separate is inherently unequal, Israel’s segregated structure of citizenship is the most profound form of inequality imaginable. Citizenship is sometimes referred to as the “foundational right” offered by states because so many other basic rights typically depend on it: from suffrage to residency and welfare. By separating citizenship rights on an ethnic basis, creating an entitlement to citizenship for  Jews with one law and denying most Palestinians citizenship with another, Israel institutionalized legal apartheid at the bedrock level. Adalah, a legal rights group for Palestinians in Israel, has compiled an online database listing Israeli laws that explicitly discriminate based on ethnicity. The Law of Return and the Citizenship Law are the most significant, but there are nearly 70 more of them.

Citizenship and marriage

Ben Gurion was prepared to award the remnants of the Palestinians in Israel this degraded version of citizenship because he assumed this population would pose no threat to his new Jewish state. He expected these Palestinian citizens – or what Israel prefers to term generically “Israeli Arabs” – to be swamped by the arrival of waves of Jewish immigrants like those that settled Tzipori. Ben Gurion badly miscalculated. The far higher birth rate of Palestinian citizens meant they continue to comprise a fifth of Israel’s population.

Palestinian citizens have maintained this numerical proportion, despite Israel’s strenuous efforts to gerrymander its population. The Law of Return encourages – with free flights, financial gifts, interest-free loans and grants – any Jew in the world to come to Israel and instantly receive citizenship. More than three million Jews have taken up the offer.

The Citizenship Law, on the other hand, effectively closed the door after 1952 on the ability of Palestinians to gain citizenship. In fact, since then there has been only one way for a non-Jew to naturalize and that is by marrying an Israeli citizen, either a Jew or Palestinian. This exception is allowed only because a few dozen non-Jews qualify each year, posing no threat to Israel’s Jewish majority.

In practice, Palestinians outside Israel have always been disqualified from using this route to citizenship, even if they marry a Palestinian citizen of Israel, as became increasingly common after Israel occupied the rest of historic Palestine in 1967. During the Oslo years, when Palestinians in Israel launched a legal challenge to force Israel to uphold the naturalization of their spouses from the occupied territories, the government hurriedly responded by passing in 2003 the Citizenship and Entry into Israel Law. It denied Palestinians the right to qualify for Israeli residency or citizenship under the marriage provision. In effect, it banned marriage across the Green Line formally separating Palestinians in Israel from Palestinians under occupation. The measure revealed that Israel was prepared to violate yet another fundamental right – to fall in love and marry the person of one’s choice – to preserve its Jewishness.

‘Nationalisation’ of land

Most citizens of the United States correctly assume that their citizenship and nationality are synonymous: “American” or “US”.

But the same is not true for Israelis. Israel classifies its citizens as holding different “nationalities”. This requires rejecting a common Israeli nationality and instead separating citizens into supposed ethnic or religious categories. Israel has recognized more than 130 nationalities to deal with anomalous cases, myself included. After I married my wife from Nazareth, I entered a lengthy, complex and hostile naturalization process. I am now an Israeli citizen, but my nationality is identified as “British”. The vast majority of Israeli citizens, on the other hand, hold one of two official nationalities: Jewish or Arab. The Israeli Supreme Court has twice upheld the idea that these nationalities are separate from – and superior to – citizenship.

This complex system of separate nationalities is not some arcane, eccentric practice: it is central to Israel’s version of apartheid. It is the means by which Israel can both institutionalize a separation in rights and obscure this state-sanctioned segregation from the view of outsiders. It allows Israel to offer different rights to different citizens depending on whether they are Jews or Palestinians, but in a way that avoids too obvious a comparison with apartheid South Africa. Here is how.

All citizens, whatever their ethnicity, enjoy “citizenship rights”. In this regard, Israel looks – at least superficially – much like a western liberal democracy. Examples of citizenship rights include health care, welfare payments, the domestic allocation of water, and education – although, as we shall see, the picture is usually far more complex than it first appears. In reality, Israel has managed covertly to subvert even these citizenship rights.

Consider medical care. Although all citizens are entitled to equal health provision, hospitals and major medical services are almost always located in Jewish communities, and difficult for Palestinian citizens to access given the lack of transport connections between Palestinian and Jewish communities. Palestinian citizens in remote communities, such as in the Negev (Naqab),  are often denied access to basic medical services. And recently it emerged that Israeli hospitals were secretly segregating Jewish and Palestinian women in maternity clinics. Dr Hatim Kanaaneh, a Palestinian physician in Israel, documents these and many other problems with health care in his book “A Doctor in Galilee”.

More significantly, Israel also recognizes “national rights”, and reserves them almost exclusively for the Jewish population. National rights are treated as superior to citizenship rights. So if there is a conflict between a Jew’s national right and a Palestinian’s individual citizenship right, the national right must be given priority by officials and the courts. In this context, Israel’s rightwing justice minister, Ayelet Shaked, observed in February 2018 that Israel should ensure “equal rights to all citizens but not equal national rights.” She added: “Israel is a Jewish state. It isn’t a state of all its nations.”

The simplest illustration of how this hierarchy of rights works can be found in Israel’s citizenship laws. The Law of Return establishes a national right for all Jews to gain instant citizenship – as well as the many other rights that derive from citizenship. The Citizenship Law, on the other hand, creates only an individual citizenship right for non-Jews, not a national one. Palestinian citizens can pass their citizenship “downwards” to their offspring but cannot extend it “outwards,” as a Jew can, to members of their extended family – in their case, Palestinians who were made refugees in 1948. My wife has relatives who were exiled by the Nakba in Jordan. But with only an individual right to citizenship, she cannot bring any of them back to their homes now in Israel.

This distinction is equally vital in understanding how Israel allocates key material resources, such as water and land. Let us consider land. Israel has “nationalized” almost all of its territory – 93 percent. Palestinian communities in Israel have been able to hold on to less than 3 percent of their land – mostly the built-up areas of their towns and villages – after waves of confiscation by the state stripped them of at least 70 percent of their holdings.

It is not unprecedented in western democracies for the state to be a major land owner, even if Israel’s total holdings are far more extensive than other states. But Israel has successfully masked what this “nationalization” of land actually means. Given that there is no recognized Israeli nationality, Israel does not hold the land on behalf of its citizens – as would be the case elsewhere. It does not even manage the land on behalf of Jewish citizens of Israel. Instead the land is held in trust for the Jewish people around the globe, whether they are citizens or not, and whether they want to be part of Israel or not.

In practice, Jews who buy homes in Israel effectively get long-term leases on their property from a government body known as the Israel Lands Authority. The state regards them as protecting or guarding the land on behalf of Jews collectively around the world. Who are they guarding it from? From the original owners. Most of these lands, like those in Tzipori, have been either seized from Palestinian refugees or confiscated from Palestinian citizens.

A democratic facade

The political geographer Oren Yiftachel is among the growing number of Israeli scholars who reject the classification of Israel as a liberal democracy, or in fact any kind of democracy. He describes Israel as an “ethnocracy”, a hybrid state that creates a democratic façade, especially for the dominant ethnic group, to conceal its essential, non-democratic structure. In describing Israel’s ethnocracy, Yiftachel provides a complex hierarchy of citizenship in which non-Jews are at the very bottom.
It is notable that Israel lacks a constitution, instead creating 11 Basic Laws that approximate a constitution. The most liberal component of this legislation, passed in 1992 and titled Freedom and Human Dignity, is sometimes referred to as Israel’s Bill of Rights. However, it explicitly fails to enshrine in law a principle of equality. Instead, the law emphasizes Israel’s existence as a “Jewish and democratic state” – an oxymoron that is rarely examined by Israelis.

A former Supreme Court judge, Meir Shamgar, famously claimed that Israel – as the nation-state of the Jewish people – was no less democratic than France as the nation-state of the French people. And yet, while it is clear how one might naturalize to become French, the only route to becoming Jewish is religious conversion. “Jewish” and “French” are clearly not equivalent conceptions of citizenship.
Netanyahu’s government has been trying to draft a 12th Basic Law. Its title is revealing: it declares Israel as “the Nation-State of the Jewish People”. Not the state of Israeli citizens, or even of Israeli Jews, but of all Jews around the world, including those Jews who are not Israeli citizens and have no interest in becoming citizens. This is a reminder of the very peculiar nature of a Jewish state, one that breaks with the conception of a civic citizenship on which liberal democracies are premised. Israel’s ethnic idea of nationality is closely derived from – and mirrors – the ugly ethnic or racial ideas of citizenship that dominated Europe a century ago (and are in places being revived). Those exclusive, aggressive conceptions of peoplehood led to two devastating world wars, as well as providing the ideological justification for a wave of anti-semitism that swept Europe and culminated in the Holocaust.

Further, if all Jewish “nationals” in the world are treated as citizens of Israel – real or potential ones – what does that make Israel’s large minority of Palestinian citizens, including my wife and two children? It seems that Israel regards them effectively as guest workers or resident aliens, tolerated so long as their presence does not threaten the state’s Jewishness. Ayelet Shaked, Israel’s justice minister, implicitly acknowledged this problem during a debate on the proposed Nation-State Basic Law in February. She said Israel could not afford to respect universal human rights: “There is a place to maintain a Jewish majority even at the price of violation of rights.”

The hierarchy of citizenship Yiftachel notes is helpful because it allows us to understand that Israeli citizenship is the exact opposite of the level playing field of formal rights one would expect to find in a liberal democracy. Another key piece of legislation, the Absentee Property Law of 1950, stripped all Palestinian refugees from the 1948 war of their right to any property they had owned before the Nakba. Everything was seized – land, crops, buildings, vehicles, farm implements, bank accounts – and became the property of Israel, passed on to Jewish institutions or Jewish citizens in violation of international law.

The Absentee Property Law applied equally to Palestinian citizens, such as those from Saffuriya who ended up in Nazareth, as it did to Palestinian refugees outside Israel’s recognized borders. In fact, as many as one in four Palestinian citizens are reckoned to have been internally displaced by the 1948 war. In the Orwellian terminology of the Absentee Property Law, these refugees are classified as “present absentees” – present in Israel, but absent from their former homes. Despite their citizenship, such Palestinians have no more rights to return home, or reclaim other property, than refugees in camps in Lebanon, Syria and Jordan.

Residential segregation

Although Tzipori was built on land confiscated from Palestinians – some of them Israeli citizens living close by in Nazareth – not one of its 300 or so homes, or its dozen farms, is owned by a Palestinian citizen. In fact, no Palestinian citizen of Israel has ever been allowed to live or even rent a home in Tzipori, seven decades after Israel’s creation.

Tzipori is far from unique. There are some 700 similar rural communities, known in Israel as cooperative communities. Each is, and is intended to be, exclusively Jewish, denying Palestinian citizens of Israel the right to live in them. These rural communities control much of the 93 percent of land that has been “nationalized”, effectively ensuring it remains off-limits to the fifth of Israel’s population that is non-Jewish.

How is this system of ethnic residential segregation enforced? Most cooperative communities like Tzipori administer a vetting procedure through an “admissions committee”, comprising officials from quasi-governmental entities such as the Jewish Agency, the Jewish National Fund and the World Zionist Organization, which are there to represent the interests of world Jewry, not Israeli citizens. These organizations – effectively interest groups that enjoy a special, protected status as agents of the Israeli state – are themselves a gross violation of the principles of a liberal democracy. The state, for example, has awarded the Jewish National Fund, whose charter obligates it to discriminate in favor of Jews, ownership of 13 percent of Israeli territory. A Jew from Brooklyn has more rights to land in Israel than a Palestinian citizen.

For most of Israel’s history, there was little need to conceal what the admissions committees were doing. No one noticed. If a Palestinian from Nazareth had applied to live in Tzipori, the admissions committee would simply have rejected the applicant on the grounds that they were an “Arab”. But this very effective mechanism for keeping Palestinian citizens off most of their historic homeland hit a crisis two decades ago when the case of the Kaadan family began working its way through Israel’s court system.

Adel Kaadan lived in a very poor Palestinian community called Baqa al-Ghabiyya, south of Nazareth and quite literally a stone’s throw from the West Bank. Kaadan had a good job as a senior nurse in nearby Hadera hospital, where he regularly treated Jewish patients and had on occasion, he told me when I interviewed him in the early 2000s, helped to save Israeli soldiers’ lives. He assumed that should entitle him to live in a Jewish community. Kaadan struck me as stubborn as he was naïve – a combination of personality traits that had got him this far and ended up causing Israel a great deal of legal and reputational trouble.

Determined to give his three young daughters the best opportunities he could manage, Kaadan had built the family an impressive villa in Baqa al-Ghabiyya. While I sat having coffee with him, one of his daughters played the piano with a proficiency that suggested she had a private tutor. But Kaadan was deeply dissatisfied with his lot. His home was grand and beautiful, but Baqa was not. As soon as the family stepped outside their home, they had to wade into the reality of Palestinian life in Israel. Kaadan was proof that it was possible for some Palestinian citizens, if they were determined and lucky enough to surmount the many obstacles placed in their way, to enjoy personal success, but they could not so easily escape the collective poverty of their surroundings.

Like many other Palestinian citizens, Kaadan was trapped by yet another piece of legislation: the Planning and Building Law of 1965. It advanced a core aim of Zionism: “Judaizing” as much land as possible. It achieved this in two main ways. First, communities in Israel were only recognized by the state if they were listed in the Planning Law. Although nearly 200 Palestinian communities had survived the Nakba, the law recognized just 120 or them.

The most problematic communities, from Israel’s point of view, were the dispersed Bedouin villages located among the remote, dusty hills of the semi-desert Negev, or Naqab, in Israel’s south. The Negev was Israel’s biggest land reserve, comprising 60 percent of the country’s territory. Its vast, inaccessible spaces had made it the preferred location for secretive military bases and Israel’s nuclear program. Israel wanted the Bedouin off their historic lands, and the Planning Law was the ideal way to evict them – by de-recognizing their villages.

Today the inhabitants of dozens of “unrecognized villages” – home to nearly a tenth of the Palestinian population in Israel – are invisible to the state, except when it comes to the enforcement of planning regulations. The villagers live without state-provided electricity, water, roads and communications. Any homes they build instantly receive demolition orders, forcing many to live in tents or tin shacks. Israel’s aim is to force the Bedouin to abandon their pastoral way of life and traditions, and relocate to overcrowded, state-built townships, which are the poorest communities in Israel by some margin.

Starved of resources

In addition to creating the unrecognized villages, the Planning and Building Law of 1965 ensures ghetto-like conditions for recognized Palestinian communities too. It creates residential segregation by confining the vast majority of Palestinian citizens to the 120 Palestinian communities in Israel that are officially listed for them, and then tightly limits their room for growth and development. Even in the case of Palestinian citizens living in a handful of so-called “mixed cities” – Palestinian cities that were largely “Judaized” after the Nakba – they have been forced into their own discrete neighborhoods, on the margins of urban life.

The Planning Law also drew a series of blue lines around all the communities in Israel, determining their expansion area. Jewish communities were awarded significant land reserves, while the blue lines around Palestinian communities were invariably drawn close to the built-up area half a century ago. Although Israel’s Palestinian population has grown seven or eight-fold since, its expansion space has barely changed, leading to massive overcrowding. This problem is exacerbated by Israel’s failure to build a single new Palestinian community since 1948.

Like the other 120 surviving Palestinian communities in Israel, Baqa had been starved of resources: land, infrastructure and services. There were no parks or green areas where the Kaadan children could play. Outside their villa, there were no sidewalks, and during heavy rains untreated sewage rose out of the inadequate drains to wash over their shoes. Israel had confiscated all Baqa’s land for future development, so houses were crowded around them on all sides, often built without planning permits, which were in any case almost impossible to obtain. Illegal hook-ups for electricity blotted the view even further. With poor refuse collection services, the families often burnt their rubbish in nearby dumpsters.

Adel Kaadan had set his eyes on living somewhere better – and that meant moving to a Jewish community. When Israel began selling building plots in Katzir, a small Jewish cooperative community located on part on Baqa’s confiscated land, Kaadan submitted his application. When it was rejected because he was an “Arab”, he turned to the courts.

In 2000, the Kaadans’ case arrived at the highest court in the land, the Supreme Court. Aharon Barak, the court’s president who heard the petition, was the most liberal and respected judge in Israel’s history. But the Kaadans’ case was undoubtedly the most unwelcome he ever adjudicated. It placed an ardent Zionist like himself in an impossible situation.

On one hand, there was no practice in Israel more clearly apartheid-like than the ethnic-based residential exclusion enforced by the admissions committees. It was simply not something Barak could afford to be seen upholding. After all, he was a regular lecturer at Yale and Harvard law schools, where he was feted, and had often been cited by liberal counterparts on the US Supreme Court as a major influence on their judicial activism.

But while he could not be seen ruling in favor of Katzir, at the same time he dared not rule in the Kaadans’ favor either. Such a decision would undermine the core rationale of a Zionist Jewish state: the Judaization of as much territory as possible. It would create a legal precedent that would throw open the doors to other Palestinian citizens, allowing them also to move into these hundreds of Jewish-only communities.

Childhoods apart

Barak understood that much else hung on the principle of residential separation. Primary and secondary education are also segregated – and largely justified on the basis of residential separation. Jewish children go to Hebrew-language schools in Jewish areas; Palestinian children in Israel go to Arabic-language schools in Palestinian communities. (There are only a handful of private bilingual schools in Israel.)

This separation ensures that educational resources are prioritized for Jewish citizens. Arab schools are massively underfunded and their curriculum tightly controlled by the authorities, as exemplified by the 2011 Nakba Law. It threatens public funding for any school or institution that teaches about the key moment in modern Palestinian history. Additionally, teaching posts in Arab schools have historically been dictated by the Shin Bet, Israel’s secret police, to create spies and an atmosphere of suspicion in classrooms and common-rooms.

A side-benefit for Israel of separation in residency and education is that Palestinian and Jewish citizens have almost no chances to meet until they reach adulthood, when their characters have been formed. It is easy to fear the Other when you have no experience of him. The success of this segregation may be measured in intermarriages between Jewish and Palestinian citizens. In the year 2011, when the Israeli authorities last issued statistics, there were only 19 such marriages, or 0.03 percent. Israeli Jews openly oppose such marriages as “miscegenation”.

In fact, Israel is so opposed to intermarriages, that it prohibits such marriages from being conducted inside Israel. Mixed couples are forced to travel abroad and marry there – typically in Cyprus – and apply for the marriage to be recognized on their return. Notably, the 1973 United Nations Convention on Apartheid lists measures prohibiting mixed marriages as a crime of apartheid.

Residential separation has also allowed Israel to ensure Jewish communities are far wealthier and better provided with services than Palestinian ones. Although all citizens are taxed on their income, public-subsidized building programs are overwhelmingly directed at providing homes for Jewish families in Jewish areas. Over seven decades, hundreds of Jewish communities have been built by the state, with ready-made roads, sidewalks and public parks, with homes automatically connected to water, electricity and sewage grids. All these communities are built on “state land” – in most cases, lands taken from Palestinian refugees and Palestinian citizens.

By contrast, not one new Arab community has been established in that time. And the 120 recognized Palestinian communities have been largely left to sink or swim on their own. After waves of confiscation by the state, they are on the remnants of private Palestinian land. Having helped to subsidize housing and building programs for millions of Jewish immigrants, Palestinian communities have mostly had to raise their own money to install basic infrastructure, including water and sewage systems.

Meanwhile, segregated zoning areas and separate planning committees allow Israel to enforce much tougher regulations on Palestinian communities, to deny building permits and to carry out demolition orders. Some 30,000 homes are reported to be illegally built in the Galilee, almost all of them in Palestinian communities.

Similarly, most of the state’s budget for local authorities, as well as business investment, is channeled towards Jewish communities rather than Palestinian ones. This is where industrial areas and factories are built, to ensure greater employment opportunities for Jewish citizens and to top up Jewish communities’ municipal coffers with business rates.

Meanwhile, a central government “balancing grant” – intended to help the poorest local authorities by redistributing income tax in their favor – is skewed too. Even though Palestinian communities are uniformly the poorest in Israel, they typically receive a third of the balancing grant received by Jewish communities.

Residential segregation has also allowed Israel to create hundreds of “national priority areas” (NPAs), which receive preferential government budgets, including extra funding to allow for long school days. Israeli officials have refused to divulge even to the courts what criteria are used to establish these priority areas, but it is clearly not based on socio-economic considerations. Of 557 NPAs receiving extra school funding, only four tiny Palestinian communities were among their number. The assumption is that they were included only to avoid accusations that the NPAs were designed solely to help Jews.

Israel has similarly used residential segregation to ensure that priority zoning for tourism chiefly benefits Jewish communities. That has required careful engineering, given that much of the tourism to Israel is Christian pilgrimage. In the north, the main pilgrimage destination is Nazareth and its Basilica of the Annunciation, where the Angel Gabriel reputedly told Mary she was carrying the son of God. But Israel avoided making the city a center for tourism, fearing it would be doubly harmful: income from the influx of pilgrims would make Nazareth financially independent; and a prolonged stay by tourists in the city would risk exposing them to the Palestinian narrative.

Instead the north’s tourism priority zone was established in nearby Tiberias, on the Sea of Galilee, a once-Palestinian city that was ethnically cleansed during the Nakba and is now a Jewish city. For decades investors have been encouraged to build hotels and tourist facilities in Tiberias, ensuring that most coachloads of pilgrims only pass through Nazareth, making a brief hour-long stop to visit the Basilica.

Although Nazareth was very belatedly awarded tourism priority status in the late 1990s – in time for the Pope’s visit for the millennium – little has changed in practice. The city is so starved of land that there is almost no room for hotels. Those that have been built are mostly located in the city’s outer limits, where pilgrims are unlikely to be exposed to Palestinian residents.

Public transport links have also privileged Jewish communities over Palestinian ones. The national bus company Egged – the main provider of public transport in Israel – has established an elaborate network of bus connections between Jewish areas, ensuring that Jewish citizens are integrated into the economy. They can easily and cheaply reach the main cities, factories and industrial zones. Egged buses, however, rarely enter Palestinian communities, depriving their residents of employment opportunities. This, combined with the lack of daycare services for young children, explains why Palestinian women in Israel have long had one of the lowest employment rates in the Arab world, at below 20 percent.

Palestinian communities have felt discrimination in the provision of security and protection too. Last November the government admitted there was woefully inadequate provision of public shelters in Palestinian communities, even in schools, against missile attacks and earthquakes. Officials have apparently balked at the large expense of providing shelters, and the problem of freeing up land in Palestinian communities to establish them. Similarly, Israel has been loath to establish police stations in Palestinian communities, leading to an explosion of crime there. In December Palestinian legislator Yousef Jabareen pointed out that there had been 381 shootings in his hometown of Umm al-Fahm in 2017, but only one indictment. He said the town’s inhabitants had become “hostages in the hands of a small group of criminals.”

In all these different ways, Israel has ensured Palestinian communities remain substantially poorer than Jewish communities. A study in December 2017 found that the richest communities in Israel – all Jewish – received nearly four times more welfare spending from the government than the poorest communities – all Palestinian. A month earlier, the Bank of Israel reported that Palestinian citizens had only 2 percent of all mortgages, in a sign of how difficult it is for them to secure loans, and they had to pay higher interest charges on the loans.

Among the 35 member states of the Organization for Economic Cooperation and Development (OECD), Israel has the highest poverty rate. This is largely because of high rates among Palestinian citizens, augmented by the self-inflicted poverty of Israel’s ultra-Orthodox community, most of whose men refuse to work, preferring religious studies. In evidence of how Israel has skewed welfare spending to benefit poor Jews like the ultra-Orthodox, rather than Palestinian citizens, only a fifth of Jewish children live below the poverty line compared to two-thirds of Palestinian children in Israel.

‘Socially unsuitable’

Back at the Supreme Court, Aharon Barak was still grappling with the conflicting burden of Zionist history and the expectations of American law schools. The judge understood he needed to fudge a ruling. He had to appear to be siding with the Kaadan family without actually ruling in their favor and thereby creating a legal precedent that would let other Palestinian families follow in their path. So he ordered Katzir to rethink its decision, warning that it could not keep them out on religious or national grounds.

The Jewish community did rething its policy, but not in a way that helped Barak. Katzir responded that they were no longer rejecting the Kaadans because they were Arab, but because they were “socially unsuitable.” Barak knew that would not wash at Yale or Harvard either – it too obviously sounded like code for “Arab”. He ordered Katzir to come back with a different decision regarding the Kaadans.

The case and a few others like it dragged on over the next several years, with the court reluctant to make a precedent-setting decision. Quietly, behind the scenes, Adel Kaadan finally received a plot of land from Katzir. Unnerved, cooperative communities across the Galilee started to pass local bylaws – insisting on a “social suitability” criterion for applicants – to pre-empt any decision by the Supreme Court in favor of the Palestinian families banging at their doors.

By 2011, it looked as if the Supreme Court was running out of options and would have to rule on the legality of the admissions committees. At that point, the government of Benjamin Netanyahu stepped in to help out the court. There was no statutory basis for the admissions committees; they were simply an administrative practice observed by all these hundreds of Jewish-only cooperative communities. The Netanyahu government, therefore, pushed through an Admissions Committee Law that year. It finally put the committees on a statutory footing, but also made them embarrassingly visible for the first time.

As the parliament backed the legislation, reports in the western media labeled it an “apartheid law” – conveniently ignoring the fact that this had been standard practice in Israel for more than six decades.
A petition from the legal group Adalah against the new law reached the Supreme Court in 2014. Barak had by this time retired. But in line with his aversion to issuing a ruling that might challenge the racist underpinnings of Israel as a Jewish state, the judges continued not to make a decision. They argued that the law was too new for the court to determine what effect the admissions committees would have in practice – or in the language of the judges, they declined to act because the law was not yet “ripe” for adjudication. The ripeness argument was hard to swallow given that the effect of the admissions committees in enforcing residential apartheid after so many decades was only too apparent.

Even so, the legal challenge launched by the Kaadans left many in the Israeli leadership worried. In February 2018, referring to the case, the justice minister Ayelet Shaked averred that in “the argument over whether it’s all right for a Jewish community to, by definition, be only Jewish, I want the answer to be, ‘Yes, it’s all right’.”

Two modes of apartheid

It is time to address more specifically the nature of the apartheid regime Israel has created – and how it mirrors the essence of South Africa’s apartheid without precisely replicating it.
Close to the forest planted over the ruins of the Palestinian homes of Saffuriya is a two-storey stone structure, an Israeli flag fluttering atop its roof. It is the only Palestinian home not razed in 1948. Later, it was inhabited by Jewish immigrants, and today serves as a small guest house known as Tzipori Village. Its main customers are Israeli Jews from the crowded, urban center of the country looking for a weekend break in the countryside.

Scholars have distinguished between two modes of South African apartheid. The first was what they term “trivial” or “petty” apartheid, though “visible” apartheid conveys more precisely the kind of segregation in question. This was the sort of segregation that was noticed by any visitor: separate park benches, buses, restaurants, toilets, and so on. Israel has been careful to avoid in so far as it can this visible kind of segregation, aware that this is what most people think of as “apartheid”. It has done so, even though, as we have seen, life in Israel is highly segregated for Jewish and Palestinian citizens. Residence is almost always segregated, as is primary and secondary education and much of the economy. But shopping malls, restaurants and toilets are not separate for Jewish and Palestinian citizens.

The same scholars refer to “grand” or “resource” apartheid, which they consider to have been far more integral to apartheid South Africa’s political project. This is segregation in relation to the state’s key material resources, such as land, water and mineral wealth. Israel has been similarly careful to segregate the main material resources to preserve them for the Jewish majority alone. It does this through the establishment of hundreds of exclusively Jewish communities like Tzipori. As noted previously, almost all of Israel’s territory has been locked up in these cooperative communities. And in line with its Zionist sloganeering about making the desert bloom, Israel has also restricted the commercial exploitation of water to agricultural communities like the kibbutz and moshav. It has provided subsidized water to these Jewish-only communities – and denied it to Palestinian communities – by treating the commercial use of water as a national right for Jews alone.
A thought experiment using Tzipori Village guest house neatly illustrates how Israel practices apartheid but in a way that only marginally differs from the South African variety. Had this bed and breakfast been located in a white community in South Africa, no black citizen would have been allowed to stay in it even for a night, and even if the owner himself had not been racist. South African law would have forbidden it. But in Israel any citizen can stay in Tzipori Village, Jew and Palestinian alike. Although the owner may be racist and reject Palestinian citizens, nothing in the law allows him to do so.

But – and this is crucial – Tzipori’s admissions committee would never allow a Palestinian citizen to buy the guest house or any home in the moshav, or even rent a home there. The right a Palestinian citizen has to spend a night in Tzipori Village is “trivial” or “petty” when compared to Israel’s sweeping exclusion of all Palestinian citizens from almost all the country’s territory. That is the point the scholars of South African apartheid highlight in distinguishing between the two modes of apartheid. In this sense, Israel’s apartheid may not be identical to South Africa’s, but it is a close relative or cousin.

This difference is also apparent in Israel’s treatment of suffrage. The fact that all Israeli citizens – Jews and Palestinians – have the vote and elect their own representatives is often cited by Israel’s supporters as proof that Israel is a normal democratic country and cannot therefore be an apartheid state. There are, however, obvious problems with this claim.

We can make sense of the difference by again examining South Africa. The reason South African apartheid took the form it did was because a white minority, determined to preserve its privileges, faced off against a large black majority. It could not afford to give them the vote because any semblance of democracy would have turned power over to the black population and ended apartheid.
Israel, on the other hand, managed to radically alter its demographic fortunes by expelling the vast majority of Palestinians in 1948. This was the equivalent of gerrymandering the electoral constituency of the new Jewish state on a vast, national scale. The exclusion of most Palestinians from their homeland through the Citizenship Law, and the open door for Jews to come to Israel provided by the Law of Return, ensured Israel could tailor-make a “Jewish ethnocracy” in perpetuity.
The Israeli-Palestinian political scientist Asad Ghanem has described the Palestinian vote as “purely symbolic” – and one can understand why by considering Israel’s first two decades, when Palestinian citizens were living under a military government. Then, they faced greater restrictions on their movement than Palestinians in the West Bank today. It would be impossible even for Israel’s keenest supporters to describe Israel as a democracy for its Palestinian citizens during this period, when they were under martial law. And yet Palestinians in Israel were awarded the vote in time for Israel’s first general election in 1949 and voted throughout the military government period. In other words, the vote may be a necessary condition for a democratic system but it is far from a sufficient one.

In fact, in Israel’s highly tribal political system, Jews are encouraged to believe they must vote only for Jewish Zionist parties, ones that uphold the apartheid system we have just analyzed. That has left Palestinian citizens with no choice but to vote for contending Palestinian parties. The one major Jewish-Arab party, the Communists, was in Israel’s earliest years a significant political force among Israeli Jews. Today, they comprise a tiny fraction of its supporters, with Palestinian citizens dominating the party.

With politics so tribal, it has been easy to prevent Palestinians from gaining even the most limited access to power. Israel’s highly proportional electoral system has led to myriad small parties in the Israeli parliament, the Knesset. All the Jewish parties have at various times participated in government in what are effectively rainbow coalitions. But the Palestinian parties have never been invited into an Israeli government, or had any significant impact on the legislative process. Israel’s political system may allow Palestinian citizens to vote, but they have zero political influence. This is why Israel can afford the generosity of allowing them to vote, knowing it will never disturb a tyrannical Jewish-majority rule.
Palestinian parliament member Ahmed Tibi has expressed it this way: “Israel is a democratic state for Jewish citizens, and a Jewish state for Arab citizens.”

‘Subversive’ call for equality

But increasingly any Palestinian presence in the Knesset is seen as too much by Israel’s Jewish parties. When the Oslo process was initiated in the late 1990s, the Israeli and Palestinian leaderships agreed that Israel’s Palestinian citizens should remain part of Israel in any future two-state arrangement. In response, Palestinian citizens began to take their Israeli citizenship far more seriously. A new party, Balad, was established by a philosophy professor, Azmi Bishara, who campaigned on a platform that Israel must stop being a Jewish state and become a “state of all its citizens” – a liberal democracy where all citizens would enjoy equal rights.

This campaign was soon picked up by all the Palestinian political parties, and led to a series of documents – including the most important, the Future Vision of the Palestinian Arabs in Israel – demanding major reforms that would turn Israel into either “a state of its citizens” or a “consensual democracy”.

The Israeli leadership was so discomfited by this campaign that in 2006 the prime minister, Ehud Olmert, held a meeting with the Shin Bet. Unlike usual meetings of the secret police, this discussion was widely publicized. The Israeli media reported that the Shin Bet regarded the so-called Future Vision documents as “subversion” and warned that they would use any means, including non-democratic ones, to defeat such a campaign for equal rights.

A year later, when Bishara – the figurehead of this movement – was out of the country on a speaking tour, it was announced that he would be put on trial for treason should he return. It was alleged that he had helped Hizbullah during Israel’s 2006 war with Lebanon – a claim even the Israeli newspaper Haaretz dismissed as preposterous. Bishara stayed away. Effectively, the government and Shin Bet had declared war on efforts to democratize Israel. As a result, most Palestinian politicians turned the volume down on their demands for political reform.
The Joint List at the European Union
However, their continuing presence in the Knesset – especially as a succession of governments under Netanyahu has grown ever-more rightwing – has enraged more and more Jewish legislators. For years, the main Jewish parties have used their control of the Central Elections Committee to try to prevent leading Palestinian politicians from standing in parliamentary elections. However, the Supreme Court has – by ever-narrower margins – repeatedly overturned the CEC’s decisions.
Avigdor Lieberman, the Soviet-born Israeli defense minister who has been leading the attack on Palestinian legislators, managed to push through a Threshold Law in 2014 that raised the electoral threshold to a level that would be impossible for any of the three large Palestinian parties to surmount. But in a major surprise, these very different parties – representing Communist, Islamic and democratic-nationalist streams – put aside their differences to create a Joint List. In a prime example of unintended consequences, the 2015 general election resulted in the Joint List becoming the third largest party in the Knesset.

For a brief while, and to great consternation in Israel, it looked as if the List might become the official opposition, providing Palestinian legislators with access to security briefings and the right to head sensitive Knesset committees.

The pressure to get rid of the Palestinian parties has continued to intensify. In 2016 the Knesset passed another law – initially called the Zoabi Law, and later renamed the Expulsion Law – that allows a three-quarters parliamentary majority to expel any legislator, not because they committed a crime or misdeed but because the other legislators do not like their political views. The law’s original name indicated that the prime target for expulsion was Haneen Zoabi, who is now the most prominent member of Bishara’s Balad party.

According to commentators, it will be impossible to raise the three-quarters majority needed to approve such an expulsion. But in a time of war, or during one of the intermittent major attacks on Gaza, it seems probable that such a majority can be marshaled against outspoken critics of Israel – and supporters of a state of all its citizens – like Zoabi.

In fact, it only requires the expulsion of one member of the Joint List and the other members will be placed in an untenable position with their voters. They will be in the Knesset only because the Jewish Zionist legislators have chosen not to expel them – yet. This is why the Haaretz newspaper referred to the Expulsion Law as the first step in the “ethnic cleansing of the Knesset.”

As Israeli officials seem increasingly determined to abolish even the last formal elements of democracy in Israel, the country’s Palestinian leaders are finding themselves with limited options. Their only hope is to bring wider attention to the substantial democratic deficit in the Israeli polity.
In February, responding to the government’s moves to legislate a Basic Law on “Israel as the nation-state of the Jewish people”, Knesset member Yousef Jabareen submitted an alternative Basic Law. It was titled “Israel, a democratic, egalitarian, and multi-cultural state”. In any western state, such a law would be axiomatic and redundant. In Israel, the measure stood no chance of gaining support in the Knesset except from legislators from the the Palestinian parties.

Jabareen admitted in an interview that the bill would be unlikely to secure backing even from the five members of Meretz, by far the most leftwing Jewish party in the parliament. Optimistically, he observed: “I want to hope that Meretz will be among them [supporters]. I have shared with Meretz a draft of the bill, but I have not asked them at this stage to join, in order to give them time to mull things over.”

There could hardly be a more ringing indictment of Israeli society than the almost-certain futility of seeking a Jewish legislator in the Knesset willing to support legislation for tolerance and equality.




100 Israeli Snipers Mowed Down Unarmed Civilians as if it were a Turkey Shoot

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Massacre in Gaza - But if you Condemn It You Will be Called Anti-Semitic




All in a day’s work


 Yesterday was Day of the Land in Gaza and thousands of people demonstrated near the border fence with Israel.  Gaza has been under a starvation siege by Israel for more than a decade.  It is a siege by air, land and sea yet Israel claims it is not the occupying power!

Some 17 people were murdered yesterday and up to 1500 people injured in a wanton massacre of an unarmed, civilian population which was exercising its right to demonstrate.

The Israeli state has what it calls an ‘existentialist’ fear of the Palestinians crossing the fence that sorrounds Gaza and entering the Israeli state.   To understand this you must understand that Israel was born in fire, the Nakba.  A Jewish state could only come into existence if the majority of its Arab inhabitants, over ¾ million, were expelled, ethnically cleansed.  Those who tried to come back, termed ‘infiltrators’ were shot dead, mainly in the 1950’s.  Thousands are estimated to have died. 

The demonstrations yesterday threatened to effect a  Return to Palestine for the Palestinians and nothing is more calculated to arouse Israel’s anger than the idea of a return of the refugees.  100 armed snipers were thus engaged to mow down anyone who even approached near to the fence. 
The world will no doubt ritually condemn this massacre whilst moving on.
Thousands of Palestinians gather near the border fence
The Board of Deputies of British Jews, which has been frothing at the mouth all week over fake anti-Semitism and denouncing what it calls ‘conspiracy’ theories about the Israeli Embassy controlling its output enaged in a few conspiracy theories of its own.  It tweeted in response to the massacres:  ‘Hamas once again using its civilians – inc children – as pawns.  We call for calm & a return to negotiating table resulting in a secure, Jewish & democratic Israel alongside a viable & vibrant Palestinian state.’
A helpful Twitter user amended the Guardian's 'shitty' headline - armies clash, civlians get murdered or slaughtered but the Guardian believes in 'balance' - fortunately there were no Guardian reporters covering the Warsaw Ghetto Uprising or they would have reported the attacks on Nazi soldiers as being unprovoked
According to these racists, thousands  of Palestinians protested against the siege of Gaza and the theft of their land, not because they hate the siege and the starvation tactics of Israel, but because they have been put up to it by those wicked people in Hamas.  Hamas has magical powers of coercion over thousands of people such that it can make them risk their lives.  Of course these lies lack all credibility and simply betray the racist mentality of those that Corbyn appeases.  Palestinians aren’t clever enough to know they are being manipulated by their leaders, unlike the savages that Israel employs in uniform.

The rest of the Board of Deputies’s tweet is equally as hypocritical.  They know very well that not one member of Israel’s cabinet supports a Palestinian state of any description.  Neither does the Israeli Labour Party either.

This however is the group that is responsible for claiming that all British Jews (except for a few ‘traitors’) support Israel’s atrocities and them proclaims, in mock horror, that there is a rise in ‘anti-Semitism’.

The wonder is that Jeremy Corbyn plays along with this fiction forgetting everything he ever did in 30+ years of work in the Palestine solidarity movement.

Tony Greenstein

According to the committee organizing the march, the Palestinian in the video is Abed el-Fatah Abed e-Nabi, 18, and was killed as a result of the shooting  IDF claims Hamas distributes many videos, some of which are partial and fabricated
 and 
  Mar 31, 2018 12:38 PM
Screen capture of video distributed by Palestinian media

A Palestinian taking part in Friday's "March of Return" near the Gaza border was shot with his back to Israeli army soldiers while moving away from the border fence, so appears to show a video published on Palestinian media Saturday.

According to the committee organizing the march, the Palestinian in the video is Abed el-Fatah Abed e-Nabi, 18, and was killed as a result of the shooting, which occurred east of Jabaliya in the northern Gaza strip.

The video shows two Palestinians running away from the border towards a large group of protesters. When they are several feet away from the group, a shot is heard, and one of the Palestinians, reporedtly e-Nabi, drops to the ground. A small group gathers around to assist him. According to the committee behind the march, the video "clearly shows e-Nabi poses no threat."
Israeli Defence Forces spokesperson has issued a reply, saying that Hamas distributes many vidoes, among which are those that show partial events that have been edited and fabricated.

"IDF acted Friday against violent protests and terrorists activities which included live fire towards its soldiers, attempts to inflitrate Israel ... stone throwing, bottle boms,"read the statement. "The forces acted according to open-fire protocols and in a reasonable manner as they avoided harming civilians posted there by Hamas, who wish to embarrass Israel while risking those civilians ... anyone who partakes in violent protests puts themselves at risk."
An injured woman
E-Nabi is one of a 15 Palestinians killed in Friday's demonstrations, in which 758 were wounded from live fire, 148 from rubber-tipped bullets, 422 from inhaling tear gas and 88 from other causes.

The UN Security Council convened Friday night to discuss the events on the Gaza border, despite the United States' and Israel's request to postpone deliberations for Saturday, due to Passover holiday eve. No Israeli envoy was present during discussions.

In a statement released Saturday, Israel's envoy to the UN Danny Danon said "This disgraceful abuse of the holiday will not prevent us from presenting the truth regarding Hamas' violent protests, whose only purpose is to ignite the sector and incite provocations."

An Israeli Arab human rights organization condemned Israel's action on the Gaza border as 'unlawful' on Saturday, alerting Attorney General Avichay Mendelblit that Israel was in breach of international law.         

Jeremy Corbyn Stabs Himself in the Back as the Fake News Anti-Semitism Campaign Gathers Strength

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Christine Shawcroft’s Resignation was a Totally Unnecessary Betrayal of a Comrade A Self-Inflicted Wound


Unfortunately Jeremy Corbyn preferred to stab himself in the back instead
Islamaphobia is 4 times as bad as antisemitism and anti-Roma racism is 6.5 times as bad yet all the news is about fake 'antisemitism'
I understand from close friends of Christine Shawcroft, that her resignation was not an act of selflessness or given willingly.  She was directly asked to resign by Jeremy Corbyn personally with the implied threat that if she didn’t resign she would be suspended.
This came after a petitionwas signed by 39 of the usual culprits – John Mann, Luciana Berger etc. demanding that Christine should resign. For Jeremy to have stabbed a close comrade in the back in order to appease these far-Right creatures is disgraceful.  Does he think that they are going to thank him? 
Christine Shawcroft - betrayed by Corbyn and Lansman
Being my silent witness aroused the ire of the Jewish Chronicle and its Political Editor Marcus Dysch
It is clear from the newspapers today – from the Sunday Times to the Observer– that the Fake News Anti-Semitism Smear Campaign is in full flow again.  Let us be in no doubt that whatever else it has to do with it is not anti-Semitism. 

If Corbyn gives way now to this artificial and hyped nonsense what will happen when and if he does get into power.


The Board of Deputies Open Letter to Corbyn last week made it crystal clear what their real agenda was - 'the far left's obsessive hatred' of things like Israel's gunning down of unarmed demonstrators
The Board justifying Israel's latest massacre of Palestinians.  The Board of Deputies is an unelected Zionist group, wholly unrepresentative of secular Jews.  The reason it attacks Corbyn is because he supports the Palestinians.
Jonathan  Hoffman (left) is a member of the Board of Deputies, Paul Besser (right) is a member of Britain First and was their 'Intelligence Officer' the woman in the middle Gemma Sheridan is a member of the neo-Nazi Jewish Defence League - Question to Jonathan Arkus, President of the BOD - why is Hoffman a member of the Board given his repeated support for anti-semites?
Here is Harvey Garfield (left) and Jonathan Hoffman (right) in the company of Roberta Moore, a member of the Jewish Defence League (Jewish wing of the English Defence League) whose members are in the background in paramilitary fatigues - Question - Why is someone who works with fascists and neo-Nazis a member of the Board of Deputies - so far Jonathan Arkush has remained silent and the gutter press isn't interested

It is a lie to suggest that Christine Shawcroft defended a holocaust denier. As I have already writtenAlan Bull, who was suspended and prevented from standing for Peterborough Council, distributed a Holocaust denial article amongst a close circle of friends for discussion.  He was not advocating Holocaust denial and in response to a question from one of those friends made his position very clear. However those who breached that group’s security erased those comments when they broadcast a story of Holocaust denial distribution.

I have also sent Holocaust denial articles to people I know. Anyone who is an anti-fascist should be acquainted with the kind of material holocaust deniers distribute.  I doubt if most of the Zionists who shout so loudly would, if push came to shove, be able to respond to the arguments of the holocaust deniers because most Zionists are ignorant propagandists.  The most distinguished of all Holocaust historians, Professor Raul Hilberg, argued that we should listen to holocaust deniers because they may make us think again about some of the things we argue about.  To suggest that simple distribution of a Holocaust denial article constitutes support for Holocaust denial is fakery.  One thing however is very clear.  

The fake news campaign over ‘anti-Semitism’ that the Sunday papers were full of has only one target and that is Jeremy Corbyn.
The Sunday papers are unanimous - we have the Observer engaging in anti-semitic tropes focusing on a rich Jewish donor leaving Labour with the implication that Jews use money to influence political parties
The Sunday Times article was total nonsense.  It concerned Facebook groups that support Corbyn.  All of them are unofficial, most of them are unmoderated and occasionally anti-Semitic materal might appear.  On the few occasions I have seen it I have drawn it to the attention of the moderators.  But to say that these are hate filled anti-Semitic groups is absolute rubbish and it ill becomes racist sewers like the Sunday Times, which employ racist columnists like Rod Liddle, to throw the accusation of ‘anti-Semitism’ at anyone.

I should perhaps also say that anti-Semitism today in Britain, despite the volume of spurious allegations by the newspapers, is marginal.  7% of British people have prejudiced views about Jews compared to 28% in respect of Muslims and 45% in respect of the Roma.  Anti-Semitism exists mainly on social media.  No one has ever died because of a tweet or a Facebook post.  It is in many ways utter trivia.  It is bricks and bottles on the streets that most concern me not social media.  The newspapers concentrate on social media anti-Semitism because there is virtually none in society, unlike Islamaphobia.
The Daily Mail is one of the biggest supporters of the idea that Labour is 'anti-semitic' however during the 1930's it support Moseley's British Union of Fascists and Hitler whilst urging the government not to admit Jewish refugees - nothing has changed as it is still hostile to refugees but that doesn't stop it being a strong supporter of Israel and being antisemitic
The Mail's Support for Israel and Zionism and support for the fake 'antisemitism' campaign against Labour goes hand in hand with genuine anti-semitism
However many of his friends that Jeremy throws to the wolves, however often Jeremy denies he is an anti-Semite he will still be attacked. The reason why is simple.  The target of the defamers and smearers is not me, not Jackie Walker, not Marc Wadsworth still less Alan Bull.  It is Jeremy Corbyn himself.  The purpose of the campaign is not to eradicate anti-Semitism but to eliminate Corbyn.

Because Corbyn gives every sign, not only of having no backbone left but also of what appears to be terminal timidity at best or stupidity at worst, he doesn’t seem to appreciate this simple fact.  Whatever he does, however he does it, however much he concedes on the principles he once believed in, he will be the target as and until he goes.  And if he goes the ‘anti-Semitism’ problem will likewise disappear.
Britain's Tory tabloids combine vicious racism against Black and Asian people, traditional antisemitism with slavish support for Israel
Corbyn really does believes that the Board of Deputies is sincere in its attacks on anti-Semitism.  That anti-Jewish hatred concerns them.  This is total nonsense. Anti-Semitism is not and never has been their major concern.

When I first joined the Anti-Nazi League in the late 1970’s, we came under sustained attack from the Board of Deputies.  Why?  Because they SWP who formed the ANL were anti-Zionist.  For the Board of Deputies anti-Zionism was always more important than anti-fascism.  Even Searchlight Magazine, which since the editorship of Gerry Gable has become pro-Zionist, called them ‘kamikaze pilots’ (Searchlight was then under the editorship of Maurice Ludmer, who unlike Gable was a socialist).
When Sir Oswald's Moseley's British Union of Fascists attempted to march through Jewish East End of London on 9 October 1936 100,000 Jews and non-Jewish workers stopped the fascists - the Board of Deputies told Jews to stay in doors
The Board of Deputies is a bourgeois body, unelected, unrepresentative and unconcerned about fascism.  When over 100,000 Jews and working class East Enders turned out in October 1936 to stop Oswald Moseley’s fascists marching through the East End of London the Board told Jews to stay indoors, keep your heads down.  It didn’t believe in physically opposing fascism.
The only demonstrations the Board holds are in support of Israel or in opposition to the Palestinians.  In the 1970’s when the National Front, an openly anti-Semitic party was beating the Liberals into 3rd place and gaining 30% of the vote in cities like Leicester and Bradford, the Board of Deputies refused to mobilise the Jewish community.  It has always preferred to keep a low profile.  It is only over Israel that it becomes motivated.  That was why it held its so-called rally against anti-Semitism last Monday outside the House of Commons included Norman Tebbit, Sajid David and even the bigots of the DUP.

Corbyn is demeaning himself by begging to meet the Board of Deputies.  It is a totally futile exercise since they are not interested in anything but his removal.  There are no amount of concessions, no amount of expulsions that he could make which would satisfy them.

When the history of this period comes to be written no doubt some enterprising researcher will put in a freedom of information request to the American Embassy files and dig up information that will show that the fake anti-Semitism campaign began with the CIA and the Deep State.  No doubt Joan Ryan MP, with her £1m slush fund and Ruth Smeeth MP, who Wikileaks has already described as a US asset, will be shown to have played their part in this fake campaign.
What is particularly disgraceful is that Momentum, of whose companies Christine is a Director, has said nothing throughout this affair.  Not one word. Christine was left to twist in the wind.  
The great dictator - Jon Lansman
Although 3 left-wingers were elected earlier this year to the National Executive Committee, we now have someone we didn’t vote for on the Right, Eddie Izzard.  Momentum has been shown to be a sleeping giant.  It has 36,000 members and yet it had nothing to say.  It was frozen, immobile because Jon Lansman, Momentum’s Great Dictator, has bought into the false anti-Semitism charges from the start. Because Momentum lacks all democracy there is no way of challenging this situation.

Christine was extremely close to Lansman, so much so that when Lansman moved to get rid of Jackie Walker as Vice-Chair of Momentum, thus encouraging Crooked Iain McNicol to suspend her, Christine voted in support of Lansman.  Likewise when she was on the NEC Christine voted to refer Jackie’s case to the NCC.  Although she has now indicated that she is opposed to Jackie’s expulsion this is another case of the witchhunt coming to bite people who previously had given it succour.

Nonetheless this is a sad end to Christine’s 19 years on the NEC during which she has been a rock of the Left.  The way she has been treated, both by Corbyn and Lansman is disgraceful.  What makes it worse is that in betraying Christine Corbyn has simply emboldened his own enemies.

What Kind of State Demolishes Schools? Israel

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School Could Be Out Forever for These Bedouin Kids in the West Bank

The Zionists International Holocaust Remembrance Alliance definition of ‘anti-Semitism’ says that ‘criticism of Israel similar to that levelled against any other country cannot be regarded as antisemitic’ with the clear implication that other criticism is anti-Semitic. 



The problem is of course that Israel is not ‘any other country’.  It is unlike all other countries being a settler colonial state.  In what other liberal democracy, which is what Israel claims to be, would you have whole villages of an ethnic minority demolished in order that a racially exclusive town could be built on top of it?  That is what is happening to Bedouin villages in Israel’s Negev.

What other country would have a segregated education system and a situation where Arabs and Jews live apart?  But this is only inside Israel.  In the West Bank there are two separate legal systems. One for Jewish settlers and one for the Palestinians.  Apartheid?  Perish the thought.  That is why Israel demolishes Palestinian schools.  

They have no permission to be built because in Area C, 60% of the West Bank, permits to build aren’t given to Palestinians unlike of course Jewish settlers.  So t his is why school could be out forever in parts of the West Bank?  Is it anti-Semitic to criticise that?  I will leave that up to you.

Tony Greenstein

Israel wants to demolish the school in Al Muntar, with alternatives located too far away for the children to attend. Residents believe they face expulsion because of expansion plans for an adjacent settlement
By
Amira Hass
Feb 06, 2018

First- to sixth-graders from the Bedouin community of Al Muntar have received a three-week reprieve. During this time, they’ll be able to study without fear that bulldozers could show up at any moment and raze their West Bank school to the ground, turning it into a pile of bricks and timber.
The reprieve – an interim injunction that freezes demolition orders previously issued by the Civil Administration – was handed down by Supreme Court Justice Uzi Vogelman last Wednesday, less than 24 hours before the demolition was scheduled to take place.

What will happen after these three weeks elapse? Everything is in the hands of Allah, says Umm Ayish, a 55-year-old grandmother whose children and grandchildren dropped out of school because the only institutions were sited several hours away on foot or by donkey, accessible only via slippery and steep paths.

In addition to Allah, the fate of the school also lies in the hands of the High Court of Justice, the Civil Administration and the Coordinator of Government Activities in the Territories. Will they be persuaded that even the children of this Bedouin community in the Judean Desert are entitled to regular studies under reasonable conditions – without reaching school tired after an early wake-up call and a long journey on steep paths; and without having to return home after dark with no power to generate the light by which they might do homework?

On Wednesday morning, hours before the reprieve was announced, pupils’ voices could be heard coming through the windows of the condemned school as some of their fathers and brothers sat on a nearby hill, reminiscing about the hardships they underwent trying to get an education. Most of them dropped out due to the difficulties of getting to the elementary school located in Wadi Abu Hindi, a community situated 3 kilometers (1.8 miles) to the north, and the high school in Al Sawahra, some 15 kilometers to the west.
Two Bedouin children walking home from school in the West Bank village of Al Muntar, January 2018. \ Moti Milrod
The students sounded happy and carefree. However, according to the community’s mukhtar (elder), Abu Hassan (Mohammed Hassan al-Hadliyeh), the children are well aware of the situation. “They ask me, ‘Will the school be demolished tomorrow?’ And then they tell me, ‘If so, we’ll go to sleep and that’s that,’” he relates, adding that “if the school is torn down, their future will be destroyed. Our girls will stop going to school. In the past, the Bedouin didn’t send their girls to school, but we’ve changed. In Saudi Arabia they let women drive now, and we understand that we must allow girls to study.” They recognize the value of an education not only at elementary-school level but also in high school and university too.

Dahoud is 45 and regrets having dropped out of school. “True, we learn from experience and from nature, and know things others don’t. But nowadays people don’t care what’s inside of you, every employer wants to know what diploma you have,” he says.

Abdallah, 39, wears a hippie-esque green kaffiyeh over his curly hair and says he’s a tour guide. 
“There’s a school in [the nearby settlement of] Ma’aleh Adumim, a place to get an education,” he says in fluent Hebrew. “All we’re asking is that we have a kindergarten and school as well. If you had a 6-year-old child who had to walk 6 kilometers both ways to get to school, wouldn’t you be concerned and want to change that? This applies to winter and summer, with the risk of slipping in the rain or dehydration while going to school. We’re asking, with respect and love, to get what everyone else has. We’re not asking for the moon.”
FILE PHOTO: Students at the only school in the Bedouin village of Al Muntar in the West Bank, January 2018. \ Moti Milrod
Due to the hardships involved in accessing school premises and the high dropout rates – a third of the hundred children of school age – the village of Al Muntar, along with Al Sawahra, decided to build a school in the heart of the community. In 2013, they built some shacks for a kindergarten. This led to a change in the local people’s aspirations and needs, with parents preferring that their small children play together, supervised, in the mornings.

According to documents at the Al Sawahra council, the area allocated for the school and kindergarten is owned by one of the village’s residents. In contrast to the school in Wadi Abu Hindi, situated in a ravine where rainwater congregates, the new area is on a plain. The European Union provided funds and the Al Sawahra council handled construction.
A desk and chairs outside the only school in the village of Al Muntar in the West Bank. Bedouin attitudes to education have changed in recent times, especially in relation to girls. \ Moti Milrod
The Palestinian Authority’s Education Ministry appointed a principal and teachers, who travel in together daily on a pickup truck that trundles along the rocky and unpaved road. It was also decided to dedicate one of the rooms to a permanent clinic. Currently, the community has a mobile clinic that visits only twice a month.

However, like all Bedouin communities in the area, the village of Al Muntar is not recognized by the Civil Administration. Some of its residents, hailing from the Al Sawahra area, have been living here since before Israel was established. Most of the village’s residents belong to the Jahalin tribe, which was expelled from Tel Arad in 1948, subsequently settling on the edge of the Judean Desert in the early 1950s. Abu Hassan was born in Al Muntar in 1968 and is a son of these refugees. When he was 7, he witnessed the start of construction in Ma’aleh Adumim.

The years passed and Ma’aleh Adumim expanded, leading to further waves of expulsion. In 1990, the settlement of Kedar sprang up right across from Al Muntar. The area had already been declared a closed military zone, though no military exercises are conducted there. The structures and sheep pens in Al Muntar have been torn down several times and the flocks confiscated. But the residents were determined to remain in the place that has been their home since the ’50s. A few years ago, they negotiated with the Civil Administration to try to find a way of staying; it was agreed they would not be evacuated. However, any construction – including public buildings such as schools or clinics – remains prohibited.





 \ Moti Milrod
In December 2016, inspectors from the Civil Administration placed stop-work orders on the kindergarten (which was already operating) and a school being constructed. This led to the standard legal-bureaucratic process of a request being filed for a building permit, this request being denied, an appeal being lodged, the appeal being denied and then, last July, a petition being filed at the High Court of Justice. The school and Bedouin community are represented by lawyer Yotam Ben-Hillel. In the petition, he argued that “in several Jewish settlements and outposts, there are schools and kindergartens that violate planning and construction laws. In many cases, these schools operate with the approval of Israel’s Education Ministry, which funds them and pays for their teachers. The [petition’s] respondents have no intention of demolishing these [buildings] for the sake of maintaining public order,” he wrote.

Following the filing of the petition, the High Court ordered a demolition freeze on condition that construction was stopped. On December 27, justices Yoram Danziger, Neal Hendel and Yael Willner accepted the state’s arguments and denied the petition. They argued that the school was on state land and that the petitioners had continued building despite the court’s prior instructions. The judges wrote: “This is a place that served as a school, but that does not justify the means used or the taking of the law into one’s own hands. One action could create new needs, and so on, with everyone building as they please. The right thing is for the entire issue to be regulated through the legal system.”

The judges did not refer to Ben-Hillel’s claims of inequality – both in regard to planning and building opportunities given to Jews, in contrast to building prohibitions on the Palestinians; and the presence of unauthorized educational structures in the settlements and outposts that operate unhindered and are not threatened with demolition.
The Bedouin village of Al Muntar, with the settlement of Kedar in the near distance. \ Moti Milrod
Even before the ruling, Israel announced that the kindergarten would not be demolished. Regarding the school, the court gave the petitioners until February 1 to vacate the premises. In one final, desperate attempt to save it, the residents asked the Civil Administration to allocate the 2 dunams (0.5 acres) on which the school stands to them, in order to meet the public need for establishing educational institutions. They also asked to be excluded from the firing zone. They also presented a detailed plan for the school structure and asked for the demolition order to be frozen. They received no reply, whereupon Ben-Hillel filed a second petition last Wednesday morning. Justice Vogelman has instructed the state to reply within three weeks.

Construction at the school has stopped. The yard remains unpaved and no stairs have been built to the classrooms. In the meantime, only 33 students – mainly girls – attend the unfinished school.

Several fifth- and sixth-grade girls said that “the Jews want to demolish the school in order to evict us from here.” Abu Hassan, meanwhile, concludes that “they want our land in order to expand Kedar. Sometimes the inspectors come and tell us to go to Azzariyeh [near East Jerusalem]; sometimes they mention Nu’eima, north of Jericho; sometimes they say Al-Jibal, near the Abu Dis garbage dump. They say it’s for our own good. But I know what’s good for me: It’s to live where I was born and where we’ve been living for almost 70 years.”

If Momentum is to serve any further purpose Lansman has to depart

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Jon Lansman Waves the White Flag of Surrender on Radio 4’s Today Program



One reaction to the 'revelations' that Corbyn meets Jews

The full malevolence as well as the pathetic ignorance of the fake news ‘anti-Semitism’ campaign was on display in all its glory with the uproar over Jeremy Corbyn’s attendance at a Passover seder hosted by the Jewish group Jewdas.  An ‘exclusive’ by the Tory Guido Fawkes it was eagerly taken up by the mass media and right-wing Labour MPs.  Corbyn was guilty of another example of ‘anti-Semitism’ because he had chosen the wrong Jews to sit down and have a meal with!  Instead he should have paid homage to the Tories at the Jewish Board of Deputies and the Jewish Leadership Council.  He should have supped with Jonathan Arkush, President of the BOD who effusively welcomedDonald Trump and his anti-Semitic retinue of Bannon and Gorka to power.

We even had Angela Smith MP, the non-Jewish MP for Penistone and Stocksbridge, tweeting her outrage about Corbyn’s ‘seber’ – the idiot couldn’t even spell the word properly before spilling her venom all over Twitter.

What this episode should demonstrate to people is that there is no logic or rationale to the ‘anti-Semitism’ attack other than the removal of Corbyn as Leader of the Labour Party.  Even a child should be able to figure that one out.  Unfortunately this simple truth escapes Jon Lansman, who is an open Zionist. The real concern of the defamers and libellers is not anti-Semitism in the Labour Party, in so far as it exists, but the existence of the Corbyn leadership itself.
An example of this was the Sunday Times ‘Corbyn – Factory of Hate’ and other papers’ focus on pro-Corbyn Facebook groups which have no connection either to the Labour Party or Momentum itself.  The Sunday Times claims that they are cesspits of ‘anti-Semitism’ but even by their own account there are just 2000 questionable posts and most of those are anti-Israel rather than anti-Semitic. As Jewish Voice for Labour’s excellent post The truth about Corbyn supporters’ Facebook groups states 2000 posts represents less than 0.05% of the total content on these groups.

Professor Moshe Machover has distributed a very simple Q&A on Anti-Semitism as a helpful guide to the current situation.
The Serengeti and Zebras
A Simple Guide to Anti-Semitism
QIs there antisemitism in Britain?

A Yes.

QHow is it manifested?

A The late Ambalavaner Sivanadan distinguished two kinds of racism: The racism that discriminates and the racism that kills.”  Antisemitism in Britain is of neither of these kinds. It is the kind of racism that insults and stereotypes.

QAre there antisemites in the Labour Party?

AThis question is like the question “Are there zebras in Norway?” The answer is “Yes, there are a few. In fact, the Oslo zoo seems to have had a few too many.”  But Norway, unlike the Serengeti, is not the natural habitat of zebras. The claim that the LP is a habitat of antisemites like the Serengeti is a habitat of zebras is a malicious lie.

QHow is this lie promoted?

AA good place to start is the Al-Jazeera exposé.

In other wordsthe whole issue of ‘anti-Semitism in the Labour Party’ is a lie whose sole purpose is to destroy the Corbyn leadership.  It began with the Daily Mail ‘expose’of Corbyn’s association with holocaust deniers and has continued via Oxford University Labour Club, the long erased muralin the East End of London and washed up on the shores of Angela Smith’s ‘seber’ with Jewdas.

All of these things should be obvious to anyone with half a brain, still less someone who calls himself a Corbyn supporter.  Momentum, whose sole purpose is to support Corbyn, could therefore be expected to be the first to staff the barricades in his defence and to call out the false anti-Semitism smears for what they are.

Instead, having kept completely silent for nearly two weeks as the renewed ‘anti-Semitism’ attacks gained traction, it eventually came out with a statementwhich conceded everything to the defamers and accusers.
Labour Against the Witchhunt has to fulfil the role that Momentum should be carryingn out

It spoke of the numerous cases of antisemitism in the Labour Party’ and the ‘apology for the pain caused both to Jewish members of the Labour Party and to the wider Jewish community’.  It stated that ‘Momentum’s NCG believes that accusations of antisemitism should not and cannot be dismissed simply as right wing smears nor as the result of conspiracies.’   Momentum’s only nod to the fact that this campaign has been wholly driven by the Right and a press determined to see an early end to Corbyn’s leadership was its acknowledgment that ‘some of Jeremy Corbyn’s political opponents are opportunistically using this issue as a way to undermine his leadership.’

As if this was not pathetic enough, Lansman was yesterday interviewed for nearly 15 minutes by Nick Robinson on Radio 4’s Today.  Here was an ideal opportunity to lay some of this nonsense to rest.  He could have laid into the malevolent and vituperative nonsense of those like Angela Smith, Guido Fawkes and the press who saw something strange in him celebrating a Jewish religious festival with progressive Jews rather than reactionary Tories. 



Presumably the '#enoughisenough' referred to idiot MPs such as Angela Smith
Not a bit of it.  Lansman instead made excuses pleading that it was Corbyn’s night off.  He described Jewdas as ‘Orthodox’ Jews which, from my knowledge of them, is not true.  They are whacky and irreverent but not Orthodox. 

And then, when presented with the statement by one of their number that ‘Israel was a pile of sewage’  responded that ‘it’s certainly not helpful to Jeremy or the Labour Party’.  Calling a state, not its people, a ‘pile of sewage’ is probably the kindest thing that can be said about those who deliberately gun down unarmed demonstrators.
The quote that got Guido all steamed up
The rest of Lansman’s pathetic interview has been transcribed below.  It talks about ‘coded’ anti-Semitism, ‘unconscious’ anti-Semitism, the need for ‘training’ to overcome it.  If anti-Semitism was a real threat in society or even in the Labour Party then it should be combated in exactly the same way as all racism is.  It is precisely because anti-Semitism barely exists that Lansman had to describe this phantom in these terms.

As Jews for Justice for Palestinians note, a survey by YouGov in 2017 for the Campaign against Antisemitism found, the numbers of those endorsing at least one antisemitic statement among Conservative and UKIP members was 40% and 39% respectively.  Among Labour and Liberal members the figures were 32% and 30% respectively. By comparing results to the 2016 survey, YouGov also found that antisemitic attitudes have fallen significantly in the Labour Party in the two years since Corbyn became Leader.  I think these figures are too high in any case and some of the statements put before people aren’t anti-Semitic for example Jewish use of the Holocaust.
Black anti-racist the late Sivanandan distinguished between racism that discriminates and racism that kills

When it came to the demonstration by the Board of Deputies a week ago outside Parliament Lansman stated it should not be a pretext for deselecting an MP.  Some 39 Labour MPs and peers attended.  Nearly all of them were the equivalent of those who John Major described as ‘the bastards’ – people who would be rid of Corbyn at a moment’s instant.

The demonstration was anything but an antiracist demonstration.  That Lansman could seriously describe a protest attended by Norman Tebbit, the arch racist who coined the ‘cricket test’ years ago to deny that British Pakistanis or Indians were British (because they supported teams from abroad) or the DUP, the party from Northern Ireland that was founded on the basis of Protestant Supremacy (and therefore identifies with the Jewish supremacist State of Israel) demonstrates just how far to the Right Lansman has come.
this fellow is a Jewish fascist with a photograph of Menachem Begin, who Einstein and Hannah Arendt accused of leading a Nazi-like party

The demonstration consisted to a large part of overt racists and fascists chanting ‘Jeremy Corbyn is a racist’ led by the guy in the picture in the Guardian (who has a picture of Menachem Begin, was once described as leading a Jewish Nazi party by Albert Einstein and Hannah Arendt in a letterto the New York Times).

The irony of all this is that the far-Right Campaign Against Anti-Semitism, which has already submitted a second complaint to the Labour Party that Corbyn is anti-Semitic has now also called for Lansman to be disciplinedfor anti-Semitism too!

If Momentum is to return to its original purpose then Lansman has to be removed from its leadership.  If it accepts the false anti-Semitism narrative then it is accepting the legitimacy of a campaign whose only purpose is to get rid of Corbyn.

Transcript of Jon Lansman’s Interview 3.4.18. on Radio 4’s Today Program

Q: Let’s start with the dinner before we move on to your statement. What puzzles people is this.  Last night Jeremy Corbyn went on TV to say, as you do in your statement, that worries about anti-Semitism are genuine.  He then sat down, had dinner with a group who say that they’re not genuine, they’re in fact a conspiracy.
 
I think this group Jewdas, unlike other groups you might describe as far left fringe groups in the Jewish community, are orthodox Jews, they’re embedded in their synagogue community and that makes them very different.  They are very much part of the Jewish community.  They’re an Orthodox part of the Jewish community, that see themselves as diaspora Jews, they perhaps don’t share the more secular approach to Israel in an ideological sense. 

Q:        You speak with authority because you’re Jewish yourself and you care about this.  My question was more not an argument about this group but does Jeremy Corbyn want to send a clear signal or not?  If he does why does he not sit down with the national leadership of the Jewish community, the Board of Deputies, the Jewish Leadership Council   not with a group who have been clear that they think that this is a fuss about nothing?

Well he sat down with this group for a Passover seder because they were people who lived in his constituency and it was his night off.  He had nothing in his official diary. His office didn’t know he was there.  So I don’t think this is as significant as it is made out and Guido isn’t known for his subtlety or nuanced debate on any issue after all.
The Daily Mail - the paper wot supported Hitler was the first paper to launch the false antisemitism smears - attacked Ed Miliband Labour's first Jewish leader for not eating a bacon sandwich correctly and because his father was a refugee from Nazi Germany

Q:        This is the Guido Fawkes web site that revealed it.  But people who have been at the dinner have also tweeted about it and have been clear.  I quoted one tweet saying Israel was sewerage which needs to be disposed of.  In a sense, isn’t this precisely the sort of language and thinking which you are now saying at Momentum has to stop.  

Well it’s certainly not helpful to Jeremy or the Labour Party but I haven’t seen the context of that and I think the main point is that Jeremy is seeking to meet with mainstream Jewish organisations.  He wants to meet, he’s very keen to meet and has been since before the demonstration last Monday with the Board of Deputies and the Jewish Leadership Council. 

Q:  You know him well.  When you talk to him about this subject do you think he always understood the problem with anti-Semitism, do you think he’s beginning to understand the problem with anti-Semitism what’s going on in his mind

Jeremy is a lifelong anti-racist.  It came as something of a shock to him to be described as some kind of a racist, of harbouring people with anti-Semitic views in the Party that he now leads.  I think awareness has grown as it has for all of us. In the statement from Momentum yesterday we talked about how we are surprised by how widespread the problem is.  The problem by the way is not that there is a widespread problem of Holocaust denial or those forms of Zionism but there is a widespread problem of unconscious bias.

In his interview Lansman pointedly refused to back up Christine Shawacroft
Spell out the bias.  What is fascinating about what you’ve said is that Jeremy Corbyn didn’t realize and you are saying that you as a prominent Jew in the Labour Party, very much on the Left but a Corbyn backer, someone whose been passionate about these issues, perhaps even you didn’t realize until you looked at it how bad this was. 

The longer this debate has gone on about anti-Semitism in the Labour Party, the more I’ve noticed on my Facebook feed for example and its particularly prevalent on social media, people who dismiss anti-Semitism as an issue in a way you would not dismiss Islamaphobia as an issue.  I think that reveals an unconscious bias that we’re all familiar with.  We send people on training courses to become aware of our unconscious bias as a result of sexism, racism, homophobia and so on.  But for some reason people in the LP seem less aware of it in themselves in relation to Jews. [compared to sexism etc]
Labour Against the Witchhunt puts out statement about anti-semitism being weaponised
Q:        Are you arguing that many people in the Labour Party, starting with the leader himself, need a form of education about what is acceptable language to use when it comes to talking about Jews and to talking about Israel?  
                                               
I think we need a widespread programme of education and training in the Labour Party about AS in order to help people recognise the dangers of using certain words, language can be very sensitive and words often mean something to other people different from what they mean to you. People need to be aware of those things.  Everybody in the Labour Party needs to be made aware. Right up to the people who are investigating charges of anti-Semitism in the Labour Party’s Compliance Unit.  Down to the people who are judging people in the National Constitutional Committee that eventually decides the outcome of some cases.   

Q:        Just to spell this out a bit.  There may be people who will say unless you say you hate Jews then you are not a racist.  I think you are saying there are all sorts of coded forms of racism using  Zio or Zionist when you really mean Jews.  Saying Israel should be wiped off the planet  instead of saying you disagree with the actions of this Israeli government.  Is that what you’re talking about?

It is.  Even the word Zionism itself means different things to different people. To some people it means the policies of the current Israeli government. We’ve seen what’s happened in Gaza in the last few days and that disturbs lots of people, me included. 

Q:        But are you saying to your supporters don’t attack Zionists when you criticize what’s happening in Gaza attack Netanyahu? 

Precisely.  There’s nothing wrong with attacking Netanyahu and the rest of the Israeli government.  But Zionism to the Jew in the street means only there being a Jewish state in Israel, safe and secure, nothing more than that. It’s not a discrete ideology, the ideology of Benjamin Netanyahu. 

Q:        You speak not just as the founder of Momentum, the most powerful organisation in the Labour Party, but you are now a member of Labour’s ruling National Executive Committee.  Take the example of Christine Shawcroft – she was on the NEC – she’s resigned now, having defended someone who did deny the Holocaust.  She always said she didn’t really read the Facebook thing but her instinct was to defend someone not to look at the evidence.  She is still on the Executive of Momentum.  Does she have to go now?

Christine Shawcroft didn’t see the photographic evidence that was so damning and she made a very bad misjudgement defending someone without seeing the full evidence. It’s one thing when you are in opposition when someone else is making the final decision about a case to take up a case about someone who feels they’ve been mistreated but when you’re chair of the committee you should see the full evidence.   So she made that bad judgement and she resigned not just from the Chair of the Committee but also from the NEC. 

Q:        But she’s not gone from Momentum.  Should she go?

We are in the middle of elections and she’s not standing in those elections. 

Q:        Are you saying, because you may be making a more general point, that her instinct, defend my people, be tribal, I’m on the Left, I’m a Corbynite, I’ve got to argue for my side, is the wrong instinct when it comes to anti-Semitism because it can mean that you defend the indefensible?

I certainly think we should not approach anti-Semitism and accusations of anti-Semitism in the way we approach cases which are factionalised, because a lot of cases that come before the National Executive are the result of in-fighting within the Labour Party.  You should certainly not approach them in that way.  We have to deal with every case of anti-Semitism on its merits.  We have to be trained in order to understand the issues properly. 

Q:        Here’s another test for you.  There’s members of Momentum around the country summoning their members of Parliament to meetings to explain why they attended an anti-Semitism rally and the implied threat is that they could be deselected.  As the founder of Momentum are you prepared to say today do not do this.  You should not need to explain why you go to an anti-racist rally. 

I do agree with that.  You should not have to defend why you go to an anti-racist rally and that’s why many Labour MPs did go there. 

Q:        So Thangam Debbonaire has been summoned to her Constituency Labour Party by Momentum activists in Bristol.  She should not have to answer those questions. 

It’s fair enough to answer a question it’s not fair enough to deselect someone for attending an anti-racist demonstration about anti-Semitism because it is clear that there is real concern within the Jewish community about anti-Semitism and we have to take that serious and we have to take every allegation of anti-Semitism seriously even if people sometimes opportunistically seize upon anti-Semitism as an issue to undermine Jeremy.  It doesn’t matter you’ve still got to take the allegation seriously. 

Q:        Let me end where we began with your view of Jeremy Corbyn.  There are some people in the Jewish community who will say look we hear the language but we also hear him call Hamas and Hezbollah friends.  We also hear him call a man who said Mossad carried out the 9/11 killings a very honoured citizen.  We also hear him praise groups who have criticized the Israelis and have dinner with groups who have criticized worries about anti-Semitism.  Are you sure, have you asked yourself in your own mind that Jeremy Corbyn agrees with you that anti-Semitism is a scourge and is different from many of the other charges laid at his feet?

I absolutely am.  He apologized in his letter to the Jewish community on Monday for the pain and suffering caused to people in the Labour Party and to people in the Jewish community.  He has said that he is an ally in the battle against anti-Semitism and I do believe that. 

Q:        In a word he has changed you say?

Well I think we’ve all realized the extent of the problem.  We’re all I think tired of too many people arguing that its all smears.  It isn’t.  We have to deal with all cases of anti-Semitism or investigate them when charges are made. 

Brighton and Hove Momentum AGM Calls for the Democratisation of Momentum Nationally

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Brighton & Hove Momentum Affiliates to Labour Against the Witchhunt and Opposes the False Anti-Semitism Witchhunt
The AGM called by acclaim for Labour's National Executive to immediately reinstate Riad, who is dying of cancer, to the Party.  He was unjustly auto-excluded under McNicol's regime as a consequence of having been gaoled for a short time for defying the sanctions regime on Iraq which is held to have killed up to a million people.  The informer in his case was former Hove MP Ivor Caplin, Southern organiser for the Jewish Labour Movement
After more than 16 months Brighton and Hove Momentum finally held its Annual General Meeting at the Friends Meeting House in Brighton tonite.  The meeting was co-chaired by Sarah Pickett and Greg Hadfield.  A lot of things have happened in that time as Anne Thompson set out in a verbal report on behalf of the previous Steering Committee. 

In July 2016 all 3 constituencies were suspended after Momentum supported candidates were victorious in the District Labour Party elections.  At that time all 3 constituencies came together in one DLP.
The lies of Warren Morgan that led to Brighton & Hove District Labour Party being suspended and the election results overturned
Led by Council leader Warren Morgan, vicious lies were spread about members having spat at and abused the staff at City College where the AGM were held.  All of these allegations were false and demonstrably so, since we managed to get hold of CCTV footage of where the incident took place.  Morgan has since been forced to resign as a consequence of his ill-fated call, after the Labour Party Conference last September, that they would not be welcomed back in Brighton on account of ‘anti-Semitism’.  Morgan finally got the message that he is not wanted, even in the ward, East Brighton, that he has represented for far too long. 

The Labour Party under its previous General Secretary, crooked Iain McNicol set up an Inquiry under the equally crooked Karen Buckingham who, when faced with the possibility of having to declare that Councillors Warren Morgan, Emma Daniels and co. were liars refused to look at the CCTV footage for reasons of ‘data protection’.  It always amazes me how McNicol’s foot soldiers never hesitated to breach the Data Protection Act by leaking details to the national press but when needs must take refuge in the same principles.  The details of what happened can be found in Greg Hadfield’s CCTV proof: There was no spitting, shoving and barging, or abusive behaviour at Brighton and Hove and District Labour Party’s annual meeting at City College on July 9 and The battle goes on in Brighton and Hove

The meeting started with an announcement that a member of the Steering Committee Riad el-Taher has been diagnosed with cancer and is not expected to live many more months.  Riad was a member of the Hove Labour Party Executive when, as a result of a leak to the press by the former Defence Minister under Blair and a junior war criminal, Ivor Caplin, Riad was auto-excluded from the Labour Party on account of a previous, spent conviction for breaking the sanctions regime on Iraq, where he comes from, for humanitarian reasons.  The meeting agreed my acclamation that the new Steering Committee should immediately contact the Momentum representatives on Labour’s National Executive Committee to get them to propose that Labour makes amends and reinstates Riad immediately to membership of the Party.  It would be even nicer if they were to suspend the informer in this case, Ivor Caplin, for his uncomradely behaviour.



Elections took place to a new Steering Committee, after an attempt to move to a resolution challenging the reduction in the number of places had failed.  Nine people were elected, most unopposed but in two out of the three contested elections candidates from the left of Momentum were victorious but overall the Committee retains its bias to the Lansmanite wing of Momentum.

Before the resolutions were taken there was a talk by Rachel from the Momentum national office on the Democracy Review in the Labour Party and then a series of questions and answers.
A resolution that I moved on the witchhunt, which was amended to call for affiliation to Labour Against the Witchhunt was passed against nitpicking opposition from Lansman supporters.  These people never oppose the principle but find 101 reasons why some word or other is out of place.  However as I stressed in my summing up, we are not passing legislation but a policy thrust.

This resolution, which I initially submitted, was proposed in the name of the Steering Committee having been extensively discussed yesterday evening.  Despite it being a resolution of the Steering Committee a number of its members voted against the resolution despite trying to amend it up to the final minute.  Despite this dishonesty it was still passed by 20-14 votes. 
A second resolution which I moved on democratising Momentum nationally was even more controversial.  This was discussed in the wake of the coup that took place at the beginning of last year when Jon Lansman tore up the democratic structures of Momentum, abolished all the liberation strands (Black, Asian, Gay etc.) abolished the regional structure and national Committee and took all power into his own hands.  The resolution was opposed by Stephen Smith and supported by Jonathan Bellos from the floor.  When it came to the vote it was passed by 18-15 votes.  Let us hope the new Steering Committee, the majority of whom opposed the motion take it to heart.

It is clear that there is now a sharp division in Brighton and Hove Momentum between supporters of Lansman’s dictatorial leadership nationally and those who believe in campaigning politics and opposing the witchhunt in Labour in particular.  One of the resolutions we moved which wasn’t take was on anti-racism and the Grenfell Fire Committee.  It is to be seen whether or not the new Committee will take these campaigns on board.
There were less than 40 people at tonights AGM compared to about 70 at the one 15 months ago.  This is despite there being over 500 members of Momentum in Brighton and some 2,000 people on the contact list.  It can only be hoped that the new Steering Committee, which I decided I didn’t have time to stand for, will be more successful in involving people.  Nonetheless our record over the past 15 months, including winning the leadership of all 3 parties in Brighton and the Local Campaign Forum shows that the Right is still on the retreat.

Tony Greenstein

The century long struggle of Jerusalem’s Ultra Orthodox Jews Against Zionism

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Clashing with the Jewish state: ultra-Orthodox Israelis who reject Zionism


This is a fascinating article on the 30,000 or so Jews who live in Mea Shearim, Jerusalem and who still reject the Zionist State of Israel.  It is little known that when the Zionist settlers first came to Palestine from the 1880’s onwards they met little sympathy from the existing, Orthodox Jewish community.  The Zionist settlement became known as the Yishuv.  The existing Jews were known as the Old Yishuv.

Chaim Weizmann, Israel’s first President wrote disparagingly of them in his autobiography, Trial and Error(pp. 225-9)

Although it is now in the ruling coalition in Israel today as United Torah Judaism, Agudat Yisrael was formed in 1912 in Katowice, Polish as an anti-Zionist organisation.  In 1924 the first Zionist assassination of a Jewish anti-Zionist was that of Jacob de Haan, a Dutch Jew and one of the main spokesman for Agudat.
In the Pew Research Centre’s survey Israel’s Religiously Divided Society 59% of Haredit (ultra-Orthodox Jews) favour expelling Israel’s Arabs from the country compared to 32% who are opposed, so one shouldn’t see the struggle against conscription as therefore translating into support for the Palestinians.  It does amongst a few but it shouldn’t be over exaggerated.  This compares to 48% of Israeli’s supporting expulsion and 46% opposing overall.

Of course some of their views, such as on gender segregation, gay rights etc. will not appeal to people.  Nonetheless one has to admire their determination to resist the draft and induction into Israel’s murderous army.  Not much point in believing in gay rights if you are prepared to massacre on an equal rights basis!

Tony Greenstein

Jaclynn Ashly on March 22, 2018

An ultra-Orthodox Jewish demonstrators stand next to burning garbage container during a protest against the opening of a parking lot during the sabbath on the outskirts of Jerusalem's conservative neighbourhood of Mea Sharim on June 27, 2009. (Photo: AFP/Menahem Kahana)

Before the sun has a chance to rise, Israeli riot police tiptoe through one of Jerusalem’s oldest Jewish neighborhoods, their shadows dancing across lines of anti-Zionist graffiti decorating buildings and walls.

Their objective is to arrest residents in Mea Shearim for refusing Israel’s mandatory army draft and organizing against the state, according to community claims. They say such raids have occurred on a near nightly basis in the neighborhood for decades. However, in recent years Israel’s police operations have escalated in Mea Shearim.
In their telling, when Israeli forces break into homes during these overnight raids, ultra-Orthodox residents are dragged out of their beds and thrown into police vans.

Many in Mea Shearim, established in 1874, are part of the Eda Haredit, “Congregation of God-fearers” in English — an ultra-Orthodox group in Jerusalem that is also fiercely anti-Zionist.
Israeli police spokesperson Micky Rosenfeld described a less recurrent scene. He was not able to provide the numbers of arrests carried out in the neighborhood over the past few months, but told Mondoweiss police units do not normally carry out night raids “unless there are specific individuals who the police know were involved in illegal demonstrations.”

The Eda Haredit opposes the Israeli state and any attempts at assimilating them into the larger Israeli society. The cloistered neighborhood of Mea Shearim has become a symbol for the group, whose members insulate themselves from state institutions and affairs as much as possible.
Eda Haredit members also reside in the Jerusalem-area city of Beit Shemesh and Safed in northern Israel.
Many of the group’s members are descendants of the Old Yishuv, Jews who resided in historic Palestine under Ottoman and then British rule.

Outside the homes of many Eda Haredit members in Mea Shearim hang signs that read: “Here lives a non-Zionist Jew.” Palestinian flags fluttering outside homes are a common sight here.

Eda Haredit members can often be found protesting the state and Israel’s army draft on the streets of Jerusalem. Israeli forces typically respond by dousing them in skunk spray – a noxious smelling liquid.

The members come prepared, even wrapping their black, wide-brimmed hats in protective plastic. When Israeli police releases skunk spray on the protesters, instead of running away, Eda Haredit members often sing and dance as the putrid concoction rains down on them.

The Israeli police have been accused of using excessive force on the demonstrators, including severely beating unarmed Eda Haredit members.
A century-long anti-Zionist struggle

Mordechai Mintzberg, a rabbi in Mea Shearim whose family resided in historic Palestine generations before Israel was founded, told Mondoweissthat the establishment of the Eda Haredit was a “counter reaction” to Zionism in the early 20th century.

According to Mintzberg, as Zionists tightened their grip on the British Mandate of Palestine following the Balfour Declaration in 1917, Jews were forced to determine their relationship to the Zionist movement.  
The ardent anti-Zionist Jews decided to establish a self-sufficient community that was unquestionably opposed to the Zionist movement,” Mintzberg says.

The Eda Haredit developed its own separate school system – taught entirely in Yiddish – and an independent religious court, known as a Badatz

When Israel was established in 1948, the group’s struggle against Zionism intensified.
Although Israel has always hosted anti-Zionist Jews across the political spectrum, the Eda Haredit stands apart for the strict adherence to their beliefs.

In the early years of the Israeli state, Eda Haredit members refused to accept Israeli IDs and some even rejected the use of Israeli currency, Benjamin Brown, a professor of Jewish thought at Hebrew University, told Mondoweiss.
Other ultra-Orthodox groups identified with the self-proclaimed Jewish state and integrated into government institutions with their constituents now participating in Israel’s parliament. Leading political parties like Shas and Agudat Yisrael have members who are ultra-Orthodox yet ardently support the state of Israel. 

The Eda Haredit considers these ultra-Orthodox groups “traitors” for “collaborating with the Zionist enemy,” Mintzberg said.

For the Eda Haredit, he says Israeli IDs and citizenship are now “forced” on the community, but members “do everything in [their] power to disassociate from the state.”

Eda Haredit members boycott elections and refuse to accept Israel’s national insurance. If members receive unwelcome assistance from the state, it is immediately placed into a fund dedicated to supporting members organizing against the Israeli army, Mintzberg said.

‘We are struggling for our very existence’ 

The community speaks Yiddish and only uses modern Hebrew with outsiders. They consider the language spoken by most Israelis today a “perversion” of ancient Hebrew, Mintzberg explained.
Jews were expelled from ancient Israel because they had gone against God’s commandments, the group believes. Jews are not allowed any form of a state until the coming of the Messiah, which is expected to occur following a Jewish “spiritual redemption” that would right the sins of the past.
Zionists have used Judaism to further their political goals in the region and “conquer” the territory, Mintzberg told Mondoweiss, adding that a Jewish nationality is antithetical to the teachings of Judaism. He considers Zionism to be a “parasite” on the Jewish faith.

According to his beliefs, Jews inside Israel and the occupied Palestinian territory should be living under Palestinian rule.

Brown estimates the population of the Eda Haredit to currently be at least 30,000. He says official statistics do not exist because the Eda Haredit refuses to cooperate with Israel’s Central Bureau of Statistics.
Lizi Sagie a secular anti-Zionist Israeli activist, told Mondoweissthat, “no one in Israel practices anti-Zionism like the Eda Haredit.”

“They don’t just talk about being anti-Zionist, they really live it,” she said. “I have never witnessed such pure justice like I found in Mea Shearim.”

In the larger Israeli society Eda Haredit members are characterized as “violent extremists” owing to the group allegedly throwing objects, spewing insults, and at times spitting on uniformed Israeli soldiers who wander into Mea Shearim.

The community has also come under fire for its practice of gender segregation. The state has previously intervened to upend barriers on public sidewalks.

But in Mintzberg’s view his group is attempting to survive and defend itself inside a state aiming to consume them into a Zionist society.

We are struggling for our very existence,” he says.

Forced conscription
The most important battleground between the Eda Haredit and the Israeli authorities has opened up around the country’s compulsory army draft.

Israeli law mandates that Jewish-Israeli citizens be conscripted into the army at the age of 18. Men must spend three years in the army, while women are conscripted for a mandatory, two-year term.

Brown says that the some 900,000 ultra-Orthodox Jews in Israel have usually been able to gain unofficial exemptions by proving they are full-time students at yeshiva, a seminary school.

A 2014 bill to restrict draft exemptions spurred a wave of protests from the community, including one of the largest marches in Israel’s history. The issue has remained in the public eye as Israeli lawmakers negotiate a bill to axe the draft exemption for ultra-Orthodox Jews.

However, unlike other ultra-Orthodox groups, Israeli attempts at recruiting the Eda Haredit are futile. For the Eda Haredit, even entering a draft center and showing documents to gain that exemption is considered “collaborating with the enemy”.

“We would never seek Israel’s permission to be exempted from their army, because we don’t recognize the Zionist regime’s authority at all,” Mintzberg said.

If any of us were ever to accept being drafted into an army, it will be one that is fighting against the Zionist state,” he added.

For Eda Haredit members, it is an honor to be jailed over refusing the draft. Their children are “excited” to reach the age of conscription because “the draft refusers become the stars and heroes of the community,” Mintzberg said.

The rift between the Eda Haredit and other ultra-Orthodox groups in Israel has deepened over recent years. The Eda Haredit sees Israel’s draft as an attempt by officials to further “corrupt” and “Israelize” the larger ultra-Orthodox society.

Over the last decade, ultra-Orthodox enlistment into the Israeli military has climbed from 288 in 2007, to nearly 2,000 today.

Sagie points out that Israeli authorities will often send Ultra-Orthodox army officials into Mea Shearim “just to provoke residents.”

They want to show the community that, ‘Look, even your own kind is wearing our uniform,'” Sagie told Mondoweiss.

The Eda Haredit holds frequent protests against the draft and distributes pamphlets outside draft centers discouraging other Ultra-Orthodox Jews from joining the army.

The group has also been known to ritually hangIsraeli soldier dummies in Mea Shearim to protest Israel’s army draft, evoking condemnation among Israeli leaders.

Last year, Israeli Defense Minister Avigdor Lieberman confronted the community on Twitter, saying it was a “shame” that Israeli citizens were “risking their lives to defend the homeland”, while an 
extremist, violent and anti-Zionist group is attempting to prevent the enlistment of ultra-Orthodox Jews into the army.”

Frequent raids

Israeli forces frequently raid Mea Shearim, according to Mintzberg, arresting draft refusers or members active in the protests.

The police operations are often conducted during night hours, when Israeli officers break into homes without any prior warnings – a police strategy usually saved for Palestinian communities in occupied East Jerusalem.

Oftentimes, residents are arrested and then released the next morning. “It’s all just meant to try and break the community,” Sagie said.

Unlike Palestinians, who often use Whatsapp groups and Facebook to warn residents of Israeli raids, the Eda Haredit’s strict anti-modern lifestyle prohibits them from using the internet.

Instead, “we have kosher phones”, Mintzberg says, taking out a weather-beaten mobile phone from his pocket. The phone only has the ability to make and receive calls.

The community has developed a “hotline” that provides details on goings-on in the neighborhood and updates on jailed residents.

During emergencies, like a night raid, the hotline sends out calls to its registered numbers. Once someone receives the call, they dial the number back and a recorded message plays.

One of the recordings, heard by Mondoweiss, was loud and frantic: “The Zionist kidnappers are invading a home!” the message blared out of the phone’s speaker, in Yiddish.

The recordings often inform residents about which houses are being raided, prompting hundreds of residents to flock outside in an attempt to prevent arrests and push Israeli forces out of the neighborhood.

When group members are arrested, oftentimes they will refuse to cooperate with Israeli officials, while others hold daily protests outside the jails where members are being held.

Outside of every synagogue in Mea Shearim, there are posters listing the names of each jailed community member, so that “the entire community will pray for them,” Mintzberg says.

‘A threat to Israel’

Meanwhile, Mintzberg says he and others in the community identify as being Palestinian. “I live on this land, so what else would I be except Palestinian?” he said.

Mintzberg explained that while the group’s strict anti-Zionist views are derived from a religious origin, these values also merge with their sense of morality.

The group’s members feel a strong connection to the Palestinian struggle, he said, “We are clearly bound to each other. We share the same history and the same struggle.”

He accused the Israeli government of seeking to turn the image of ultra-Orthodox Jews into the “enemy” of Palestinians and divide the two groups.

“The state has invested a lot of money and energy into trying to divide us from Palestinians,” he said.
A few families in the Eda Haredit are activists in Neturei Karta, a group of ultra-Orthodox men who organize with Palestinians in the occupied West Bank. However, even these small initiatives to support Palestinians are often targeted and shut down by the Israeli government, Mintzberg noted.
Nevertheless, Mintzberg believes his community’s struggle is a powerful challenge to Israel.
“We are a threat to Israel’s narrative because our continued existence as anti-Zionist Jews defies every myth perpetuated by the Israeli state,” he said.

See also Cops draw flack for marking ultra-Orthodox protesters arms with numbers

Demonstration Today in Whitehall Against the Massacre of Unarmed Protestors in Gaza

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Today over 2,000 demonstrators gathered outside Downing Street in Whitehall to make their voice heard about Israel’s massacre of unarmed demonstrators in Gaza.  Faced with a hermetically sealed siege for over a decade, a lack of freshwater, electricity, medical supplies and food people have taken to protesting at the border fence of Gaza demanding the right to return to where they came from – Israel.

Israel’s response has been, as shown below, the normal one which one expects.  27 people have been murdered and over a thousand have been injured by live gunfire.  This despite the fact that all those killed or injured are within concentration camp Gaza.
It is testimony to the cynicism of the West that there has been no response to these killings by the British government.  Jeremy Corbyn sent a message to the demonstration but we fear that he is going to go next week to appease the Board of Deputies of British Jews and the Jewish Leadership Council both of which support Israel’s massacre, blaming it on the Palestinians themselves. 

There was a contingent from Brighton and Hove there today, including some of us from Momentum.  Below are reports on the demonstrations in Gaza and also a report on the murder yesterday of a Palestinian journalist in Gaza.

Tony Greenstein

The Nakba is not a just a memory, it is an ongoing reality. We can accept that we all must eventually die; in Gaza, the tragedy is that we don’t get to live.
A Palestinian clown entertains Palestinian refugee children at the tent city protest near the border with Israel, in Gaza, April 2, 2018. (Mohammed Talatene / picture-alliance / dpa / AP Images)
Khan YounisOver the past eight days, tens of thousands of protesters in Gaza have breathed life into a place that is slowly being depleted of it. We have come together, chanting and singing a lullaby we’ve all longed for—“We will return”—bringing all that we have left to offer in an attempt to reclaim our right to live in freedom and justice. Despite our peaceful marches, we have been met with and clouds of tear gas and live fire from Israeli soldiers. Unfortunately, this is not new to Palestinians in Gaza, who have lived through many wars and a brutal siege and blockade.

Gaza is home to almost 1.9 million people, of which 1.2 million are refugees who were expelled from their homes and land during the establishment of Israel 70 years ago, known as the Nakba (catastrophe) to Palestinians. Since the beginning of the siege almost 11 years ago, the task of simply surviving each day has proved to be a challenge. To merely wake up and have access to clean water and electricity is now a luxury. The siege has been particularly hard on young people, who suffer from a 58 percent unemployment rate. What’s worse is that all of this is a result of Israeli policy, which can be changed. This harsh and difficult life does not have to be the reality for Gaza.
Members of the Orthodox Anti-Zionist Sect Neturei Karta
It is as though displacing us was not enough; it’s as if the entire memory of Palestinian refugees must be contained and erased.

Fishermen cannot go beyond six nautical miles, making it a challenge to gather enough fish to sustain their families. After Israel’s wars on Gaza, in 2008-09 and then again in 2012 and 2014, and all the killings that happened in between, the people here aren’t even afforded the chance to rebuild, as Israel has tightened its hold on the entry of construction materials. The state of hospitals is alarming, and patients are rarely given the chance to seek treatment outside. This isn’t even to mention the perpetual state of darkness we live under, with barely any electricity or clean water. It is as though displacing us was not enough; it’s as if the entire memory of Palestinian refugees must be contained and erased.
I was born in Rafah refugee camp in Gaza. My parents are from the city of Ramle, in what is now known as Israel. Like most Palestinian refugees, I heard the stories from my older family members about being brutally displaced from their homes during the Nakba. No matter how many decades pass, they, like hundreds of thousands of others, are never able to forget the horrors they witnessed during their dispossession and all the violence and pain that came with it. 
A rare appearance by yours truly
I have never seen my family’s home in Ramle, and my children have never seen anything beyond the confines of Gaza and the siege. With my eldest just 7 years old and my youngest 2, they do not know a reality beyond the sound of bombs, the darkness of night with no electricity, the inability to travel freely—or the fact that these things are not normal. Nothing about life in Gaza is normal. The Nakba is not a just a memory, it is an ongoing reality. And while we can reconcile that we all must eventually die, in Gaza the tragedy is that we don’t get to live.

The last two Fridays, we stood against all the powers telling us to break and die in silence and decided to march for life.

It is in spite of this harsh reality that we endure. The last two Fridays, we stood against all the powers telling us to break and die in silence and decided to march for life. It is a protest of a people who want nothing more than to live in dignity.
A lonely Jonathan Hoffman, ex-Vice Chair of the Zionist Federation before he was booted out - he was later joined by someone else
In 2011, Palestinians marched near the borders from Syria, Lebanon, Jordan, Gaza, and the West Bank. Some were killed, others made it past the border and were arrested by Israeli soldiers. But long before then, in 1976, Palestinians protested the expropriation of their lands by Israel in what later became known as Land Day. Six Palestinians were killed then, and 42 years later Israel is still resorting to deadly violence to prevent refugees from returning, killing at least 25 Palestinians in Gaza since last Friday. Those human beings dared to dream beyond the alleyways of the refugee camps; they had a vision of a home they never had the chance to see.

I have worried for our safety as we came out in the thousands to what Israel deems a “no-go zone.” I have thought about the consequences. As I stood with my family near the Return March square in eastern Khan Younis, we were all tear-gassed, including my children. I was pained to see the innocence of childhood being tainted by such a traumatizing experience. But what many people fail to recognize is that whether we are in our homes or protesting in the fields, we are never truly safe in Gaza, nor are we truly alive. It is as though our entire existence, and dreams of ever returning home and living in dignity, must be hidden in the dark. 
However, this year, after Trump’s recognition of Jerusalem as the capital of Israel and the possibility of making what he called the “deal of the century,” Palestinians have felt an imminent threat to the legal right of return of refugees, despite its being enshrined in UN Resolution 194. It is a collective worry that our rights as refugees are in serious jeopardy, and we must resist it in an innovative, unified, revolutionary way—one that exists outside the parameters of negotiations and factionalism, to place pressure on Israel to reclaim our rights. 

For the past 70 years, Israel has been in a perpetual state of displacing and humiliating Palestinians. We saw it happen in 1948, and again in 1967, and now we are still witnessing it, with the growth of settlements. As Israel pushes Palestinians out, it brings in new immigrants from around the world and settles them on lands stolen from Palestinians, in violation of international law. Yet Israel continues to be emboldened by a lack of pressure from the international community, and by the support of the Trump administration, so settlements continue to expand relentlessly.

Israel would have the world believe that Palestinians willingly left our homes and chose this life of degradation, without basic human rights, and that we brought it on ourselves.
Paul Besser - (in woolly blue hat) - former Intelligence Chief of neo-Nazi Britain First
Today, the Palestinians of Gaza are attempting to break the chains that Israel has tried so hard to force us into. We are unarmed demonstrators confronting heavily armed soldiers with peaceful protest. As a result, it is difficult for Israel to smear us and justify its brutal violence, and the world is faced with the reality that innocent civilians are being killed just for exercising their right to protest peacefully. The excuses Israel uses to justify its policies toward the Palestinians are slowly losing their effectiveness, as people around the world are increasingly realizing that the true face of Israel is that of a brutal apartheid regime.

Despite the calculated violence and targeting of unarmed protesters by Israel, with our Great Return March, Palestinians in Gaza are stating loudly and clearly that we are still here. For Israel, it is our identity that is our crime, but we are celebrating the very identity that Israel tries to criminalize. People from all walks of life are joining the march. Artists are contributing with the traditional dabke dance, intellectuals are organizing reading circles, entertainers are dressing as clowns and playing with children. What has been most striking is the young, living and playing, their laughter the greatest protest of all.

The UN warned that Gaza may be uninhabitable in just two years. Resisting the fate that Israel has planned for us, we are fighting back peacefully with our bodies and our love for life, appealing to the justice that remains in the world.
Paul Besser of neo-Nazi Britain First and Gemma Sheridan (holding flag) of fascist Jewish Defence League
Jonathan Hoffman and Richard Galber
Ahmad Abu RtemahAhmad Abu Rtemah is an independent Gaza-based writer, social-media activist, and one of the organizers of the Great Return March.

PRESS STATEMENT

ISSUED BY KWARA KEKANA ON BEHALF OF BDS SOUTH AFRICA


07 April 2018 | 

Yesterday, Friday 6th April, Israeli snipers shot and killed 30 year old Palestinian photo journalist Yaser Murtaja (click here for news article).

Murtaja was hit despite wearing a blue flak jacket marked with the word "press", discerning him as a journalist (click here for photo, warning graphic content).

Murtaja was born in the Palestinian Gaza Strip, often described as a prison camp (where Israel controls what and who is allowed in and what and who is allowed out). It’s the worlds most densely populated piece of land (25km by 6km with over 2 million people). 

Last month Yaser posted a picture of Gaza taken by a drone and said that he hoped to one day take such a photo from the sky instead of from the ground (click here). Israel unfortunately also controls the airspace above Gaza. Murtaja never got the opportunity to take the photo or to, even once, leave Gaza.
 
Palestinian media analyst Nour Odeh has described Murtaja as "a beautiful soul and a gifted journalist [who] dedicated his short-lived career to telling his people's story, showing their pain but also their joy, & dreams. His friends and colleagues mourn him with sorrow". Our condolences go out from South Africa to the friends, family and media colleagues of Yaser Murtaja. Hamba kahle, Yaser.

In addition to Murtaja, Israeli snipers also shot 6 other journalists and killed two Palestinian teenagers Mohammed Madi and Alaa Azamli. In total Israel killed 9 unarmed Palestinians yesterday (6 April) and 30 since last week Friday (30 March). Palestinians across the political and religious spectrum have been gathering at weekly protests, dubbed the #GreatReturnMarch, which is a 6 week series of demonstrations taking place along the border of Gaza and Israel. Over 75% of the Palestinian people living in Gaza are refugees whose homes are in Israel. The UN has demanded that Israel allow the Palestinians refugees to return but Israel has refused.


BOYCOTT, DIVESTMENT AND SANCTIONS AGAINST ISRAEL IN SOUTH AFRICA (BDS SOUTH AFRICA)

Corbyn Should Refuse to Meet Jonathan Arkush and the Board of Deputies as and until they take anti-Semitism seriously!

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The Demands of Arkush on Corbyn would reduce Labour to little more than prisoner status

After the Jewdas Debacle the Board of Deputies of British Jews Drop Their ‘Preconditions’ for a Meeting


The most recent wave of false ‘anti-Semitism’ campaigns began with the thinnest of pretexts.  A six year old mural, long erased, that Luciana Berger MP, a former Director of Labour Friends of Israel had stumbled upon. It wasn’t even clear that a picture of 6 bankers playing monopoly on the backs of Black workers was even anti-Semitic. Only 2 of the 6 bankers were Jewish. Indeed if you associate bankers automatically with Jews then it is you who are anti-Semitic.
The Zionists 'anti-racist' demonstration where the main chant was 'Corbyn is a racist'
But any pretext will do when needs must.  Berger, who was parachuted into Liverpool Wavertree in what was a nakedly corrupt selection process, has a history of making false allegations of anti-Semitism from her student days.
After getting egg on their faces over Jewdas the Board dropped their preconditions for meeting Corbyn
This pretext was however enough to set off an ‘anti-racist’ demonstration organised by the Board of Deputies outside Parliament.  Such was their commitment to ‘anti-racism’ that well known anti-racists such as Norman Tebbit of ‘cricket test’ fame participated. For those who have forgotten perhaps a reminder is due.  Tebbit when an MP remarked that ‘"A large proportion of Britain's Asian population fail to pass the cricket test. Which side do they cheer for? It's an interesting test. Are you still harking back to where you came from or where you are?"  Tebbit was of the view that British Asians really belonged back in India and Pakistan.

In 1991 Tebbit told Woodrow Wyatt that ‘"because some of them insist on sticking to their own culture, like the Muslims in Bradford and so forth, and they are extremely dangerous."

There were also those well known anti-racists from the Democratic Unionist Party such as Ian Paisley Jnr., who when not calling forth hell-fire and damnation upon Catholics is doing his best to prevent the scourge of sodomy from infesting Ireland’s green and pleasant land.  In 2007 young Ian was quoted as saying that ‘"I am pretty repulsed by gay and lesbianism. I think it is wrong. "I think that those people harm themselves and - without caring about it - harm society. That doesn't mean to say that I hate them. I mean, I hate what they do."

The heads of the unelected Board of Deputies of British Jews and the Jewish Leadership Council, Jonathans Arkush and Goldstein wrotean Open Letter to Corbyn in which they made it crystal clear that the ‘anti-Semitism’ they were talking about was integrally related to anti-Zionism:

“Again and again, Jeremy Corbyn has sided with antisemites rather than Jews. At best, this derives from the far left’s obsessive hatred of Zionism, Zionists and Israel. At worst, it suggests a conspiratorial worldview in which mainstream Jewish communities are believed to be a hostile entity, a class enemy,”

In response to a letter from Corbyn apologising for Labour’s non-existent anti-Semitism, Arkush and Goldstein presented a set of preposterous demands which is printed below.  In the letter, which set down a series of preconditions to be fulfilled even before a meeting took place, Arkush and Goldstein demanded:

Ian Paisley MP, one of the 'anti-racists' at the demonstration outside Parliament

   1.     The appointment of an ombudsman ‘to oversee performance’ in anti-Semitism disciplinary cases which should report to the Labour Party, the Board of Deputies and the Jewish Leadership Council.

   2.      MPs, councillors and other party members should not share platforms with people who have been suspended or expelled for antisemitism and if they do then they themselves should be suspended or, in the case of MPs, should lose the whip.

    3.       ‘The Party should circulate the IHRA definition of antisemitism’, the full definition of the IHRA with all 11 examples, 7 of which relate to comparisons with Israel.  So for example anyone denying the right of the Jewish people to self-determination or saying that Israel is a racist state is automatically an anti-Semite.
   
     4    The Party will not work ‘through fringe organisations who wish to obstruct the Party’s efforts to tackle antisemitism’.

If Jeremy Corbyn were to adhere to any or all of these demands he may as well resign, which is the whole purpose of these demands.  The idea that Labour’s disciplinary process should be subject to an external Ombudsman who reports to the unelected anti-Labour Board and JLC is too absurd for words.

The suggestion that the penalty for sharing platforms with people not to Arkush’s fancy, even people who are suspended (and therefore presumed to be innocent) is outrageous.  But people who are expelled are also in many cases innocent, given the kangaroo court structure that operates in the Labour Party today.  This is an example of McCarthyism nothing more to have a list of people you can’t even speak with.
The Zionists complain that it is a ‘smear’ to suggest that their concern over ‘anti-Semitism’ is dictated by their support for Israel.  Yet what is one to make of their demand that Corbyn distribute the ‘full’ International Holocaust Remembrance Alliance  definition of anti-Semitism, even though the actual IHRA definition is just 39 words.  The actual definition is not only pretty useless but it is, by its own admission, non-legally binding.  It is open-ended, uncertain in meaning and anything but a definition.  It states:

‘Antisemitism is a certain perception of Jews, which may be expressed as hatred toward Jews. Rhetorical and physical manifestations of antisemitism are directed toward Jewish or non- Jewish individuals and/or their property, toward Jewish community institutions and religious facilities.’

The IHRA has been more than adequately criticised by both Sir Stephen Sedley, a former Court of Appeal judge in Defining Anti-Semitism and in an Opinionby Hugh Tomlinson QC.  However the BOD and the JLC want Corbyn to adopt not only the IHRA definition but the accompanying 11 examples, even though in the original documentation it states quite clearly that ‘To guide IHRA in its work, the following examples may serve as illustrations:’  Note the ‘may’.  In other words they are not part of the actual definition.

What makes this worse is the hypocrisy of both these Zionist organisations.  Both are unelected by the Jewish community in Britain.  The Board is based on synagogue membership and Zionist organisations, thus entirely bypassing secular Jewry.  The JLC is entirely self-appointed, previously consisting of Jewish capitalists but now various Jewish community organisations.  When they talk of ‘fringe’ organisations they mean any organisation that is at all radical or anti-racist.

We saw what they meant last week when Corbyn went to a seder evening with Jewdas.  The Jewish Chronicle reportedBoard of Deputies president Jonathan Arkush has launched a scathing attack on the controversial Jewdas group, suggesting they are asource of virulent antisemitismand claiming that their members “are not all Jewish”.This is a Jewish group which has contributed significantly more to opposing fascist organisations and racism in its short history than the Board has done in its nearly 280 years existence.

The Board of Deputies in the 1930’s told Jews NOT to oppose Sir Oswald Moseley’s British Union of Fascists and in the late 1970’s refused to work with the Anti-Nazi League in its fight against the National Front because they held that anti-Zionism was worse than fascism.  This is a group that now claims it held an anti-racist demonstration with right-wing Tories and sectarian Ulster Protestants!

It is a great pity that Corbyn has agreed to meet with these people at all.  Their real agenda was made clear in the wake of the murder last week of 18 Palestinians in Gaza.  The Board blamed Hamas for using civilians and children ‘as pawns’.  It had nothing to say about the deliberate use of live ammunition against unarmed demonstrators.  This is just a continuation of its shameful record concerning Israel.  The anti-Semitism controversy has to be seen in the context of its unflinching support for Israel.

Jonathan Arkush himself is a prime hypocrite.  When Donald Trump came to power, after having used all sorts of anti-Semitic hints, ads, dog whistles and allusions to Jewish financial power Arkush welcomedhim and his anti-Semitic advisers – Steve Bannon and Sebastian Gorka.  As Dana Milbank wrotein the Washington Post Anti-Semitism is no longer an undertone of Trump’s campaign. It’s the melody. 

If Arkush or Goldstein were at all serious about anti-Semitism they would question the links that the Tories have in the European Parliament where they are members of the European Conservative and Reformists group with Poland’s Law and Justice Party and the Latvian For Fatherland and Freedom/LNNK Party.

The Law and Justice Party is not only a far-Right racist party but many of its members are explicitly anti-Semitic.  Ha’aretz reportedthat Polands new defence minister Antoni Macierewicz has asserted that the anti-Semitic Protocols of the Elders of Zion is true. In 2002, Macierewicz told Radio Maryja, a right-wing Catholic station that he had read the Protocols and, while they  may not be authentic they are nonetheless true!  The Nazi took the Protocols as their bible and Hitler praised them in Mein Kampf.
Anna Bikont
In January of this year the Polish parliament passed a Holocaust law which outlawed any mention of Polish complicity in the Holocaust or Nazi crimes on pain of a 3 year sentence. Yet it is a fact that in July 1941 villagers in Jedwabne in the East of Poland herded up to 1600 of their Jewish compatriots into a barn which they then set on fire.  Two Polish historians, Anna Bikont in the Crime and the Silence and Jan Tomasz Gross’s Neighbors: The Destruction of the Jewish Community in Jedwabne, Poland detailed what happened.

In 2009 this controversy broke out in this country when David Miliband criticisedthe then Tory Opposition for their links with the leader of the ECR group, Michal Kaminski. Jonathan Freedland, the Guardian’s liberal Zionist commentator also got in on the act in an articleOnce no self-respecting politician would have gone near people such as Kaminski


What was the reaction of the Zionists?  To jump up and down about David Cameron’s tolerance of anti-Semitism?  Perhaps the Jewish Chronicle had some particularly pungent articles criticising anti-Semitism in the Tory Party?  Not a bit of it.  JC editor Stephen Pollard wrotethat ‘Poland's Kaminski is not an antisemite: he's a friend to Jews’.  How, one might ask, was the MP for Jedwabne and the surrounding area (where other similar pogroms had occurred) and who had been a strong supporter of the Committee to Defend the Good Name of Jedwabne, a group dedicated to denying the village’s complicity in what had happened,  and who opposed a national apology for the massacre, a good friend to the Jews?

Well the answer was that Kaminski, although he was a fascist sympathiser, was also ‘one of the greatest friends to the Jews in a town where antisemitism and a visceral loathing of Israel are rife.  In other words he was a strong supporter of Israel, just like Trump and his friends, and that therefore exonerated him.  Pollard also defended Latvian MP, Robert Zile, also in the ECRgroup, who every year took part in a demonstration with the veterans of the Latvian Waffen SS.  He too was a strong supporter of Israel even if he wasn’t too keen on Latvia’s Jews!
Kaminski pays a visit to Yad Vashem which is used to sanitise all visitors to Israel - whatever their pedigree
 And what of the Board of Deputies and JLC?  What was their reaction to Kaminski?  Well in October 2009 Israel’s Ambassador to the UN, Ron Prossor, spoke with Kaminski on the Conservative Friends of Israel [CFI] platform at the Conservative’s annual conference. When the President of the BOD, Vivian Wineman, wrote to Conservative leader, David Cameron, querying whether the Tories had checked out Kaminski’s political record, Is Michal Kaminski fit to lead the Tories in Europe?  
Kaminski’s Zionist allies rushed to his defence. [see Howard Cooper  A Small Scandal at the Jewish Chronicle on how the JC defended this tie up with Kaminski].  Wineman’s innocuous letter to Cameron caused a rift with the JLC. One JLC member described colleagues as “livid” at the timing of the letter. Another was “incandescent”. Leaders split over David Cameron's Euro allies’ JC 8.10.09.

Yet  despite this, even today, nine years later the Conservatives are still members of a European Conservative & Reformists group in the European Parliament with the same far-Right Law and Justice Party and For Fatherland and Freedom/LNNK.

I have a suggestion to Jeremy Corbyn.  He should refuse to meet with Arkush and company as and until he sees concrete evidence that they are going to hold their Tory friends to account and insist that they dissociate themselves from Polish and Latvian anti-Semitic parties.  Indeed the composition of the ECR group is so toxic that they should insist that the Tories pull out altogether.


Dear Mr Corbyn,

Thank you for your letter of 26 March, setting out your detailed views on the problem of antisemitism in the Labour Party.

We are sure you saw the strength of feeling in the mainstream Jewish community that was expressed in our open letter and in Parliament Square on Monday. These were unprecedented steps on our part and we hope you understand the seriousness of such a communal action. It arose from nearly three years of cumulative anger and despair in the Jewish community at repeated, numerous cases of antisemitism in the Labour Party and failures to deal with them in a decisive, swift and public manner. For whatever reasons, you have not, until now, seemed to grasp how strongly British Jews feel about the situation. Your letter was a welcome change in this regard, but only if it kick starts strong actions and leadership against the problem. 

Consequently we appreciate your apology for the pain caused by antisemitism in the Labour Party and for your prior comments regarding the antisemitic mural; and your acknowledgement that this is not just “a matter of a few bad apples”, but represents a particular way of thinking. For the situation to meaningfully improve, rather than keep worsening, this understanding will require embedding across the Party.

Any meeting between us must produce concrete, practical outcomes to be implemented by the Party; there is no point in meeting if the situation remains the same or continues to worsen. In this spirit, and to enable a meeting to take place, we propose an agenda of actions for discussion:

Leadership

The Party leadership, and you personally, must be seen and heard to lead this work. Only your voice can persuade your followers that this a necessary and correct course of action. If actions need to be passed by the NEC or other Party bodies, you need to take personal responsibility for ensuring this happens. 

Antisemitism disciplinary cases
Outstanding and future cases to be brought to a swift conclusion under a fixed timescale. An independent, mutually agreed ombudsman should be appointed to oversee performance, reporting to the Party and to the Board of Deputies and Jewish Leadership Council.

Relations with suspended members
MPs, councillors and other party members should not share platforms with people who have been suspended or expelled for antisemitism and CLPs should not provide them with a platform. Anybody doing so should themselves be suspended from membership; in the case of MPs, they should lose the party whip.

Education
The Party should circulate the IHRA definition of antisemitism, with all its examples and clauses, to all members and branches. The Party should work with mainstream Jewish community organisations to develop and implement education about antisemitism. This should include a clear list of unacceptable language, based on the full IHRA definition and on the examples included in your letter of 26 March.

Engagement
Public confirmation that the Party will seek to understand and engage with the Jewish community via its main representative groups, and not through fringe organisations who wish to obstruct the Party’s efforts to tackle antisemitism.

Process
These changes must be sustained and enduring. There needs to be an agreed process to monitor the progress and implementation of these actions in the future.

To conclude, your personal pledge to be a “militant opponent” of antisemitism and to always be our ally are vital statements: the situation demands it and we would expect nothing less. In this light, there is an urgent matter that we need you to address. People inside and outside the Jewish community are repeatedly subjected to abuse and insults for raising the issue of antisemitism in the Labour Party. This even affects those Labour MPs who showed their solidarity with the Jewish community on Monday.

This is a disgrace: nobody should be vilified for opposing antisemitism. Those Labour Party members and Labour-supporting blogs pushing the abuse are largely doing so in your name.

They need to hear you say, publicly and in your own voice, that we had every right to protest about antisemitism, and that Labour MPs had every right to support us; that our concerns about antisemitism are sincere and not a “smear” as has been widely alleged (including on your own Facebook page); and that anyone directing abuse, intimidation or threats at those of us who oppose antisemitism is damaging your efforts to eliminate it and to start rebuilding trust. We firmly believe that this must happen urgently, and certainly before we can meet.

We hope this can be the start of a process of constructive anti-racist work in the Labour Party, one that will help to rebuild the relationship between the Party and the Jewish community. The Party and the Jewish community deserve nothing less.

Your sincerely

Jonathan Arkush - Board of Deputies president
Jonathan Goldstein - Jewish Leadership Council chair



Luke Akehurst – Is there any war crime or atrocity that this shill won’t justify?

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Akehurst Justifies Israel’s Terror in Gaza and its Murder of Unarmed Demonstrators





















Dylan Thomas wrote that ‘the hand that signed the paper felled a city’.  I doubt if Luke Akehurst, a former member of Labour’s National Executive Committee and an aspirant to succeed John Spellar as MP for Warley, has killed anyone. However he has done his best to encourage, support and justify the murder of innocent Palestinians.  Those legally minded may recall that Julius Streicher, the Editor of Der Sturmer, was hanged at Nuremburg for Crimes Against Humanity, even though he too was not judged to have personally killed anyone.  Indeed the charge was invented to convict him.

Luke Akehurst’s willingness to justify and gather support for Israel’s use of live fire against peaceful demonstrators makes him no different from the war criminals who pull the trigger.  If anything he is more culpable than the snipers who execute their orders.
Luke Akehurst has no problem with Israel using live ammunition against these demonstrators
I suggest that people use the link on Akehurst’s ‘We Believe in Israel’ site to email MPs, but delete the Zionist message in the letter and explain why you are opposed to Israel’s war criminals shooting unarmed demonstrators and explaining why you have deleted Akehurst’s previous message.  Akehurst also asked that people contact him with responses.  Maybe you might like to send this wretch a response!
Luke Akehurst is Director of We Believe in Israel and a stalwart of Labour First.  A former arms salesman Akehurst sent out an email at the weekend asking people to send an identikit letter to MPs defending Israel’s gunning down and murder of 27 unarmed Palestinians and the wounding of over one thousand more in Gaza during the last week.  Every last lie and pretext, every dishonest subterfuge and circumlocution was used as Akehurst blamed the people who had been murdered or wounded.

Akehurst’s email was entitled:  ‘Please email your MP to ask them to condemn Hamas for provoking violence on the Gaza border.’  You would be forgiven for having thought that Hamas had done the shooting.  Perhaps Hamas had kidnapped thousands of Palestinians and forced them to march to the fence surrounding Gaza? 
an injured demonstrator is carried away
The Zionists are fond of accusing Palestinian supporters are engaging in ‘conspiracy theories’ but could there be any more malign and sinister conspiracy theory than depicting the demonstrators in Gaza as puppets of Hamas?  The idea that people willingly walk into a free fire zone because Hamas has told them to is reminiscent of the darkest days of the British Empire when hundreds of demonstrators were mowed down by the British at Amritsar.
Akehurst has the racist mindset of all apologists for colonialists.  The indigenous people only rise up against those who have dispossessed them because they are put up to it by ‘others’.  They are too uncivilised and child-like to have a mind of their own.  This is classic Kipling territory.

Contrast Akehurst’s wretched racism with Gideon Levy’s heart felt words in Ha’aretz yesterday:

It’s hard to understand how one can look at tens of thousands of people in their cage and not see them. How is it possible to look at these protesters and not see the disaster wrought first and foremost by Israel?

B'tselem, an Israeli human rights group issued a call to soldiers not to fire on unarmed human beings bringing down threats of prosecution on its head.  But Akehurst isn’t in the business of human rights but defending Zionism and Jewish supremacy in Israel.

If the Labour Party is seriously concerned about racism, as opposed to the fake anti-Semitism it embroils itself in, it would immediately suspend Luke Akehurst for his anti-Palestinian racism. 
By way of contrast Jeremy Corbyn sent a good message to the 2,000 plus demonstration outside Downing Street at the weekend.  It is actions such as this which lie behind the fake anti-Semitism campaign and which guarantee why this particular show is set to run and run.

I have asked for this statement to be read at today's demonstration supporting the Palestinian people in Gaza:

The killing and wounding of yet more unarmed Palestinian protesters yesterday by Israeli forces in Gaza is an outrage.

The majority of the people of the Gaza Strip are stateless refugees, subject to a decade long blockade and the denial of basic human and political rights. More than two thirds are reliant on humanitarian assistance, with limited access to the most basic amenities, such as water and electricity.
They have a right to protest against their appalling conditions and the continuing blockade and occupation of Palestinian land, and in support of their right to return to their homes and their right to self-determination.
Firing live ammunition into crowds of unarmed civilians is illegal and inhumane and cannot be tolerated.

We stand in solidarity with the Israelis who have taken to the streets this last week to protest their government’s actions.

The silence from international powers with the responsibility of bringing a just settlement of the Israel-Palestine conflict must end.

The UK government must support the UN Secretary-General’s call for an independent international inquiry into the killing of protesters in Gaza and review the sale of arms that could be used in violation of international law.
The events in Gaza and the threat of renewed conflict underlines the urgent necessity of genuine negotiations to achieve a viable two-state settlement that delivers peace, justice and security to both Palestinians and Israelis.


Israel and Occupied Palestinian Territories - Amnesty International Statement (excerpts)

The Israeli occupation of Palestinian territory (the West Bank including East Jerusalem and the Gaza Strip) is in its fifth decade and the undercurrent of violence and inherent abuses of fundamental human rights and disregard for international law inherent in any long-standing military occupation is presented by both sides. Both Israeli and Palestinian civilians continue to bear the brunt of the violence in the region.
Human rights violations by Israeli forces in the Occupied Palestinian Territories (OPT) have included, but are not limited to, home demolitions and the forced eviction of Palestinian families; punitive arrests, unfair trials, ill-treatment and torture of detainees and the use of excessive or lethal force to subdue nonviolent demonstrations as well as the use of restrictive legal means. In contravention of international law, Israel continues to build parts of the wall/fence in the OPT, expand settlements and use draconian restrictions on the movement of Palestinians with some 600 roadblocks and checkpoints. Amnesty International is also concerned about discriminatory policies affecting access to water for Palestinians.
In areas under control of the Palestinian Authority, concerns include, but are not limited to, excessive use of force, arbitrary arrests, ill-treatment, torture and the use of administrative detention to jail individuals without charge or trial. Some detainees also do not receive adequate medical attention.
A ceasefire between Israeli forces and Palestinian armed groups in the Gaza Strip in effect since 2009 has been generally respected. The Gaza Strip has been under increasing restrictions since 2005, when Israel unilaterally pulled troops and settlers out of the strip. June 2007, restrictions tightened to an almost air-tight blockade, deepening the hardship there and virtually imprisoning the entire population of 1.6 million.
Israel maintains effective control over Gaza, controlling all but one of the crossings into the Gaza Strip, the airspace, territorial waters, telecommunications and the population registry which determines who is allowed to leave or enter Gaza. Therefore, Israel is still considered the occupying power and is responsible for the welfare of the inhabitants in the strip under international humanitarian law.
Israeli authorities rejected or delayed hundreds of permit applications to leave Gaza by Palestinians requiring specialist medical treatment; a few died as a result. Most of Gaza's inhabitants depend on international aid, which is severely hampered by the blockade. In May 2010, Israeli forces killed nine men aboard an aid flotilla in international waters that was challenging the blockade's legality.

Palestinian photojournalist Yaser Murtaja soon after he was shot in the chest during clashes at the Gaza border Friday April 6, 2018.IBRAHEEM ABU MUSTAFA/רויט

Palestinian journalist Yaser Murtaja was sh ot in the chest and died despite wearing a clearly visible press jacket

Israel claims to have Gaza are just one more lie
In 2005 Israel pulled out its troops from Gaza.  Not in order to allow the people of Gaza to live their own lives in peace but in order to better control them from the outside.  Gaza was turned into an open air prison, an area in which to test different weaponry, a live firing range.

As Amnesty International maintains above, in terms of international law Israel is the occupying power, preventing access to the territory by sea, air and land.  It maintains a Population Registry and uses this to control who goes in and out.

The extent to which Israel maintains control is shown by the following story in Ha’aretz.  A Palestinian couple based in Germany want to marry in the West Bank where the man’s family is.  Although the bride, Abu Nada, has lived in Germany for over a decade, Israel has her still registered as living in Gaza.  Gazan’s aren’t allowed with rare exceptions to go to the West Bank and certainly not her family.  Israel has therefore, callously and bureaucratically refused permission for them to marry amongst family and friends.  The reasons?  None are given but all this is, of course, done in the name of security.  No doubt the execrable Luke Akehurst would approve.

Israel Refuses to Let Palestinian Couple Living in Germany Wed in West Bank

The Civil Administration says the bride is registered as a resident of the Gaza Strip, even though she left more than a decade ago

Yotam Berger
  Apr 08, 2018 1:37 AM
Ala Abu Nada and Omar Mohsan


Israel's Civil Administration is not allowing a Palestinian couple who live in Germany to hold their wedding ceremony in the West Bank, saying the bride is registered as a resident of the Gaza Strip even though she left more than a decade ago.                                                     
The Civil Administration in the West Bank informed the two that they “do not meet the criteria” for obtaining entry permits, but gave no further details. The couple, who hold Palestinian identity papers and have been living in Germany for years, have postponed their wedding indefinitely.
Ala Abu Nada was born in Gaza and left in 2004 for Germany, where she grew up and now lives. She met Omar Mohsan, a Hebron resident who went to Germany to study engineering, at a Palestinian convention in Malmo, Sweden. Last year the two asked the Civil Administration for permits allowing the Abu Nada family to travel from the Gaza Strip to Hebron so they could attend the wedding.
In a letter, the Civil Administration said that because the bride’s request was denied there was no reason to approve travel permits for the family. It added that travel from Gaza to the West Bank for the wedding of immediate family members is only approved when either the bride or the bridegroom are West Bank residents who live there.
In a conversation with Haaretz from Germany, Abu Nada said she met Mohsan two years ago when she was 18.
“Omar talked to my parents, who live in Cologne, and then we got engaged,” she said. “To this very moment we don’t know why they denied us entry. We only want to get married and return to Germany. It’s my dream to meet Omar’s family and celebrate my wedding there.”
Abu Nada said the wedding had been planned for April 6. She said the Israeli authorities had not contacted her and she only heard about the refusal through the Gisha Legal Center for Freedom of Movement, a nonprofit organization that is helping the couple.
Ala Abu Nada and Omar Mohsan
“I have never been to the West Bank,” she added.
People at Gisha said Abu Nada was indeed registered with the Civil Administration as a Gaza Strip resident but has not lived there for 14 years. She is not requesting exit permits from Gaza for herself.
As attorney Osnat Cohen-Lifshitz, the head of Gisha’s legal department, put it, “You can be an adult American-born citizen but for Israel you remain a Palestinian and that’s how you’ll be treated. You can’t enter through Ben-Gurion Airport, and you’ll be subject to their system of permits. The origin is the dominant factor there.”
According to Cohen-Lifshitz, the difference in this case is that the request is for Gaza residents who wish to enter the West Bank. For the Civil Administration that does not fit any category.
Cohen-Lifshitz says Abu Nada and her family’s requests met the necessary requirements because permits for a wedding of an immediate family member are “on the list.” “It’s one of the main criteria,” she said.
Nidal Mohsan, Omar’s father, said his son wanted to come for seven to 10 days in order to have a party and then return and finish his studies. He believes his son will stay in Germany when he finishes his degree.
“Maybe he’ll come once a year or every year and a half for a visit,” the father said. “You know how it is.”
For its part, the Civil Administration said Abu Nada’s request was received in September and was examined by the relevant authorities.
Her request did not meet the criteria and the permit was denied,” it said.  

Fancy that – Maureen Lipman Once Again Declares that She is Withdrawing All Support from the Labour Party

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Pundits are asking whether Maureen Lipman Will Announce that she is Abandoning Labour for a Third Time 

This was Maureen Lipman in 2014 under Ed Miliband
And in 2017 it was Corbyn who had made Lipman a Tory not Ed Miliband after all!

Well I must say I was slightly taken aback when I read the Daily Mirror headline Maureen Lipman says 'Corbyn made me a Tory' during Labour anti-Semitism protest and calls for his resignation.  

Surely this can’t be the same Maureen Lipman who declared, over 3 years ago, that she could no longer support the Labour Party because Ed Miliband had supported a Palestinian state.  [Maureen Lipman drops long-standing support for Labour party, Guardian 29.10.14.]  This was despite Labour having its first ever Jewish leader, Ed Miliband, hardly a sign of antisemitism.
Despite having a Jewish leader Lipman could not support Ed Miliband's position on a Palestinian state
It would appear that in the interval between Ed Miliband standing down and Corbyn being elected, Maureen Lipman once again became a socialist

So the first time Maureen abandoned her support for the Labour Party because it supported a Palestinian state and the second time Maureen abandoned the Labour Party because it was anti-Semitic.  Could it be that in Maureen Lipman’s eyes, support for the Palestinians is equal to anti-Semitism?  After all that is what we have been saying all along.

It was only last week that Jonathans Arkush and Goldstein of the Board of Deputies and Jewish Leadership Council bleated that ‘We are told that our concerns are faked, and done at the command of Israel and/or Zionism (whatever that means); that anti-Semitism is merely "criticism of Israel"; that we call any and all criticism of Israel "anti-Semitic."
Well Maureen Lipman is proof of the fact that to Zionists, criticism of Israel and Zionism and Israel IS the same as anti-Semitism.  Of course we know that already because no less a personage than the Israeli Labour Party's former Foreign Minister Abba Eban declared
that ‘One of the chief tasks of any dialogue with the Gentile world is to prove that the distinction between anti-Semitism and anti-Zionism is not a distinction at all. Anti-Zionism is merely the new anti-Semitism.’

I look forward to Maureen withdrawing her support from the Labour Party for a third time when a suitable occasion occurs and I know we can count on the popular press to print this world shattering revelation as if it were one of the saddest days in the life of Maureen Lipman.

In fact Lipman is a died-in-the-wool anti-Arab racist with the mentality of a typical colonialist.  On 13 July 2006, in a debate on the BBC's This Week, she argued that "human life is not cheap to the Israelis, and human life on the other side is quite cheap actually, because they strap bombs to people and send them to blow themselves up’ 

The idea that life is cheap to the natives, that they do not mourn as we do, has historically always been a justification for the slaughter and genocide of native peoples.  They don’t feel pain like we do.   It justifies the attitude of Israeli soldiers for example who consider it a sport to shoot Arab demonstrators.

Tony Greenstein

A letter I have sent to the Independent tonight on receiving news that once again Lipman is betraying Labour
Tuesday, 10 April 2018
Letters Editor,
The Independent
191, Marsh Wall
London E14 9RS

Dear Sir,
I was interested to learn that Maureen Lipman has ‘identified with a placard reading “Corbyn made me a Tory”’ at a demonstration against ‘anti-Semitism’ in the Labour Party last Sunday. [Hundreds join demonstration accusing Jeremy Corbyn of 'broken promise' on antisemitism, 8th February].
Could this possibly be the same Maureen Lipman who was reported as saying that she could not vote for the ‘Chuka Harman Burnham Hunt Balls brigade’ in 2014 as a result of the decision of the Labour Party’s only Jewish leader Ed Miliban to support the recognition of a Palestinian state?  No doubt Miliband was also an anti-Semite! [Guardian, 29.10.14 Maureen Lipman drops long-standing support for Labour party
Perhaps Ms Lipman can tell us if she intends to abandon her support for the Labour Party a third time?
Yours faithfully,

Tony Greenstein 

5,000 people have called on the Charity Commission to Deregister the Campaign Against Anti-Semitism – let’s make it 10,000 by next week

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On Sunday the Far-Right CAA held a demonstration calling Jeremy Corbyn a racist and anti-Semite and Labour a racist party





The Charity Commission has clear guidelines in respect of charities, campaigning and political activity. In their Guidance Campaigning and political activity by charities at a glance, under key points, there are a number of bullet points that the Campaign Against Anti-Semitism are in breach of.  In particular:

There is a legal requirement that political campaigning, or political activity... must be undertaken by a charity only in the context of supporting the delivery of its charitable purposes. Unlike other forms of campaigning, it must not be the continuing and sole activity of the charity’.
148 references to Corbyn are on the CAA site - not one of them is complimentary
The Campaign Against Anti-Semitism are going to find their attacks on Jeremy Corbyn, as a racist and anti-Semite difficult if not impossible to justify.  There is little doubt that the main activity of the Campaign Against Anti-Semitism is in defaming and attacking anti-Zionists and supporters of the Palestinians of which they see Jeremy Corbyn as a prime example.
The key legal requirement is that ‘in the political arena, a charity must stress its independence and ensure that any involvement it has with political parties is balanced.’

A glance at the CAA website demonstrates that the attention of the CAA is focussed almost exclusively on the Labour Party and Jeremy Corbyn in particular.
Maureen Lipman has now changed from Labour to Tories twice already!
A search today reveals 23 occasions when Theresa May was featured in articles, none of them critical, quite the opposite.  

Contrast this with Jeremy Corbyn.  There are 148 articles which mention him, none of them complimentary.  For example article no. 1 states


‘Jeremy Corbyn reacts to CAA demonstration by disgracefully dismissing Maureen Lipman’s speech against him.’   What possible public benefit or charitable purpose is served by this tendentious article?
Under Jeremy Corbyn, the Labour Party has become a safe haven for racists. He is at home amongst them, having spent his political career seeking out and giving succour to Holocaust deniers, genocidal antisemitic terrorist groups and a litany of Jew-haters.’
How can this possibly be considered to be politically neutral or unbiased?  What possible purpose is served by this attack on Jeremy Corbyn?
Gideon Falter, far-Right Chair of the CAA speaks at their rally of about 200 people
 Its article ‘J'Accuse’ is similarly worded:
‘ “We accuse the Labour Party, its MPs and institutions, of complicity with and promotion of antisemitic racism. ... We are at an historic moment: there is no hiding place for them any longer. The Labour Party under Jeremy Corbyn is now a racist party and to be silent now is to condone. We call on all Labour MPs and members to act and support our disciplinary complaint against Jeremy Corbyn. This is the point of no return: future generations are watching.”
...
Gideon Falter, Chairman of Campaign Against Antisemitism, said: “Under Jeremy Corbyn, the Labour Party has been seized by racists. Jeremy Corbyn is at home amongst them, having spent his political career seeking out and giving his backing to Holocaust deniers, genocidal antisemitic terrorist groups, wild antisemitic conspiracy theorists and a litany of Jew-haters. This is the point of no return: Britain must stand up for its Jewish community against the racists in control of the Labour Party...’
Not only is Jeremy Corbyn a racist but so is the Labour Party as a whole.  And this is a politically neutral charity!  Now that William Shawcross, the Islamaphobe who was Chair of the Charity Commission, has departed we would expect this complaint, a successor to the one submitted last year to be quickly dealt with.

PLEASE SIGN THE PETITION CALLING ON TH E CHARITY COMMISSION TO DEREGISTER THE CAMPAIGN AGAINST ANTI-SEMITISM

We have over 5,000 signatures now.  In one week it will be delivered to the Charity Commission.  Let’s make it 10,000.

Tony Greenstein

If Momentum expels me today they will be joining the false anti-Semitism campaign whose target is Corbyn

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Momentum can either endorse McNicol’s racist witchhunt or declare zero tolerance of the false anti-Semitism campaign


Two weeks ago the two Jonathans - Arkush and Goldstein - of the Board of Deputies and Jewish Leadership Council, wrote an insulting and openly contemptuous letter to Jeremy Corbyn.  It was written in the wake of the latest fake anti-Semitism allegations concerning a long erased mural in the East End of London.  Arkush and Goldstein bleated that their concerns about ‘anti-Semitism’ weren’t being taken seriously:
We are told that our concerns are faked, and done at the command of Israel and/or Zionism (whatever that means); that anti-Semitism is merely "criticism of Israel"; that we call any and all criticism of Israel "anti-Semitic"
Arkush betrays his own agenda when he accuses Jewdas of 'antisemitism' and also his own racism when he accuses them of having non-Jews in their ranks
A few days later, as if to prove that their critics were right, Arkush laid into Jewdas, the Jewish group whose seder Jeremy Corbyn had attended, describing them as a ‘source of virulent anti-Semitism’.  Jewdas are not even an anti-Zionist group.  They do though have a long and consistent history of opposing racism and fascism, anti-Semitism included, as well as racism in Israel. Whatever other sins they can be accused of, anti-Semitism isn’t one of them.
Jonathan Arkus has no problem in speaking to Roberta Moore and her boyfriend who are both wearing tee shirts of the neo-Nazi Kahanist organisation Kach
Arkush demonstrated that even against Jewish opponents, Zionists don't hesitate to deploy the tried and trusted weapon of fake anti-Semitism.  They can't help themselves.  How else do you defend Israel's murderous regime and Zionist Apartheid other than by making false accusations of anti-semitism?  But if we mention this fact we are criticised for alleging Jewish 'conspiracies' and thus even calling them to account is antisemitic!
Arkush and Goldstein said this in their open letter berating Corbyn:

Again and again, Jeremy Corbyn has sided with anti-Semites rather than Jews. At best, this derives from the far left's obsessive hatred of Zionism, Zionists and Israel. At worst, it suggests a conspiratorial worldview in which mainstream Jewish communities are believed to be a hostile entity, a class enemy.

There is of course no evidence whatsoever to support this allegation which is merely a milder version of the ranting statement of Gideon Falter of the far-Right Campaign Against Anti-Semitism:

Under Jeremy Corbyn, the Labour Party has been seized by racists. Jeremy Corbyn is at home amongst them, having spent his political career seeking out and giving his backing to Holocaust deniers, genocidal antisemitic terrorist groups, wild antisemitic conspiracy theorists and a litany of Jew-haters.”

The Zionist movement, in the guise of the Jewish Labour Movement, have targeted Jewish anti-Zionists in the Labour Party in particular.  I have been expelled and Arkush has also demanded the expulsion of Jackie Walker and Ken Livingstone, describingLabour as having moved “with the speed of an arthritic snail.”. Arkush is not happy with the speed of the expulsion process!Previously the JLM targeted Professor Moshe Machover, who was auto-excluded and then readmitted and Glyn Secker of Jewish Voice for Labour, who was suspended and unsuspended within a week and before that Charlie Allen.  At Labour Party conference they also suggested that Naomi Wimborne-Iddrissi should be suspended.

Jewish opponents of Zionism and supporters of the Palestinians will always be the target of the Zionists' false allegations of anti-semitism for the simple reason that we are living proof that their claim to represent all Jews is a lie, an anti-Semitic lie, because it presumes that Jews form one homogenous political bloc.  The irony of course is that it is the Zionists who are closest ideologically to the anti-semites.  It is not for nothing that every fascist and anti-semitic party in Europe - from Le Pen to Geert Wilders to Heinz Strache and Hungary's newly elected Prime Minister Viktor Orban - loves Israel.  In this country the EDL march with the Israeli flag.
Republican president-elect Donald Trump delivers his acceptance speech during his election night event at the New York Hilton Midtown in the early morning hours of November 9, 2016 in New York City. (Spencer Platt/Getty Images/AFP)
Republican president-elect Donald Trump delivers his acceptance speech during his election night event at the New York Hilton Midtown in the early morning hours of November 9, 2016 in New York City. (Spencer Platt/Getty Images/AFP)
In the United States the alt-Right is single-minded in their devotion to Israel even whilst they have nothing but contempt for Jews who are seen as quintissential liberals.  Richard Spencer, neo-Nazi founder of the alt-Right describes himself as a White Zionist! 

Steve Bannon, co-founder of Breitbart News and Trump's former Strategic Advisor, according to NBC News, asked a school director “why there were so many Hanukkah books in the library.” At another school, his ex-wife said, Bannon “asked me if it bothered me that the school used to be in a temple. I said no and asked why he asked … he did not respond.”

At a third school, the Archer School for Girls, Bannon “went on to say the biggest problem he had with Archer is the number of Jews that attend. He said that he doesn’t like Jews and that he doesn’t like the way they raise their kids to be ‘whiny brats’ and that he didn’t want the girls going to school with Jews.”

None of this stopped the Zionist Organisation of America from making Bannon an honoured guest and speaker at its 2017 Annual Gala Dinner.  For good measure they also invited another Trump appointee, Sebastian Gorka who, according to the Jewish Forward is a member of a Hungarian far-right group that is listed by the U.S. State Department as having been “under the direction of the Nazi Government of Germany” during World War II. The elite order is known as the Vitézi Rend.

Instead of standing up a campaign whose sole purpose is the removal of Corbyn, Momentum’s National Co-ordinating Group took the cowards way out last week with a statement which:

‘acknowledges the anger, upset and despair within the British Jewish community at the numerous cases of antisemitism in the Labour Party... Momentum’s NCG believes that accusations of antisemitism should not and cannot be dismissed simply as right wing smears nor as the result of conspiracies’.

This absurd statement concedes everything and understands nothing.  There have been no ‘numerous cases of anti-Semitism’.  Anti-Semitism in the Labour Party today is less today than ever, completely minimal.  Where anti-Semitism exists it is almost always clumsy verbal comments which betray a confusion in respect to Israel not Jews. Unsurprisingly, when Jewish leaders defend Israel’s murderous behaviour in the name of all Jews and when Israel calls itself a Jewish state some people will take them at their word and blame what has happened on Jews.  This is light years away from the biological, lethal racial anti-Semitism of the Nazi era or even the Catholic anti-Semitism that persists till this day in countries of Eastern Europe like Poland.

Clumsy or anti-Semitic comments on Twitter are not evidence of a rise of anti-Semitism.  Anyone can post on Facebook and magnify their own importance. No one who is Jewish suffers from such idiocy.  No one has died from a tweet or a Facebook post.  It is Black people who die at the hands of the Police.  It is Asian and Muslim people whose mosques are firebombed and who themselves are attacked by racists.  Jewish people in this society are White and privileged.  They are not the victims of racial oppression which is why the Zionist movement resorts to false accusations of ‘anti-Semitism’ against their opponents.  There isn't a single Palestine solidarity activist who hasn’t been accused of anti-Semitism.

All this is identity politics gone mad.  A product of the belief that any group, however preposterous their claims, can say they are oppressed.  It may be a heresy but Jews are not oppressed as Jews in Britain today.  They may feel different in some ways, such as in their identification with Israel for example, but oppressed they are not.  That is why they have no right to expect others to treat them as if they are oppressed because in claiming oppression they are countering their demands to groups who actually are oppressed.

The idea that Jewish people or the Jewish community are in ‘despair’ at Labour Party anti-Semitism is a media creation that Momentum, under Jon Lansman, himself a Zionist, has adopted.  The fact that the Jewish Labour Movement joined in the attacks on Corbyn for having spent a Passover seder with Jewdas speaks volumes.  The JLM represents the Israeli state inside the Labour Party.  There is nothing radical about this group, which is why they voted 92%-4% for Owen Smith in 2016.

What Momentum needs to appreciate above all is that the real target of the fabricated anti-Semitism campaign is not Jackie Walker, Ken Livingstone, Glynn Secker, Moshe Machover or me but Corbyn.  He is the prize.  We are collateral damage.  

The beauty of the fake 'anti-semitism' campaign from the point of view of the Zionists is that it has no ending, it cannot end.  It is designed to run and run.   There will always be some tweet or Facebook post that can be dredged up as 'proof' of Corbyn's 'antisemitism'.  There will always be some hapless fool who, lacking any other explanation, will describe Israel's behaviour and the support given her by the USA as being on account of the mythical 'Rothschilds'.  Whatever Corbyn does to appease monsters such as the far-Right Arkush (who is indeed a political monster) it will never be enough.  The anti-semitism crisis, engineered in the Embassies of the United States and Israel, is guaranteed to run and run.  

It is no accident that the antisemitism crisis came about during Corbyn's first leadership campaign.  If and when he is overthrown or defeated this campaign will suddenly vanish like the mist on a summer's morning.  It is made in Langley in the USA.
Avi Gabbay - right-wing leader of the nationalist Israeli Labour Party
Today it was announcedthat the leader of the racist Israeli Labour Party, Avi Gabbay, is personally cutting relations with Jeremy Corbyn.
The Israeli Labour Party under Gabbay, who was previously a Minister in Netanyahu's cabinet, has supportedIsrael’s attempt to deport 40,000 Black African refugees.  The Israeli Labour Party opposes the dismantlement of settlements in the West Bank and opposes any government coalition with the Joint List which represents the Arab parties (whereas he is open to a coalition with the far-Right Yisrael Beteinu party of Avigdor Lieberman).  As Israel’s 972 Magazinenoted

Gabbay’s new direction for the party became more than just a change in rhetoric this week, when he ordered the party to support a bill that will allow the deportation and indefinite detention of asylum seekers living in Israel... it could have real consequences: the deportation of tens of thousands of people who have lived in Israel for years, putting many of their lives at risk.


Momentum should instead bite the bullet and argue that the position of the British wing of the Israeli Labour Party as an affiliated socialist society is untenable and needs to end.  It is as if we would have tolerated a pro-Apartheid Afrikaner Party affiliated to the Labour Party. The fact that this situation began in 1921 at the height of Labour's support for the Empire is an additional reason to cut our links with the Israeli Labour Party.  Nearly a century of attachment to a racist organisation is already far too long.  If there is a need for a Jewish section of the Labour Party, which I doubt, then it should be open to all Jewish members of the Labour Party not, as is presently the case, only Zionist Jews (& non-Jews).  It should be Jewish Voice for Labour that replaces the JLM.

If Momentum later today decides to expel me, which is highly likely, they will not only be acting as the transmission belt for McNicol’s racist witchhunt but they will be giving succour to a campaign whose real target is the person that Momentum was set up to support, Jeremy Corbyn. 

Below is the submission I made to the Panel from Momentum's National Coordinating Group which will make the decision

Voting to Expel Me from Momentum will be a Vote to Endorse the Contrived and Fabricated Anti-Semitism Campaign Against Corbyn

Introduction
I am preparing this submission on the basis that the panel of the National Coordinating Group which has been appointed to hear my appeal has not already made their mind up before walking into the room.  It will be for them to convince me and others of this fact since the Chair of the NCG, Jon Lansman, has already made his views clear in an email of 19th March to Laura Parker:

‘We do have to get rid of Greenstein but I am a bit concerned by the process...’

Neither Mr Lansman nor Ms Parker saw fit to send this email to me.

The NCG is not known for its independence of Lansman’s wishes. Lansman wants me removed from Momentum, because I have been expelled from the Labour Party, a consequence of having been a victim of the witchhunt. The real reason is my criticism of him.  It will be interesting to see whether a panel of the NCG is prepared to disagree with Lansman.

My appeal is against being ‘deemed to have resigned’ from Momentum, under rule 5.8 of the Constitution.  Rule 5.8 as members know states that someone who ceases to be a member of the Labour Party may be deemed to have resigned.  In other words the process is one of discretion.  Momentum should refuseto affirm Iain McNicol’ contempt for such niceties as natural justice and due process and support my campaign for reinstatement in the Labour Party. To do otherwise would be to endorse McNicol’s reign of terror and error.

The nearest comparison to my situation is the decision of the Law Society in the case of Sally Clark.  Members may (or probably won’t) remember the case of Sally Clark, the solicitor who was gaoled in November 1999 for life for murdering her two infant children who in fact died from Cot Death syndrome.  The Law Society, which normally strikes off a solicitor convicted of a serious criminal offence, uniquely refusedto strike her off as they were of the belief that she was innocent.  Sally was freed by the Court of Appeal in 2003.
These two articles were the first information I received as to the allegations against me - leaked to the not normally Labour supporting press
I am also the victim of a miscarriage of justice.  It was perpetrated above all by McNicol and the machine he operated under John Stolliday and Sam Matthews.  It was implemented by Labour’s equivalent of the Star Chamber, the National Kangaroo Committee otherwise known as the NCC.  The NCC is a body that deliberately ignores, by virtue of its own Guidelines (which aren’t in fact part of the Labour Party’s Constitution) all malpractice and breaches of natural justice and fairness that take place before the hearing itself. 

Appendix 6 s.6(D)(i) of the Labour Party Rules stipulates that:

‘The procedures adopted on behalf of the Party or a CLP in advance of a referral to the NCC are not matters for the NCC dealing with a particular case. The NCC is entitled to (and will) act on the basis that the charges are properly brought before them and cannot become embroiled in dealing with complaints about the administration of any investigation leading to the charges. Any such complaint will therefore not be entertained by the NCC or panel thereof unless it is material or relevant to the consideration of the evidence to be used by the presenter in support of the charges.

This is a ‘turning a blind eye’ clause of the Labour Party rules.  It deliberately ignores any breaches of procedure or injustices happening before the NCC takes charge of the matter.  It doesn’t matter how badly a person is treated the NCC is completely indifferent.  We have had one suicide, many reports of depression and trauma caused by  the behaviour of Labour’s apparatchiks yet the NCC deliberately refuses to even look at how people are treated.  
Both the Times and Telegraph withdrew their imputation that I was antisemitic
In my case I was suspended on 18th March 2016 for remarks I was ‘alleged to have made’.  Despite repeatedly emailing John Stolliday I received no response to my request for information regarding my alleged remarks.  On April 2ndboth The Telegraph and The Times printed stories detailing the allegations, all of which referred to the then building hysteria over anti-Semitism in the Labour Party.
Both newspapers, under legal threat of a libel action, made retractions and printed letters from me making it clear that they were not alleging that I was anti-Semitic.  The Telegraph made it clear that this information came directly from the Compliance Unit.  This outrageous breach of the Data Protection Act 1998 should have been enough for these charges to be thrown out.  Instead I was subject to an Investigation Hearing on May 31st 2016 and then for the following 18 months nothing happened.  On November 2ndwhilst recovering from surgery in Kings College Hospital, I received notice of a hearing on December 11th.

Despite emailing back requesting extra time the NCC refused to grant me an adjournment.  On December 7thI applied to the High Court and obtained an Injunction forcing McNicol to postpone the hearing.  This duly took place on February 18th 2018 when I was expelled.

Paragraph 102 of the Skeleton Argument of the barrister for the Labour Party, Thomas Ogg, freely conceded that: ‘All of the charges relate to conduct after Mr Greenstein's suspension from the Labour Party on 18 March 2016.’  In other words I was suspended first and then McNicol’s minions set about gathering evidence. 
South African anti-apartheid activists have no problem in recognising Israel's Apartheid system
Why was I targeted?  Because I am a prominent Jewish anti-Zionist.  Nothing more and nothing less.  Targeted by the Jewish Labour Movement, the British branch of the Israeli Labour Party.  A racist party of ethnic cleansing and segregation.  A racist party that has supported these past months Netanyahu’s attempts to deport 40,000 Black Africa refugees for the crime of being Black and non-Jewish.  This is the real racism that should merit the attention of members of Momentum not the phantom of ‘anti-Semitism’.

No court of law would uphold this procedure, which amounts to the equivalent of preventative detention.  Unfortunately until Chakrabarti’s proposals on disciplinary processes are implemented then this situation will recur.  However Momentum, since it stands for a New Politics, if that isn’t just another bit of spin, should register its objection to this process by refusing to expel me (which is what ‘deemed to have resigned’ means.

Background – the False Anti-Semitism Campaign

For the past two years there has been an unremitting campaign against ‘anti-Semitism’ in the Labour Party.  It began even before Corbyn became leader when the Conservative and Zionist press became alarmed that someone who had always identified with the Palestinian cause was about to be elected leader of the Labour Party. It has continued up to this day. Jackie Walker, Ken Livingstone, Marc Wadsworth and myself have been collateral damage. The real target is Jeremy Corbyn. 

The false anti-Semitism campaign began with headlines in the Daily Mail[1] and the Jewish Chronicle[2] concerning Corbyn’s alleged links with a holocaust denier. The campaign then proceeded via Gerald Kaufman’s comments about Jewish money (just last week the Observer was telling us ‘Major Jewish private donor ditches Labour over antisemitism’.[3] without any fuss at all.)  The campaign continued via the manufactured affair of Oxford University Labour Club and the allegations, which were not upheld, that Jewish students were subject to racial abuse.  Those who levelled the allegations did so because the Labour club had voted to support Israel Apartheid Week.  Soon after they left the Labour Party altogether for the Lib-Dems.  This was documented by investigative journalist Asa Winstanley How Israel lobby manufactured UK Labour Party’s anti-Semitism crisis.[4]
We have had, over the last month alone, a dodgy dossier of David Collier,[5]much of which is forged, about Corbyn’s membership of the Palestine Live Facebook page.  The Zionist ‘charity’ Campaign Against Anti-Semitism has also made a second complaint of anti-Semitism against Corbyn and they are calling a demonstration against Corbyn’s anti-Semitism on April 8th. It hardly needs repeating that the false anti-Semitism smear campaign has nothing to do with anti-Semitism and everything to do with removing Jeremy Corbyn. 

Throughout this period Labour Party members have remained immune to this nonsense and the latest poll suggests that 77% don’t believe that Labour is riddled with anti-Semitism.[6] It is a campaign got up in the mainstream media that bears no relationship to reality. 
What is indisputable is the antisemitic nature of the cartoon by Netanyahu's son, Yair, whose attack on George Soros (above) was praised by ex-KKK Grand Wizard David Duke and the neo-Nazi editor of the Daily Stormer, Andrew Anglin
In response to the removal of McNicol coupled with the appointment of Christine Shawcroft as Chair of the Disputes Committee, this campaign restarted.  We have seen the wholly synthetic attack around a mural that has been erased for 6 years.  Corbyn apologised for his earlier opposition to its destruction but I don’t even believe that this was necessary because, like many works of art, it was open to differing interpretations. I personally don’t believe it was anti-Semitic, friends of mine disagree with me.  People can disagree in good faith.  However the attacks on Jeremy were not motivated by concern over anti-Semitism but were a cynical attack begun by Blairite MP Luciana Berger. 

We can see this cynicism at work over the affair of the Passover seder that Jeremy attended with the Jewish group Jewdas. Jonathan Arkush, the right-wing Tory who heads the Board of Deputies described Jewdas as “source of virulent antisemitism”.[7] 

It is extremely regrettable that Momentum, instead of standing up to this campaign and challenging the idea that anti-Semitism is widespread in the Labour Party, goes along with this narrative.[8]  Momentum’s statement said that ‘Momentum’s NCG believes that accusations of antisemitism should not and cannot be dismissed simply as right wing smears nor as the result of conspiracies.’  Unfortunately this flippant dismissal of what has happened fails to ask even basic questions as to where this campaign has come from.  The Al Jazeera programme The Lobby[9] demonstrated that people from the Israeli Embassy and its lobby groups in the Labour Party – the Jewish Labour Movement and Labour Friends of Israel – do nothing but conspire and plot to demonise their opponents.  I distinguish here between conspiracies and conspiracy theories, which are altogether different.

In his long interview on the Today  Program of 3 April Jon Lansman was incapable of criticising the behaviour of MPs like Angela Smith and John Woodcock over the Jewdas affair. Smith, who couldn’t even spell ‘Seder’ correctly, stated it showed “a blatant dismissal” of the need to tackle antisemitism.’ [10] Lansman really doesn’t see anything amiss in a false campaign that has been waged for two years.  That is why he was instrumental in the removal of Jackie Walker as Vice-Chair of Momentum, someone whom I described, even before she was suspended, as the victim of a political lynching.[11]

When Nick Robinson asked Lansman about why Labour MPs were being threatened with deselection for going to an ‘anti-racist’ rally outside Parliament, the obvious answer was that they weren’t.  Yet Lansman didn’t demur. The rally was a rally of racists.  The main chant was ‘Jeremy Corbyn is a racist.’  Jewish people like myself who assembled with Jewish Voice for Labour were harried with accusations of ‘traitor’ (an anti-Semitic term of abuse which implies that our loyalty should be to Israel). What kind of ‘anti-racist’ rally is it that includes Ian Paisley MP and his DUP colleagues, Norman Tebbit, Sir Eric Pickles and mainly Jewish and non-Jewish Tories and Zionists?  Plus of course 39 right-wing Labour MPs.  The chap on the front of the Guardian picture is an overt fascist.[12]  Perhaps if Momentum had had the courage to do what it did 2 years ago, in response to the chicken coup, then we would have seen a genuine and large anti-racist demonstration.

Have members of Momentum’s NCG ever asked themselves why papers such as the Daily Mail are so supportive of the false anti-Semitism campaign?  A paper which Michael Foot called the ‘forgers’ Gazett’ on account of the Zinoviev letter.  A paper which supported Hitler prior to 1939, the British Union of Fascists, which opposed Jewish refugees coming into this country and which till this very day harbours anti-Semitic prejudies (e.g. Ed Miliband and the bacon sandwich controversy).  Yet these papers are always happy to shout ‘anti-Semitism’ when anti-Zionism and Israel is on the agenda.  It is one of those ironies that no one seems to mention that the vilest racist tabloids, which employed people like Katy Hopkins, Rod Liddle, Richard Littlejohn et al. have no hesitation in demonstrating faux outrage over ‘anti-Semitism’. 

In the course of this campaign, I too was suspended.  I was a victim of a campaign that had nothing to do with anti-Semitism and everything to do with Zionism and support for the State of Israel.  It is deeply to be regretted that instead of Momentum calling this campaign out for the bogus and false affair that it is, they have succumbed to the political pressure

Jon Lansman has effectively justified the Nakba, the expulsion of the Palestinian refugees in 1947-8 in Labour and the Jews: from ethnic cleansing to truth and reconciliation[13] and justified Zionism, the ideology of Jewish racial supremacy and segregation in Why the Left must stop talking about ‘Zionism’[14] by painting it as an anodyne form of identity politics.

Momentum, because it is not a democratic organisation and because there are no forums where these matters can be debated, has stumbled blindly during this whole period.  For two weeks following the Mural campaign it said nothing, even as Christine Shawcroft was forced off the NEC at the urging of 39 right-wing Labour MPs.  A resignation that should not have occurred.  Former MP and Junior Minister Chris Mullins summed up what was happening:
“Alleged anti-semitism yet another stick with which to beat Corbyn -- along with Corbyn 'friend of the IRA, Hizbollah, Hamas, Czech spy, Soviet spy....' You name it. Whatever next?... I am not a Corbynista, but I can see what's going on here. Sorry to see that some of my Labour colleagues have fallen for it. Anyone in doubt should read this morning's Tory press. https://twitter.com/PolhomeEditor/statu ... 0032508929 …’ [15]
  
What is remarkable is that despite all the heat generated by the anti-Semitism furore, so few incidents of actual anti-Semitism have been documented.  Many of those which were documented were falsified.  People may remember Vicky Kirby who tweeted that Jews had big noses.  An obvious case you might think of an anti-Semitic caricature. However Asa Winstanley dug a little deeper and found that she had in fact tweeted the lines to a play by David Baddiel, a Jewish playwright.  Guido Fawkes had photo shopped this out. 
Even the Guardian's Jonathan Freedland and a representative of the Board of Deputies accepts I am not antisemitic
I have fought anti-Semitism and fascism all my life. I was responsible in 2012 for the expulsion of a holocaust denier from the Brighton branch of PSC and then nationally. I have no tolerance of Holocaust denial where it occurs but it is very rare. What motivates it these days is not simply neo-Nazism, as once was the case, but the weaponisation of the Holocaust by the Zionist movement and Israel.  And before members of the panel fall off their chairs let me explain. Israel has consistently mobilised the Holocaust in support of its policies of ethnic cleansing and mass murder.  For example Shimon Peres called the Green Line between Israel and the West Bank ‘Auschwitz borders’.[16] As Professor Edith Zertal of the Hebrew University in Jerusalem and visiting professor at Chicago University wrote, there hasn’t been a war involving Israel ‘that has not been perceived, defined, and conceptualized in terms of the Holocaust.’ Israel has mobilised the Holocaust ‘in the service of Israeli politics.’ [17]

I reject out of hand the idea that racism can best be combated via education and what used to be called racism awareness training (RAT).  As the late Black anti-racist activist and writer Amalavaner Sivanandan said, RAT makes the Police more aware of who their enemy is.[18]  It appears that Momentum is infested with the very racism it purports to oppose if it really believes that racism, rooted in the very pores of capitalism, can be eradicated through education.  Racism is something we fight in our practice and day to day activity.  Racism is something we inherited with colonialism and imperialism.  It is as English as apple pie.  When anti-Semitism is wielded as a weapon on behalf of the world’s only Apartheid State then the idea that the racists who justify that state, the Jewish Labour Movement, should be in charge of that training is nothing less than sick.  To those who doubt Israel is an Apartheid society I suggest they read for example Jonathan Cook’s Why Israel is an apartheid state.[19]

My Expulsion from the Labour Party

On 18th February I was expelled from the Labour Party as a result of the false anti-Semitism campaign. A campaign of destabilisation which in my opinion could only have been inaugurated by a combination of the Israeli and American embassies in conjunction with our own intelligence services. The CIA has few other functions other than destabilising governments and political movements hostile to US interests. The election of a leader of the second main party of government in the US’s closest ally in Europe, who was anti-NATO and opposed to US intervention globally, could not have escaped their attention.  The idea that with the election of Jeremy Corbyn an anti-Semitism plague broke out in Labour is too silly for words.

Contrary to received opinion I was not expelled for being an anti-Semite.  That is hardly surprising since I have spent much of the past 40 years as an anti-fascist and anti-racist activist.  I am the author of the only book detailing the history of the anti-fascist struggle in Brighton and on the South Coast.[20]  In paras. 2&3 of his Skeleton argument Thomas Ogg argued that:

The fact that Mr Greenstein considers the word (‘zio’) not to be a racial slur is no defence because he knows the word is considered offensive and he accepts he uses the word pejoratively....
The NEC's case is that Greenstein's use of the term "Zio" is antisemitic, but the NEC does not otherwise allege that Mr Greenstein's conduct was antisemitic.’ 

This was the core and the kernel of the NEC’s case against me.  All else was decoration and froth.  ‘Zio’ may be both offensive and perjorative but that does not make it anti-Semitic.  We used to chant ‘Nazi scum off our streets’ that is hardly complimentary and it was certainly offensive but it wasn’t racist.  I do not accept that ‘zio’ is racist.  Certainly it is perjorative, as it should be. But it isn’t anti-Semitic for the following reasons:

 ‘Zio’, which is not a word I use outside social media, is short for Zionist. It is no different from similar shorthand – Commie, Trot, Tory, Fash.  If anyone is saying that it is an abusive term for ‘Jew’ then what they are really saying is that the term Zionist and Jew are interchangeable.  That is a position of anti-Semites and fascists and also of course Zionists.  It is an anti-Semitic statement in itself and is also wrong.  Historically most Jews were opposed to Zionism.  The biggest supporters of Zionism were anti-Semites for whom Zionism was a means of getting rid of the Jews in their midst.

As Isaac Deutscher wrote of the Jewish workers in Poland:
‘‘to the Jewish workers anti-Semitism seemed to triumph in Zionism, which recognised the legitimacy and the validity of the old cry ‘Jews get out!' The Zionists were agreeing to get out.’[i]

According to Ellman these are Palestinian terrorists

Amongst my other ‘crimes’ was ‘abusing’ Progress and Labour Friends of Israel member Louise Ellman MP who, in the name of security supports Israel’s shackling, beating and incarceration of (Palestinian) children.  (see Parliamentary debate on Palestinian child prisoners and detainees, 6.1.16.).  My abuse consisted of accusing her of supporting Israeli abuse of Palestinian children.  The proponents of the false anti-Semitism smears will assure you that their campaign has nothing, absolutely nothing to do with Israel or Zionism. Indeed those who suggest it is are guilty of believing in conspiracy theories, which are themselves a form of anti-Semitism!
It is anti-Zionist Jews who receive the most abuse
 
The Timeline of My Dealings with Momentum Nationally
On 18th March I e-mailed Momentum nationally asking why they had ceased taking my subscriptions and assuming that they had done so because I had been expelled.

On 22nd March a Santiago Bell-Bradford emailed informing me that I was wrong and the fault lay with Pay Pal. I was happy to accept this and I said I would contact Pay Pal directly.

17 minutes later another email arrived, from Momentum Info, informing me that it had come to their attention (in fact I pointed it out) that I had been expelled from the Labour Party and I had 6 days to make written representations to Momentum as to why they also should not expel me.  I was told that a panel of the National Co-ordinating Group or a panel thereof would meet to determine my fate.

I wrote back almost immediately complaining that an email such as this should have a name attached to it and attacking their impersonal corporate culture. In my naivety I treated this email at face value.  I didn’t expect that it was the product of dirty tricks. I simply pointed out that there seemed to be an omission in their letter, viz. that I had a right to be heard in person.

I said that child care responsibilities prevented me from attending on Thursday March 29th and I suggested alternative dates. I also stated that ‘Your email gives the distinct impression that this is merely a matter of going through the motions.’ I also pointed out that the constitution merely stated that Imay be deemed to have resigned.’  At this stage I was still assuming that the email was sent in good faith.

What changed this was a phone call I received about 15 minutes later from Laura Parker. Laura phoned to ‘explain’ why names are never used on emails because of the abuse staff get from Momentum members! This was wholly untrue since I had just received an email in the name of Santiago Bell Bradford. When I tried to discuss the substance of the email I had sent she put the phone down.  It was almost as if she was phoning me up to distract me.

I responded to this email rejecting her explanation and making the point that ‘If what you are saying is that large numbers of Momentum members are abusive then you might ask yourself whether it has anything to do with the way you treat people.’

I also received an anonymous email with copies of internal Momentum emails which put everything into context.  The first email was at 00.34 on the morning of Monday 19th March.  Lansman wrote, in his capacity of Chair of the NCG that:

‘We do have to get rid of Greenstein but I am a bit concerned by the process which he will make a big deal out of possibly including lawyers - sorry if I didn’t say this earlier.The bits of the constitution which are relevant here are....

One of the ironies of my suspension was that genuine neo-Nazis like Britain First's Paul Besser could use it to suggest that I was anti-Semitic whereas his own support for Zionism made him kosher
What Lansman was saying was that Momentum may deem me to have resigned but they have to go through the motions of having a hearing.  It wasn’t even conceded that I had a right to be heard in person.  Presumably this is the new, kinder politics which Momentum enjoins! 
Lansman couldn’t have been clearer. There was nothing about due process and the right to a fair hearing. I had the right to be heard but ‘not necessary (sic) in person.’ Quite how Lansman can square having a right to be heard with me not being present in person is something I haven’t yet got my head around. 

I followed this up with a further email to Lansman stating that if he wishes to engage in these tricks and deceptions then I shall be forced to treat him as I did the Labour Party and apply for an injunction. 

If this is how Lansman behaves to me, with a complete lack of openness and honesty, how does he treat others? What conception of socialism does Lansman adhere to that causes him to play these deceitful games? Is the expectation that staff members will lie an implied part of their contracts because Laura Parker didn’t inform me of this exchange of correspondence.

Conclusion

Momentum has a Constitution, which was imposed by Lansman over a year ago.  It has never been approved, still less debated by Momentum’s membership.  The relevant part of the Constitution dealing with members who have been expelled are the following:

5.8     Any member who does not join the Labour Party by 1 July 2017, or ceases to be a member of the Labour Party, or acts inconsistently with Labour Party membership, may be deemed to have resigned.
5.10   Where a member may be deemed to have resigned in accordance with Rules 5.7, 5.8 or 5.9 there will be a right to be heard by the NCG or a delegated panel before a final decision is made.

It is quite clear that it is within the discretion of the panel to accept my continuing membership of Momentum.  Momentum should be supporting me in my efforts to be readmitted to Labour now that McNicol has departed.  It should not be supporting the outrageous procedures which were used in my case.

It should indeed be a rare event when someone who is Jewish is expelled as part of the anti-Semitism witch-hunt.  Jonathan Arkush of the Board of Deputies welcomed my expulsion.  He has called for the expulsion of another Jew, Jackie Walker.  Arkush is someone who welcomed Donald Trump to power and the anti-Semitic retinue of people like Steve Bannon and the neo-Nazi Sebastian Gorka. 
Arkush is also a supporter of Benjamin Netanyahu, Israel’s far-Right racist Prime Minister. Surely it doesn’t take too much to join the dots and see why the Board of Deputies sees the expulsion of anti-Zionist Jews as being part of the fight against ‘anti-Semitism’.  Arkush is open about the fact that his concern is not with anti-Semitism but anti-Zionism.  If there is any remaining doubt then you only need to read his open letter to Jeremy Corbyn which states:

Again and again, Jeremy Corbyn has sided with anti-Semites rather than Jews. At best, this derives from the far left's obsessive hatred of Zionism, Zionists and Israel. At worst, it suggests a conspiratorial worldview in which mainstream Jewish communities are believed to be a hostile entity, a class enemy.[21]

It is crystal clear what the real concerns of the Zionist leaders are.  It is Israel and Zionism.  That is no basis for my exclusion from Momentum.

Tony Greenstein




[1]          EXCLUSIVE: Jeremy Corbyn's 'long-standing links' with notorious Holocaust denier and his 'anti-Semitic' organisation revealed, https://tinyurl.com/pzr5wpd , Notorious conspiracy theorist who believes the 'world is controlled by Jewish elders' spoke at Westminster event hosted by Jeremy Corbyn, https://tinyurl.com/ybvblvusl
[2]          Revealed: Jeremy Corbyn attended event hosted by Holocaust denier's group in 2013.https://tinyurl.com/y8v2a862

[6]          Labour Members Think Anti-Semitism Claims Are Being Exaggerated To Damage Jeremy Corbyn, Huffington Post 31.3.18.

[7]       Jonathan Arkush claims Jewdas is ‘a source of virulent antisemitism’ https://www.thejc.com/news/uk-news/jonathan-arkush-claims-jewdas-is-a-source-of-virulent-antisemitism-1.461817

[10]         Corbyn was right to attend the Jewdas Seder, there's no such thing as 'good' and 'bad' Jews  Independent3 April 2018,  https://tinyurl.com/y7rol7ve 

[11]         The Jewish Labour Movement and its Political Lynching of Jackie Walker, 17.9.16. http://azvsas.blogspot.co.uk/2016/09/the-jewish-labour-movement-and-its.html

[12]         Labour antisemitism more widespread than thought, Momentum says, https://www.theguardian.com/politics/2018/apr/02/labour-antisemitism-more-widespread-than-thought-momentum-says, Guardian  April 2nd 



[16]         Auschwitz Borders Are Here, https://www.haaretz.com/1.5148580

[17]         Zertal, pp.4, 91.  Israel’s Holocaust and the Politics of Nationhood, Cambridge University Press, 2011.

[18]         We Are Here Because You Were With Us: Remembering A. Sivanandan (1923–2018), https://ceasefiremagazine.co.uk/us-remembering-a-sivanandan-1923-2018/


[20]         Review, Fighting Fascism The Argus, 28.5.2012. http://www.theargus.co.uk/magazine/nostalgia/pastpresent/9728304.Fighting_fascism/



[i]           Isaac Deutscher, 'The Non Jewish Jew '& Other Essays-The Russian  Revolution and the Jewish Question' pp.66/7.

How Leftist Intellectuals Take Fright when Zionism Wages a War on ‘anti-Semitism’

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Richard Seymour and Labour’s Antisemitism Affair–straddling both sides of the fence


Jacobin is not a site that most people on the left in Britain will be familiar with. It is however a major left-wing journal in the United States.  I once contributed Rewriting the Holocaust for Jacobin, in the wake of Netanyahu's speech to the 2015 World Zionist Congress when he described how Hitler was persuaded to adopt the Final Solution by the Mufti of Jerusalem.

Richard Seymour is undoubtedly a gifted and capable writer.  He was, until the 2013 rape crisis, a member of the Socialist Workers Party when he led the resistance on his Leninology blog to the attempts by the leadership and Alex Callinicos to cover up what had happened.  Since then he has drifted politically, writing a couple of books, becoming immersed in intersectionality and flirting with Left Unity.  Seymour’s latest article in Jacobinsuggests he is wandering aimlessly across the left, dragged in the undertow of conflicting political currents without neither ballast or firm conviction.
Seymour is mired in the swamp of identity politics and this is causing him to lose his political bearings. After all a Jewish identity based around Israel and Zionism, suitably dressed up as a concern with anti-Semitism, is equally as valid as a Palestinian identity based on ethnic cleansing. If Jews can claim that they are oppressed because of hostility to Israel who is going to countermand this? When class and race are removed from the equation who is to decide who is oppressed and who is the oppressor? Everything is subjective and personal. All identities are equally valid, albeit some are more equal than others.  By what criteria can one say that an identity based on Zionism is reactionary if one does not have an analysis based on class and imperialism?

Seymour’s latest article Labour’s Antisemitism Affair on Labour’s media manufactured anti-Semitism crisis proves the maxim that those who leave the SWP invariably drift to the right.  In Seymour’s case this involves a wholesale abandonment of class politics in favour of subjectivism and a crude empiricism.
Seymour’s article is a deep disappointment as he tries to bridge the gap between the two sides of what he calls Labour’s Anti-Semitism Affair.  Seymour’s purpose is blindingly obvious.  He wants to find something innovative to say.  He wants to put new wine into old bottles and thus he imagines he’s being daring and brave in seeking to break the mould of the politics of anti-Semitism.  Like those who have tried this feat of political acrobacy before him, he ends up satisfying no one. It is a tilt to the Right and an abandonment of the Left.  It stands in marked contrast to the subsequent article Corbyn Under Firein Jacobin by Daniel Finn.

One of the hallmarks of socialist or left-wing writers is their commitment to the overthrow of the system we live under.  They employ their talents on our behalf not just their own. There should be no room to doubt where they stand on the major issues of the day.  They are against the mainstream.  People such as John Pilger, Naomi Klein, Noam Chomsky, Norman Finkelstein and Tariq Ali have demonstrated their commitment under fire.  However the Left is also plagued by opportunists and turncoats, fair weather friends and erstwhile socialists like Owen Jones, the Guardian’s resident leftist and friend of the Israeli Labour Party/JLM. Others, like Nick Cohen, simply jack-knifed to the right.  American neo-conservatism is littered with the bodies of ex-leftists such as Nathan Glazer, James Burnham and Irving Kristol. See The Neoconservative Counterrevolution
Gilad Atzmon, the anti-semitic jazz player who the SWP was associated with through the years when Richard Seymour was a member
I would have expected Richard Seymour to have put into some kind of context, in the course of his 5000+ word article, from where and why he thought that Labour’s ‘anti-Semitism’ crisis arose. Or was the ‘anti-Semitism’ controversy a spontaneous eruption when the prospect of a Corbyn leadership of the Labour Party materialised?  A narrative of ‘anti-Semitism’ that is espoused by every right-wing newspaper in Britain – from the Daily Mail and Sun to the Guardian surely demands some explanation as to its origins? 


I find it wholly dishonest that when describing the fabricated anti-Semitism controversy at Oxford University Labour Club in January 2016, Seymour referred to the central villain, the Chair of the Club, Alex Chalmers, as “a former intern at the pro-Israel group BICOM.”
I wrote an article for Jacobin nearly 2 years ago
Chalmer’s resignation as Chair sparked the crisis and led to the Royall Report which in turn led to the Chakrabarti Report. The information about his links to BICOM was discovered by Asa Winstanley, a researcher and writers for Electronic Intifada, whose articles How Israel lobby manufactured UK Labour Party’s anti-Semitism crisis and Instigator of anti-Semitism scam kicked out of Labour are indispensable to anyone seeking to make sense of what was happening.  Yet although purloining the fruits of Asa’s investigative work, Seymour deigned to give him credit. The Guardian and other papers get frequent references but the writings of a journalist on our side is simply ignored.

As people will know, I was one of the major casualties of this crisis.  I was suspended on March 18th 2016 and expelled on February 18th 2018.  I have detailed the various stages of my suspension from my Investigation Hearing to my successful application for an Injunction against the Labour Party on my blog.  I have tried to put what has happened to me into a wider context, for example detailing the suspension of people like Jackie Walker.

I find it difficult to empathise with so-called intellectuals who divorce themselves from that which they write about.  People who prize themselves on their detachment from the struggle and who adopt an aloof and condescending attitude to those who are involved in political battles are destined not to hang around for too long.  People like Richard Seymour believe themselves equipped to offer their advice from on high without ever getting their hands dirty.
Gary Spedding
I don't doubt that Seymour can sometimes write interesting and insightful articles but he can also be extremely arrogant. Although he has escaped from their clutches Seymour has nonetheless retained the mentality and psychology of the SWP where everything is subordinate to building the party. Perhaps having kept aloof from left sectarian politics I find myself irritated at the cynicism of a group from which I was expelled at the tender age of 19.  To repeat all its mistakes over and over again, without ever learning from those mistakes and to operate in the same way as you have always done, with front organisations which garner less and less support, merely proves Einstein's maxim that the definition of insanity is repeating the same thing over and over again and hoping for a different result. 

There is no attempt in Richard’s article to explain the origins of Labour’s 'antisemitism' campaign.  It apparently appeared as if by magic.  The idea of a deliberately co-ordinated plan to destabilise Labour doesn't even seem to have occurred to Seymour.  The possibility of state interference and involvement completely escapes him. Seymour begins with the minutae of the latest incidents of 'anti-semitism' from Jewdas, to the famous mural by Mear One, which he automatically assumes is antisemitic, to Christine Shawcroft. Seymour concludes that 'There is, clearly, a problem somewhere. Unfortunately, the way in which allegations of antisemitism have been used for party-political purposes, has tended to obscure the need to address it.'
An article in Haaretz by Gary Spedding supporting the bogus anti-semitism campaign
This is the key defect of Seymour’s article.  He accepts that ‘There is, clearly, a problem somewhere.’
Seymour’s article provides justification for the statement by Momentum that was issued in the wake of the latest episode of ‘anti-Semitism’. It bears the imprint of Jon Lansman, a left Zionist who is the head of Momentum.  Lansman has consistently refused to mobilise Momentum in the fight against the witch-hunt in the Labour Party still less to counter the activities of the Jewish Labour Movement, the Israeli state’s representatives inside Labour.  The statement reads:

Momentum’s NCG believes that accusations of antisemitism should not and cannot be dismissed simply as right wing smears nor as the result of conspiracies. Current examples of antisemitism within the Labour Party are not only a problem of a few, extreme ‘bad apples’ but also of unconscious bias which manifests itself in varied, nuanced and subtle ways and is more widespread in the Labour Party than many of us had understood even a few months ago.

It is possible to accept that antisemitism is a problem in parts of the left and needs to be loudly denounced whilst also accepting that some of Jeremy Corbyn’s political opponents are opportunistically using this issue as a way to undermine his leadership.

There is nothing in the above statement that Seymour could disagree with. 

It does not seem to have occurred to Seymour that the election of Jeremy Corbyn as leader of the second major party in the US’s closest ally in Europe, someone who was both anti-Nato and anti-US imperialism, could not but help provoke panic in the security establishment.  If the CIA and all the other spooks at the US Embassy were not discussing what to do when Corbyn appeared to be winning the Labour leadership contest they weren't doing their job. 

Perhaps Seymour believes that whilst the CIA has no compunction in destabilising governments and parties in Latin America they wouldn’t do such a thing in Britain?  Maybe he hasn’t heard of Operation Gladio. It doesn’t seem to have occurred to Seymour that the Labour Party is being destabilised via the United State’s chosen friend Israel.  It is as if the Al Jazeera undercover programmes The Lobby had not been shown and Shai Masot, the Israeli agent had never existed.
Seymour takes certain facts and ignores others, for example the attack on Corbyn even before he became leader as a holocaust denier.  He lacks any perspective, making empiricism into a fine art.  Indeed the ‘anti-Semitism’ campaign is all our fault.  ‘If you walk straight into the constantly whirring propellers of a hostile media with eyes wide shut, then what is the use of complaining about the “Israel Lobby”?’  So the false anti-Semitism campaign has nothing to do with the media or those who own them. The blame lies rather with the victims of the press.

Seymour’s factual grasp leaves a lot to be desired.  When talking about Ken Livingstone’s remark that Hitler supported Zionism, Seymour says of Ha'avara, the Transfer Agreement between the Jewish Agency in Palestine and the Nazi state, that: ‘Hitler was not “supporting” Zionism so much as using every expedient to expel Jews from Germany.’

This is simply not true.  The Nazi government made it clear that they did support the German Zionist movement vs  their non-Zionist German counterparts. David Cesarani wrote describing how ‘The efforts of the Gestapo are oriented to promoting Zionism as much as possible and lending support to its efforts to further emigration.” (my emphasis) [The Final Solution(p.96)] Lucy Dawidowicz, another Zionist historian described how, on 28th January 1935, Reinhardt Heydrich issued a directive stating that
‘the activity of the Zionist-oriented youth organizations ... prior to their emigration to Palestine lies in the interest of the National Socialist state’s leadership.’ These organisations therefore ‘are not to be treated with that strictness that it is necessary to apply to the members of the so-called German-Jewish organizations (assimilationists)’.  [Lucy Dawidowicz, War Against the Jews, pp.118]

Francis Nicosia writes of how Berl Katznelson, a founder of the Israeli Labour Party Mapai and editor of its paper Davar saw the rise of Hitler as “an opportunity to build and flourish like none we have ever had or ever will have”. [Zionism and Anti-Semitism in Nazi Germany, p.91, CUP, 2008.]  Ben Gurion’s attitude to the Holocaust is best described by his official biographer, Shabtai Teveth: ‘If there was a line in Ben-Gurion’s mind between the beneficial disaster and an all-destroying 
catastrophe, it must have been a very fine one.’[The Burning Ground 1886-1948, p.851, Houghton Mifflin, Boston, 1987].

Ha'avara was not set up in order to help Jews emigrate from Germany.  The Jews it helped were amongst the richest, those who could take £1,000 capital out (which enabled them to enter Palestine without an immigration certificate).  They could have left anyway. Ha'avara’s purpose, from the Nazi’s point of view was to undermine the International Jewish Boycott of Nazi Germany which was destroying the German export economy. From the point of view of the Zionist Organisation, Ha'avara was the sole way of bringing into Palestine the maximum amount of German Jewish capital. [Jewish Chronicle, 13th December 1935] According to Edwin Black [Ha’avara – The Transfer Agreement, Brookline Books, 1999, pp. 257-8), Ha'avara’s main purpose was ‘saving the wealth’ of German Jewry and ‘rescuing the capital from Nazi Germany.’  The Jews themselves were a secondary matter.
Baruch Vladech, Chair of the American Jewish Labour Committee and Editor of the Yiddish Daily Forward, described Ha'avara’s purpose as 'not to rescue the Jews from Germany but to strengthen various institutions in Palestine.'He observed that whilst

the whole organized labor movement and the progressive world are waging a fight against Hitler through the boycott. The Transfer Agreement scabs on that fight.’[Lenni Brenner, pp. 92-93, 51 Documents: Zionist Collaboration with the Nazis’, Barricade Books, 1972].

Seymour's criticisms of Jackie Walker, the Black-Jewish activist who was Vice-Chair of Momentum, are even more off beam.  By attending the ‘training session’ of the Jewish Labour Movement on anti-Semitism, she was waging a ‘factional war’.  Seymour describes her comment that Holocaust Day was not “open to all people who experienced a holocaust.” as wrong. It wasn’t, the African & Belgian Congo holocausts are absent. The extermination of the Disabled and Roma are classified under ‘Persecution’ rather than ‘Holocaust’ on the Holocaust Memorial Day Trust.

Seymour describes Jackie’s behaviour as ‘tendentious’ and that ‘she was splitting hairs, belittling antisemitism’. Seymour describes his ignorance of the subject. Jackie was challenging the International Holocaust Remembrance Alliance definition of anti-Semitism which conflates anti-Semitism and anti-Zionism. The IHRA is at the centre of the debate over false allegations of ‘anti-Semitism’.  If Seymour is so unaware of the ramifications of the IHRA then he should read the criticism of it in London Review of Books May 2017 by former Court of Appeal Judge Sir Stephen Sedley. [Defining Anti-Semitism].

Seymour concludes by saying that ‘Walker’s tactical misadventure inadvertently damaged her own cause’ implying that it was her own fault that ‘she was drummed out of the Momentum leadership.’  What kind of socialist blames the defeat of workers on their own mistakes as a means of making a rhetorical point? It is noteworthy that Seymour has nothing to say about the Momentum leadership.
Seymour says that precisely 56 individuals have been suspended because of allegations of anti-Semitism citing Thomas Jones’ Labour and Anti-Semitism. The only problem with this is that this article was written in May 2016.  We are nearly two years down the road and the numbers are far greater.  We had thousands of suspensions in the summer of 2016 during the leadership election, many of which were based on ‘anti-Semitism’.

Seymour is right when he says that Israel has become a ‘totem issue...a displacement for other issues.’ and that this is one of the reasons for the false anti-Semitism campaign.  It is because Israel has become symbolic of the divide between right and left that we have to confront Labour’s role in supporting the world’s only apartheid state not allow ourselves to be bogged down in refuting the false allegations of anti-Semitism.  Unfortunately Seymour proposes the opposite course, namely that we should take serious that which he describes as a displacement issue.

In the section on Jewish Anti-Zionists Seymour writes that the reaction  to what he calls anti antisemitism ‘has many sources, and some of it, as Momentum suggests, might be rooted in shades and variations of unconscious antisemitism. ' Momentum’s own statementspeaks of an ‘unconscious bias which manifests itself in varied, nuanced and subtle ways and is more widespread... than many of us had understood.’

Racism if it is unconscious it’s not worth the candle.  At a time when the government is stripping Black people who came here in the Windrush of their citizenship rights, when we face the continuing issue of Black deaths in custody at the hands of a racist police force and the incarceration of refugees, to talk about an invisible or ‘unconscious’ racism that is deployed on behalf of White privileged people is obscene and racist in itself.

Momentum’s statement calls for ‘unconscious bias training... awareness trainings’.  As Virou Srilangarajahwrotein an obituary for the legendary anti-racist writer and activist, Ambalavaner Sivanandan,who died earlier this year,‘racism awareness training’, removed state and institutional responsibility for racism, instead turning it into a ‘natural’ social phenomenon independent of material conditions, a ‘white disease’. 

Racial awareness training, which Chakrabarti opposed but which the Labour Party has ignored, is based on the idea that racism exists inside one’s head not in society.  It reaches its apotheosis in the absurdity of the Jewish Labour Movement, the ‘sister party’ of the racist Israeli Labour Party, a party that supports the segregation of Jew and Arab and which Netanyahu’s deportation of 40,000 Black African refugees from Israel, running training sessions on ‘anti-Semitism’. You might as well have the Yorkshire Ripper give a lecture on violence against women.  This is the nonsense that Seymour is subscribing to.

If what Seymour (and Lansman) argue is correct, the false allegations of ‘anti-Semitism’ have nothing to do with labelling all criticism of Zionism as ‘anti-Semitic’. They have nothing to do with the Right’s use of the issue as a means of attacking Corbyn on other issues, it’s all down to the unconscious mind.  I just hope that if Seymour decides to abandon writing for a career that he doesn’t choose psycho analysis or psychiatry as his chosen profession. Freud undoubtedly has a lot to answer for but surely not the vacuity of Richard Seymour. 

There is, of course, a simpler explanation. Momentum has resolutely avoided opposing the anti-Semitism witchhunt.  This nonsense about 'unconscious antisemitism' is intended to explain why there are so few genuine examples of anti-semitism to be found.

Seymour’s description of Jewish Voice for Labour, Free Speech on Israel and Jewdas as anti-Zionist is simply wrong.  None of the groups say that they are anti-Zionist.  Although Seymour is right about the decline of left-wing Zionism I fail to understand his analogy with Wallace baiting Truman.  Seymour describes he doesn't analyse.

Seymour’s section The Limits of Anti-Anti-Antisemitism  suggests that anti-Zionists in the Labour Party are posturing as being politically tough.  He tells us that ' it is not helpful for the Left to adopt this attitude, or the performative political “toughness” that often comes with it. Defensiveness has to give way to reflexivity.' This demonstrates the superficiality of  this article and also how far removed Seymour is from that which he writes about. We are in a midst of a war, waged by the Right using anti-Semitism as a weapon and all Seymour can suggest is that we should be 'reflexive'.

What Seymour really means is that we should accept that there is some factual basis to the allegations of anti-Semitism. Seymour uncritically quotes from a survey by the far-Right Zionist Campaign Against Antisemitism without asking any deeper questions such as whether the survey was flawed, whether it was designed to produce certain outcomes or indeed anything about the CAA itself. 
In the CAA’s survey people are asked different questions relating to Jews (for example do Jews chase money) and because nearly half of the population answer positively to one of the questions they conclude that we are in the middle of a wave of anti-Semitism and that nearly half of the British people are anti-Semitic. Seymour goes along with this. 

Dave Rich, the Deputy Director of the Zionist Community Security Trust, with whom I agree on virtually nothing, observedthat

‘This latest poll showed something else that is interesting... that people who believe antisemitic things about Jews rarely think of themselves as antisemitic.... It is as if antisemitic ideas circulate in society and influence the stereotypes people believe about Jews, but this does not affect how people imagine they relate to actual, living Jews who they know or might meet.... Even people who believe there is a global Jewish conspiracy or deny the Holocaust are affronted by the notion they might be antisemitic.

The normally restrained Institute for Jewish Policy Research foundthat the CAA’s “barometer” report was “littered with flaws” and the group’s work “may even be rather irresponsible.”  The IJPR criticized the way that the Campaign Against Antisemitism had used data to make the
“rather sensationalist claim that almost half of all British adults harbor some sort of anti-Semitic view… a far more accurate and honest read” of the data would “highlight the fact that between 75 percent and 90 percent of people in Britain either do not hold anti-Semitic views or have no particular view of Jews either way, and only about 4 percent to 5 percent of people can be characterized as clearly anti-Semitic.”

The CAA also claimed that more than half of British Jews felt that anti-Semitism echoed that of the 1930s. Anshel Pfeffer witheringly observed in Ha’aretz that if the CAA “actually believe that, then it’s hard to take anything they say about contemporary anti-Semitism in their home country seriously.”Pfeffer noted, regarding the statement that Jews talk about the Holocaust too much in order to gain sympathy  “too many Jews … are often too quick to bring up the Holocaust in order to make a point. … Holding that opinion doesn’t necessarily make you an anti-Semite.” 
According to the respected Pew Research Centre’s 2016 Global Survey of Attitudes just 7% of British people are anti-Semitic.  Compare this to 28% in the case of Islamaphobia and a 45% in the case of anti-Roma racism. 

The problem with Seymour is that he is still faithful to the SWP notion that all forms of racism are equal, even when anti-Semitism is a marginal prejudice that doesn't involve power relations within capitalist society, state racism or economic discrimination.  Instead of researching the subject, Seymour reaches for Google Search and takes what the CAA says at face value without any attempt to find out what their motives might be.
It would also appear that Seymour has adopted or rather swallowed the concept of ‘left anti-Semitism’ that is normally associated with the pro-imperialist Alliance for Workers Liberty.  He describes the self-publicising narcissist Gary Spedding as a ‘Jewish left-winger’ citing his article in Ha’aretz We in the Palestinian Solidarity Movement Have a Problem With anti-Semitism. Whatever else Spedding is, he is certainly not Jewish (nor is he left-wing) although that doesn't prevent him telling Jews just what is and is not antisemitic.

Spedding bases his experience of ‘anti-Semitism’ on being told at a Palestine solidarity meeting that the term ‘anti-Semitism’ applies equally to Arabs, since they too are anti-Semites.  This is a common fallacy which is quite easily corrected.  Words and phrases take on a certain meanings over time.  There are no such things as ‘Semites’, which are the product of Wilhelm Marr’s attempt to racialise anti-Jewish hatred in 1879. 
An example of the Palestine solidarity movement's very own Walter Mitthy
Spedding is not a Palestine solidarity activist. His claim to having spent 10 years fighting anti-Semitism in the Palestine solidarity movement is a lie. When the fight against the influence of Gilad Atzmon and Israel Shamir were at their height Spedding was nowhere to be seen. It was people like Ali Abunimah, the editor of Electronic Intifada, whom Spedding has gratuitously abused, who dealt a lethal blow to Shamir and Atzmon with the issuing of a declaration Granting No Quarter: A Call for the Disavowal of the Racism and Antisemitism of Gilad Atzmon, signed by over 20 prominent Palestinians and Arabs which destroyed Atzmon’s reputation.  It was at my urging that JVL expelled Spedding.

Another example of ‘anti-Semitism’ that Seymour asserts is Annie Kehune of Jewdas who ‘writes of being “fed up of having to follow ‘I’m Jewish’ with ‘but I’m not a Zionist’ in left-wing circles.  It may well annoy Annie but unfortunately the leadership of the British Jewish community claim that all Jews support Israel and its actions against the Palestinians. It is no surprise therefore that people associate being Jewish with being a Zionist.  I see nothing wrong with Jewish people making their position clear just as one would have expected White opponents of Apartheid in South Africa to have made their views clear.
Spedding gave support 2 years ago to the false and bogus claims of Angela Eagle, who was then trying to be the Right's candidate against Corbyn, that she had been subject to homophobic abuse in her party.  Wallasey CLP was suspended because of these lies.  It is no secret that Spedding peddled these lies but it is some what surprising that Richard Seymour considers him an ally
Seymour quite unbelievably concludes by arguing that 'However, while every claim has to be evaluated carefully, a precondition for that is that they should be taken seriously in and of themselves, and not merely and a priori as a manifestation of the “Israel Lobby.” Why, when these allegations are made maliciously, should we take them seriously?  If allegations of anti-Semitism are made to deflect from support for the Palestinians then they should be seen for what they are.  So when Jonathan Arkush of the Board of Deputies claims that Jewdas are a source of virulent antisemitism” and goes on to claim that their members “are not all Jewish” should we investigate such matters?  Perhaps we should take a blood test just in order that the matter can be resolved conclusively!

Like most SWP exiles Seymour is trying to find a progressive space between the politics he once espoused and their right-wing critics today.  He doesn't even like talk of the Israel Lobby and would prefer if we would simply turn a blind eye to the activities of the JLM and Labour Friends of Israel. 
Seymour ends in true SWP fashion that 'At a time when nascent far-right movements are surfacing, with antisemitic tendencies linked to state power in Hungary and the United States, the Left has a particular responsibility to lead on this issue.'  Yes indeed and who is it, in the USA and in Hungary, who is hand in hand with these anti-semites if not the Zionist movement?  I can only presume that Seymour in his ivory tower is unaware that the founder of the alt-Right himself, the neo-Nazi Richard Spencer has declared himself a White Zionist. Or that Jonathan Arkush, one of the main players in the false ‘anti-Semitism’ campaign welcomedDonald Trump’s election with all its anti-Semitic dog whistles?

The last thing we should do is to be diverted into every alleyway that the Zionists want us to go down.  What Seymour is really proposing is that the Zionists be allowed to set the agenda.
Seymour is isolated from the movement he writes about which is why he thinks Spedding is representative. Yes of course antisemitic nonsense should be countered. However it endangers not a single Jew because racism against Jews is a matter of prejudice, not of life and death.  As I wroteover a decade ago, opposition to anti-Semitism has become the "anti-racism" of the political right.’  No one has died from a tweet or social media post.

The irony is that it was the SWP itself, when Seymour was a member, which was allied with Gilad Atzmon. In June 2005 Jews Against Zionism picketed a meeting of the SWP at Bookmarks where Atzmon was giving a talk on Otto Weininger. I wrote Blind eye to anti-semitism attacking the SWP’s support for Atzmon. Although Richard was not happy about their position he wasn’t exactly outspoken either and tellingly he chose to remain a member of the SWP. It is not for Richard Seymour to now lecture us on the evils of anti-Semitism.

I was surprised that Jacobin had published Seymour’s article but reassured that the current editor Bhaskar has responded to me that he completely disagreed with the thrust of the article.  The previous editor, Max Ajl told me that he would never have published such a Shoddy piece!’  I still find it puzzling why Jacobin thought it worthy of publication when there are so many right-wing sites would have welcomed what they would consider a repentant sinner!

Tony Greenstein
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