UK community feels under 'constant attack', says Labour peer


By Miriam Shaviv
January 15, 2010
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Further to our (rather lively) discussion about quality of Jewish life in Britain, comes this report in the Indy yesterday:

The Jewish community in the UK feels under "constant attack", a Labour peer warned today.

Lord Mitchell praised the multi-cultural nature of London but pointed to rising incidents of anti-Semitism. Stickers such as "death to Jews" had been displayed at some of the UK's leading university campuses and had been "slow to be removed", he said.

He told peers in a debate on tolerance in British society that universities had a "duty of care to all students and in many cases they are slow to uphold this duty", citing free speech as the reason for not interfering.

Lord Mitchell said: "It may well come as a shock that the Jewish community in this country feels under constant attack. "I don't want to overstate the case but many Jewish friends have said to me that they felt more frightened, more threatened, than at any time in their lives.

"Incidents of anti-Semitic attacks are up, some are physical, some are verbal. The trend is rising."

Attacks go up when there are conflicts in the Middle East because Jews are held by some to be supporters of the "more extreme elements in Israel", he said.

All synagogues have constant security patrols and most Jewish social events have trained security personnel "prominently watching and checking", he said...

Lord Davies of Oldham, for the Government, said: "There is a minority fascist element in our society that present threats to all minority groups."

That's where the government has it wrong. I don't think this community would feel under so much pressure were it truly just an issue of one minority in society, unsupported by anyone else. What has some elements in the community feeling scared is the feeling that their concerns, safety, interests etc are not taken seriously - by the majority. This is about an overall atmosphere which Jews perceive as negative, not about a problem with one fringe group.

COMMENTS

moshetzarfati2

15 January, 2010 - 16:03

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You would agree, however, that by and large if you are an Asian or a black person living in the UK today, you are more likely to be racially abused or be arrested by the police than if you are Jewish. The Muslim and Hindu communities also complain that their security concerns are not taken seriously, too -- and their mosques, temples and cemeteries are as likely to be vandalised than synagogues, communal schools and our cemeteries (and in some cases more so).


Jonathan Hoffman

15 January, 2010 - 16:19

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What has some elements in the community feeling scared is the feeling that their concerns, safety, interests etc are not taken seriously - by the majority.

Two reasons why this is spot-on:

1. Of the 30 or so recommendations in the 2006 Parliamentary Report on Antisemitism, only at most 4 have been implemented

2. Universities have proved that they are unable/unwilling to tackle antisemitic extremism. Yet still the government does nothing. Instead they have set up a 'working group' chaired by Malcolm Grant who recently (THES article) wrote that he did not understand why Abdulmutalib was radicalised, since he came from a rich family and had had a good education - thus proving that he (Grant) does not have a clue...

http://www.guardian.co.uk/education/2010/jan/06/university-heads-tackle-...

http://www.timeshighereducation.co.uk/story.asp?sectioncode=26&storycode...


moshetzarfati2

15 January, 2010 - 16:24

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This reminds me of the Jewish Chronicle headline that never was: "Communal leaders despair as antisemitism declines"

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