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The Jewish Chronicle

Let’s use the law to halt these Nazi slurs

Playing the ‘Nazi card’ over Israel goes deeper than mere insult

July 16, 2009 12:09

By

Winston Pickett

2 min read

In assessing the consequences of antisemitic discourse, are some characterisations worse than others? Are some epithets more offensive due to the depth of the insult, the affront to memory or the power to malign the Jewish collective? If so, how should they be treated?
These questions go to the heart of the European Institute for the Study of Contemporary Antisemitism’s report, Understanding and Addressing the ‘Nazi Card’: Intervening Against Antisemitic Discourse. In seeking to answer the questions, authors Paul Iganski and Abe Sweiry have fashioned an indispensable tool for cutting through the conceptual fog that hovers over what could be called “the discourse surrounding antisemitic discourse”.

When the 2006 Report of All-Party Inquiry into Antisemitism flagged the use of words that vilify, demonise and demean Jews and Israel as a form of “antisemitic discourse” it provided a useful service for analysts, policy makers and politicians who sensed that something dangerous and Judaeophobic was taking place when Israel was compared to Nazis and the Nazi state. When the CST launched its own report last year that sought to red flag and quantify such antisemitic eruptions on an annual basis, a sense of QED seemed to be around the corner.

Yet critics and free speech purists cried “censorship” and claimed it was a way to silence “legitimate criticism” of Israel. They alleged it was fair criticism and that harsh words were sometimes needed to curb Israel’s excesses.

Meanwhile historians saw something more sinister at work: playing the Nazi card gives Holocaust deniers a cognitive pass, making what Anthony Julius calls fellow-travellers out of its users.