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The Jewish Chronicle

Media blind to nature of Chabad horror

The UK press failed to see that the attacks on Jews in Mumbai were racist.

December 4, 2008 11:31

By

Alex Brummer,

Alex Brummer

2 min read

The argument made in some quarters that a distinction can be drawn between anti-Zionism and antisemitism looks threadbare after the attack on the Chabad house in Mumbai. The Jewish centre may have provided a refuge to Israeli travellers passing through India’s commercial centre, but it was an outpost of traditional Judaism — not Israel.

As far as the terrorists are concerned, Jews and Zionists are one and the same. The inherent racism in what happened in Mumbai, where the targets were Westerners and Jews, was largely missed by the British media.

Instead of focusing on the death of men of the cloth killed in the Jewish centre, some of the papers chose to see Israel (and by implication Jews) as the cause of the attacks rather than the victims.
A leader in the FT argued: “Tackling disputes such as Kashmir, or that between Israel and the Palestinians, would help separate tractable grievances from extremist manipulation and provide the legitimacy to crush pan-Islamic jihadism.”

William Dalrymple, writing in The Observer, sought to make much the same point. “If Israel’s treatment of the Palestinians is the most emotive issue for Muslims in the Middle East, then India’s treatment of the people of Kashmir plays a similar role among South-East Asian Muslims,” he opined. If, as Dalrymple argued, Kashmir lies at the heart of the tragic events in India, why did the group make Jews a target?