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Sometimes reality is our best ally

September 22, 2011 11:31
Ambassador Daniel Taub

By

Jenni Frazer,

Jenni Frazer

2 min read

Israel's new ambassador to the UK, London-born Daniel Taub, pledged this week to do whatever he could to engage people across the political spectrum with the Jewish state - even those who were ostensibly anti-Israel. "Even a short visit to Israel can have a dramatic effect," the ambassador said. "Reality is sometimes our greatest ally."

The ambassador, who made aliyah in 1989 and is only the second British-born Israeli diplomat to serve as envoy in the country of his birth (the first was Yehuda Avner), warned against giving anti-Israel campaigns too much credence.

In a wide-ranging interview with the JC this week, Mr Taub said: "I think that the impression created by these campaigns is disproportionate to the size and the core of people that are involved. I don't think it's helpful to define people who are anti-Israel, as antisemites. That places the bar too low. I don't want to create a situation where the only thing a person has to do is to prove that they are not an antisemite, and then [it's as though] everything else they do is okay. If somebody has double standards for Israel, we should hold them to account because of that, and not because of something else."

Mr Taub, who was a leading light in Oxford Jewish Society during his student years, said he was "very much committed" to travelling to campuses and "difficult" venues during his tenure as ambassador, but acknowledged that he had "a sense of disappointment" about the level of rhetoric in some places. "I don't feel that campuses always live up to the principles of academic open debate," he said.

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