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Emanuele Ottolenghi

By

Emanuele Ottolenghi,

Emanuele Ottolenghi

Opinion

A harmonious choir of liberal conformism

November 26, 2010 10:44
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As the saying goes, you should practice what you preach - not what emerged from the recent panel discussion between Peter Beinart, former editor of the US liberal weekly the New Republic and recent heir to the late Tony Judt's critique of Zionism, Guardian columnist Jonathan Freedland, and Mick Davis, chairman of the Jewish Leadership Council.

Davis lamented the existence of a supposed conformism among Jewish community leaders when it comes to voicing criticism of Israel in the open and called for more frank introspection - but the panel failed to make room for dissenting views, offering instead a harmonious choir of opinionated liberal conformism.

On one thing Davis is right - Anglo-Jewry's leadership is largely tilted to the left. That Beinart, an outspoken critic of Israel, would be invited to speak at all shows the limits of Anglo-Jewish support for Israel. Clearly, there are self-imposed boundaries on what views about Israel are voiced within the Jewish establishment. These boundaries constrain support, rather than criticism of Israel, given that Jewish leaders are not prepared to travel further than the Israeli left-of-centre worldview of the Middle East - and even that they find increasingly arduous to do. It is their right to take such a view but it is hardly uncritical support.

That Davis's comments failed to elicit much of anything beyond Britain's borders (praises from the usual anti-Zionist corners notwithstanding) is mainly a consequence of the fact that in the UK, his comments are hardly revolutionary. They are another example of 'everything has been said but not everybody said it.'

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