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Marcus Dysch

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Marcus Dysch,

Marcus Dysch

Analysis

Leeds JSoc row symbolises wider campus split

March 22, 2012 16:00
1 min read

The squabbling over Leeds JSoc's withdrawn invitation to American lawyer Brooke Goldstein is a further symptom of an as yet unreported broiges bubbling away under the surface of intra-community relations.

For some time now the traditional Jewish communal bodies of the Union of Jewish Students and Board of Deputies – the "establishment" if you will – have experienced some feather-ruffling from what they see as impudent, trouble-making upstarts, particularly on and around campuses.

Ms Goldstein's tour was organised by a trio of these independent groups: Stand With Us, the British-Israel Coalition and UK Lawyers for Israel.

The efforts of such organisations, and their leading activists – such as Sam Westrop, Gili Brenner and Hasan Afzal – have raised questions over who is best placed to lead British Jewish students' efforts to combat antisemitism and anti-Israel activity.

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