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Jennifer Lipman

By

Jennifer Lipman,

Jennifer Lipman

Opinion

Be careful who our friends are

March 22, 2012 16:42
2 min read

I'm at a demonstration outside the Israeli embassy. People are waving Israeli flags around me, chanting in support of Israel's right to defend its citizens. A Californian rabbi is speaking about the Jewish state. As a proud Zionist, I should be in my comfort zone. But I've rarely felt more uncomfortable in my life.

Because side by side with the Stars of David are hundreds of angry, jeering members of the English Defence League, there to "oppose Islamic fascism". They are the sort of thugs I'd avoid if I met them on the underground late at night; absolutely not the sort I want to stand with at a rally for Israel.

The legacy of that day in October 2010 is to remind us that our enemy's enemy - I use "enemy" in a very broad sense - rarely has a place as our friend. Indeed, that's a very dangerous starting point for supporters of Israel.

Last week an apparently "controversial" pro-Israel New York lawyer was blocked from speaking at Leeds University - not because anti-Israel students objected, but because the JSoc decided that her previous association with Dutch politician Geert Wilders made her persona non grata. Having not heard Brooke Goldstein speak - although she did so elsewhere - I can't comment on whether her presence would indeed have jeopardised the welfare of Jewish students.

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