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Opinion

For British Jews, it is the worst of times but also the best of times

Amid surging antisemitism, Jonathan Freedland finds reasons to be cheerful

May 17, 2019 14:32
Jewish protestors at the Enough Is Enough demonstration against Labour antisemitism March 2018
3 min read

It was, I said, the best of times, it was the worst of times. The quotation from Charles Dickens is worn through over-use, but on this occasion it felt too apt to resist. It’s the opening sentence of A Tale of Two Cities, of course, Dickens’ novel of the French revolution set in Paris and London.

If I found it irresistible that’s because I was addressing a group of American Jews on a European tour that had taken them first to the French capital and then to the British one.

They were travelling with the Anti-Defamation League and, naturally, their interest was in rising levels of antisemitism.

I’ve spoken to similar US groups before, and in the past the dynamic was one of concerned pity from the Americans towards their British or European cousins, the latter still battling demons of prejudice that the lucky Jews of the Goldene Medina had long left behind. It wasn’t like that this time.