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Gideon Falter

ByGideon Falter, Gideon Falter

Opinion

Join the grassroots revolution

September 18, 2014 12:01
2 min read

Ours is the world's fourth-largest diaspora Jewish community. Our leaders have been instrumental in the great Jewish achievements of the last century, from eliciting the Balfour Declaration to winning the release of Soviet Jewry. But, over the years, something changed. Our communal voice lost its potency while new enemies arose, becoming stronger and louder. Our Britishness begs us not to make a fuss and our communal institutions urge us to be restrained. Fast-forward to the conflict in Gaza, when rank antisemitism became commonplace on the streets and online, breaking CST records.

That's when the Campaign Against Antisemitism was founded, because it was needed. We are not veteran campaigners but an assortment of next-generation British Jews who decided to act, discovering and joining each other along the way. We highlighted individual cases of antisemitism and encouraged the community to report them to the police and CST, resulting in arrests. When the Tricycle Theatre pushed away the UK Jewish Film Festival, we brought 350 protesters to their gates.

When antisemitic hate crime continued to rage but the prosecutions did not materialise, thousands joined our rally outside the Royal Courts of Justice calling for zero tolerance enforcement of the law.

Our rally was enthusiastically backed by the full gamut of Jewish community institutions and by the community itself. Orthodox and secular, left and right, voted with their feet and came out in force. The speakers reflected the variety of the crowd. The next day, David Cameron told Parliament that there must be no tolerance of antisemitism. A week later, I met two senior government ministers who had noticed our rally, and our discussions are ongoing. That is what a united front, on its feet and in fine voice, can do.