By

Winston Pickett

Opinion

Law exists to stop the bigots

January 31, 2011 13:04
2 min read

Reports of antisemitism in the UK are reminiscent of a certain vertigo that used to throw Bill Clinton's first presidential campaign into a state of heightened anticipation. Betsy Wright, Clinton's acerbic adviser and veteran lobbyist, dubbed it waiting for the next "bimbo eruption".

What derails the Jewish enterprise in this country may not be as titillating. It is, however, equally vexing. Witness last month's front-page story about a dyspeptic Palestinian speaker at an esteemed British university mouthing antisemitic obscenities, spurring communal leaders to devise an effective response - and leaving the rest of us to wonder how to curb such eruptions in the future.

Small wonder our anxiety level has been ratcheted up several notches. In recent weeks, various think-tank reports show that such phenomena as Abdul Bari-Atwan's talk at LSE of a malevolent "Jewish lobby" and his veiled accusations that Jewish students were collectively responsible for "bombing Gaza" are not only part of an ongoing effluvium of anti-Jewish, anti-Israel invective in academia, but an integral component of a UK campaign most notably on UK campuses.

Last month's report by the Jerusalem-based Reut Institute, revealing Britain to be a "hub" of global deligitimisation efforts that unite Middle East resistance networks with allies on the liberal-left in Europe, was followed by another, by the Jerusalem Centre for Public Affairs, charging the British academy with becoming a key "mainstreaming agent" in the international effort to deny Israel's right to exist as a Jewish state. This involves routine offers of platforms to Islamist ideologues who demonise and vilify Israel under the banner of academic freedom.

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