Become a Member
Opinion

Our flags should not be used to threaten others

We believe in robust, difficult and uncomfortable conversations, write Rabbi Laura Janner Klausner and Imam Qari Asim

May 27, 2021 14:42
10072014-ecostream-demo-jpg-1
2 min read

Flag wars harm both Jews and Muslims. “That flag is seen as a call to arms and seen as a message of support of antisemitism, for being anti-Jewish and it was never meant to be like that.” What is it about the Palestinian flag which caused the headteacher of Allerton Grange School in Leeds to make, and then apologise for, this statement? Why is the use of flags and symbols seen as making others “feel threatened and unsafe”?

Research shows that most British Jews, including the Board of Deputies, favour a two-state solution, an independent sovereign Israel alongside an independent sovereign Palestine. So most British Jews favour a Palestinian state, which means acknowledging Palestinians’ right to embrace their flag as a concrete symbol of nationhood, just as most Israelis embrace the Israeli flag.

What then has gone wrong? Since the outbreak of violence in Gaza and Israel three weeks ago, there’s been a reported increase in the UK of Islamophobic incidents of 430 per cent and an increase in antisemitic incidents of 500 per cent. What is happening in Gaza, is, unfortunately, not staying in Gaza, and what’s happening in Jerusalem is not staying in Jerusalem.

A terrible direct result is that British Muslims and Jews are receiving racist backlash for the actions of overseas bodies. We are in a proxy war here for what’s happening over there. Already, delicate relations between our communities are being frayed.