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Student Views

Opinion

Oxford’s Labour Club is just the tip of the iceberg

April 19, 2016 13:46
richard black 2 0
2 min read

Ever since the widely reported resignation of Alex Chalmers from Oxford University’s Labour Club, the media has shone a spotlight on antisemitism within the Labour Party at large. The litany of abuses are shocking but, regrettably, becoming less surprising under a Labour leader who cannot see Jew hatred before his very eyes.

In my experience, the overwhelming majority of Oxford teachers and students are intelligent, tolerant and thoroughly decent. Oxford Jewish life is flourishing – with a thriving JSoc and Chabad society, excellent inter-faith relations and a buzzing social scene of both Jews and non-Jews. Most Oxford students resolutely abhor antisemitism, racism and other forms of prejudice. It’s in their DNA.

Before coming to Oxford, I desperately wanted to affirm my Jewishness in this positive vein. I didn’t want my Judaism to be defined by antisemites. Unfortunately, for me and many other Jewish students, that has not always been possible. Four years there have shown me that antisemitism feeds off prejudices that build up incrementally over a long period. Like a plague, it is carried by sometimes unconscious hosts, until it spreads to the point at which it seems unstoppable. Four years have shown me that antisemitic prejudice is far from uncommon at one of the world’s greatest universities. Nor is it consigned to the Labour Club or the radical Left.

The first time I came across it was at a formal dinner. A few chairs away, I overheard a conceited undergraduate talk about what he termed ‘the Jewish problem.’ He explained that Jews exploit the memory of the Holocaust while committing their very own Holocaust against Palestinians (hastening to add, naturally, that Jews control American finance and media).

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