Become a Member
Opinion

The door opened by October 7 directly led to Glastonbury platforming hate

The taboo around antisemitism that has existed since 1945, appears to be breaking down

July 1, 2025 11:28
GettyImages-2221936150.jpg
To the backdrop of a Palestinian flag, Bobby Vylan of British duo Bob Vylan performs on the West Holts Stage on the fourth day of the Glastonbury festival at Worthy Farm in the village of Pilton in Somerset, south-west England, on June 28, 2025. (Photo by Oli SCARFF / AFP) (Photo by OLI SCARFF/AFP via Getty Images)
3 min read

There’s a Latin phrase I’ve been using a lot over the past twenty months or so. And in the past few days, since the BBC decided that a dose of Jew hate from Glastonbury made for compelling viewing, it’s barely been off my lips: status quo ante (a return to the previous state of affairs).

For decades after 1945, open expressions of antisemitism were rare. There was debate – perhaps questioning is a better way of putting it – as to whether there was a widespread recognition that after the murder of six million Jews, it was impolite to be antisemitic in public, or whether the murder of six million Jews had actually destroyed the virus of Jew hate, and the world’s oldest hatred was effectively over.

But as Lord Sacks put it, antisemitism is a constantly mutating virus. Even in the post-war decades it was obvious it had not been eradicated and had merely changed its appearance. When open Jew hate was frowned upon in polite society it took another form: Holocaust denial. Denying Jews the Holocaust was, for antisemites, an even more enjoyable form of hatred. And it could be couched as supposedly objective research, albeit ‘research’ that only Jew haters would countenance.

So antisemitism never disappeared. Why would it have? Murdering six million Jews was the apotheosis of antisemitism but it was not the end of it. The only issue in reality was when the self-denying ordinance against open Jew hate would end.