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The mob are trying to cancel Jimmy Carr, but I’d like to thank him

Carr was called a ‘Nazi sympathiser’ for attending an event marking Israel’s 77th anniversary

May 19, 2025 13:22
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Jimmy Carr performs onstage during the 17th Annual Stand Up For Heroes Benefit in New York City. (Photo by Mike Coppola/Getty Images for Bob Woodruff Foundation)
3 min read

Pro-Palestinian protest – or, more accurately, anti-Israel hatred – has reached new depths of cruelty with the victimisation of an innocent high-profile target: the comedian Jimmy Carr.

Carr’s offence? Attending, along with several hundred other guests, an event marking Israel’s 77th anniversary, which was held at the British Museum last week. (The British Museum has not got off lightly either, with howls of faux shock and disgust hurled against it and calls for withdrawals of memberships).

The first hint of troublemaking came when some bizarre sounding group – Energy Embargo for Palestine – called on social media for a protest against a “secret Israeli event” at the museum after the location got leaked. I was one of the guests invited to this prestigious annual independence day celebration. There was nothing “secret” about it, other than the sad fact that its whereabouts, like most Jewish communal events these days, had to be kept discreet for safety reasons.

On the night, the police - required as usual in large numbers because of the risk of violence from protesters - were there, keeping noisy demonstrators confined to a side street, where a keffiyah-clad rabble chanted along to the tedious refrain of “Free free Palestine!” Two streets away - also behind police lines - was a reassuring sea of blue and white flags of supporters, dancing and clapping to Jewish and Israeli songs in a festival-like atmosphere. Neither could be heard inside the museum, as guests - political figures, diplomats, communal representatives, journalists, broadcasters, Jews and non-Jews - mingled and met.