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Opinion

When Jews in London hide their faith, we let the terrorists win

Now more than ever, Jews shouldn't shy away

October 18, 2023 15:50
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3 min read

Last week, was a dark one in the long history of Jews. As news slowly broke on Saturday morning, I found out from texts from friends and family in Israel. My first thought was that it was just another flare-up in an infinite cycle of flare-ups. But as it became clear that the horror in Israel was on a level not seen by Jews since the Holocaust, it might sound strange but I immediately thought of how this would hurt not just Jews in Israel, but across the diaspora.

It’s a cycle that’s as grimly predictable as the violence in Israel. Whenever there’s a war between Hamas and the IDF, without fail, tensions boil over to Jews all over the world. And as the full scale of the violence began to unfold, everything repeated as it always does. In Sydney, pro-Palestinian protestors were filmed chanting ‘gas the Jews’, in London a woman was filmed mocking the deaths of innocent Jews as police arrested protestors outside the Israeli embassy in Kensington.

And then, after a week of unimaginable horror, came the reactions of British Jews. I wouldn’t judge any Jew for feeling unsafe for taking precautions, removing any Magen Davids on things they wear. I saw a tweet from Dov Forman, Holocaust education activist and great-grandson of Holocaust survivor Lily Ebert. He said he was considering not wearing his kippah, hesitating before donning something that would mark him as Jewish.