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Why won't my UCL colleagues accept the IHRA definition of Jew-hate?

I was deeply disappointed when the Academic Board elected to explore an alternative definition of antisemitism

April 22, 2021 10:19
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2 min read

Antisemitism has a near-constant presence in the media at present. Given this, one might assume there is widespread understanding and awareness of what antisemitism is. But plenty of polling evidence shows that vast swathes of the public do not even know what the term means. 

Antisemitism is not something that is fixed and immutable. On the contrary, a large part of its malice derives from its ability and tendency to assume different shapes and forms in accordance with contemporary trends and developments. From the blood libel of the Middle Ages to the myth of “Jewish money-power” in the last century, the longest hatred shape-shifts relentlessly – with the undercurrent of antisemitic tropes, stereotypes and prejudices remaining a constant menace just below the surface. 

But the essence remains constant. Antisemitism is, at its core, about irrational hatred of Jewish people. In 2016, our research at the University College London Centre for Holocaust Education indicated that most young people are oblivious to this fundamental truth of antisemitism. 

Just 37 per cent of 11 to 18-year-olds we surveyed could correctly identify what the term antisemitism meant. Moreover, we also unearthed a troubling propensity among young people to try and “plug” gaps in their knowledge of the Holocaust by rehearsing common myths and misconceptions about Jewish people in the 1930s and 1940s. 

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