Britain’s Jews In Crisis Over National Loyalty, Identity
And Israel
29 December 2009
By Gilad Atzmon
Whistleblowers say top Zionist institutions in
unprecedented crisis
Britain’s leading Jewish institutions are facing
their worst crisis in living memory as their loyalty
to the United Kingdom and support for basic universal
principles of human rights and common decency come
under growing scrutiny.
In recent weeks Redress Information & Analysis has has
been approached by a number of existing and former
employees and volunteers of prominent Jewish bodies,
all pointing to an acute internal crisis within their
institutions.
Breaking ranks
The first to make contact with us were two
whistleblowers from the Board of Deputies of British
Jews. They explained to us the nature and scope of the
crisis gripping Britain’s top Jewish institutions and
offered to put us in contact with people in the Office
of the Chief Rabbi and the Jewish Chronicle
newspaper. We took up the offer.
Naturally, we were curious as to why our interlocutors
chose or were willing to talk to Redress Information &
Analysis rather than voice their concerns to a
national media outlet such as the Guardian,
the Independent or the BBC. All said that
they were worried that their names would be leaked
back to their institutions or published in the press
and that, as a result, they would be sacked or
ostracized by their Jewish relatives and friends. Some
feared the possibility of “moles” in the national
media, or people in these media who have “special
relations” with the Jewish institutions, doing the
leaking.
We have gone to extraordinary lengths to corroborate
the identity of our contacts and can confirm that they
are all genuine – that they are who they said they are
and that they work, or have worked, for the
institutions they said they worked for.
Our contacts agreed for us to publish their concerns
and to quote them but strictly on condition of
anonymity. Consequently, we have undertaken not to
publish their names, gender or the dates on which we
made contact with them, although, to emphasize once
again, their identity and the Jewish institutions for
which they currently work or have recently worked have
been verified beyond any doubt.
Our Jewish contacts expressed common concerns,
focusing on questions about their identity and loyalty
to Britain – the country of their birth – and on the
attitude of their institutions towards the State of
Israel, especially in the wake of the Israeli
onslaught on the Gaza Strip in 2008-09, in which
Israel killed 1,400 Palestinians, injured more than
5,000 and wreaked carnage and destruction on the 1.5
million inhabitants of the Strip.
Board of Deputies of British Jews – under
“unbearable pressure”
Our contacts at the Board of Deputies of British
Jews described the crisis ripping through Britain’s
Jewish institutions in stark terms. One said:
Our support for Israel, especially its attack on
Gaza in 2008-09, is creating ruptures in the wider
Jewish community in Britain and placing institutions
such as ours under unbearable pressure. The fact
that the Board of Deputies’ support for Israel is
couched in relatively anodyne terms and in a
superficially impartial context no longer works. The
wider Jewish community, and the general public at
large, are beginning to see through this.
For the first time in my memory, we are being
pressed by British Jews to answer questions that
have always been in the backs of our minds but which
we can no longer brush aside. Are we British or are
we Israelis? If we are British, then is it not
incumbent upon us to question, as the wider British
public is questioning, the policies and behaviour of
the State of Israel without harbouring any feelings
of disloyalty – because our loyalty is to the UK and
not to Israel?
Our second contact at the Board of Deputies of
British Jews added:
Israel purports to speak on behalf of us as Jews.
Many in our community are telling us that we
therefore have a special responsibility – more so
than Britons of other faiths or those of no faith –
to condemn Israel’s violations of human rights and
common decency when dealing with the Palestinians.
Many others are saying that we should say explicitly
and unequivocally – both as individuals and through
our community institutions – that our loyalty is to
Britain first, second, third and fourth ad
infinitum, that we have no special loyalty or
allegiance to Israel and that, for us, Israel is
just another country, like France, Italy or Spain.
They say that we should distance ourselves from
Israel and be the first to condemn its policies and
actions towards the Palestinian people. A small but
growing minority – a minority that is growing
exponentially, I hasten to add – tell us that we
should go further and take the lead in calling for
the boycott of Israel until it implements all United
Nations resolutions, including Security Council
Resolution 242 of 1967, and until it begins to
behave as a civilized and responsible member of the
international community.
But I would say that the question of our allegiance
is the one that is the most serious and damaging in
the long term. It does not help in this regard when
some of our Jewish ministers, such as the foreign
secretary, David Miliband, and the Foreign Office
minister, Ivan Lewis, are either openly pro-Israel
or are seen to be supporters of Israel. This casts
doubt on the loyalty of all of us to Britain, our
country.
Office of the Chief Rabbi – “living in a time
warp”
According to our contact at the Office of the Chief
Rabbi, the problems facing Jewish institutions in
Britain have been compounded by the failure of these
institutions to adapt in the light of international
developments and a sea-change in British public
opinion. The contact said that this failure applied to
the Office of the Chief Rabbi as much as to any other
Jewish organization in the UK. In the contact’s own
words:
The Office of the Chief Rabbi, the Board of
Deputies, the Jewish Chronicle and many
other Jewish organizations up and down the country –
at universities, for instance – are living in a time
warp, as if today were 1948 or the eve of the 1967
war.
The world has changed, and the information the
community has available to it shows that we Jews are
not in peril – on the contrary, Jews in the UK and
throughout Europe are prospering like never before.
Anti-Semitism – by which I mean racist, anti-Jewish
feeling – has all but vanished. In fact, it is the
Muslims, not the Jews, who are bearing the brunt of
racism in Europe. Islamophobia, spurred on by
neo-Nazi parties and neo-conservatives, is what we
Jews, as members of a wider multi-cultural
community, should be fighting against.
In fact, I would say that thanks to an abundance of
reliable information now available on the internet,
even those who live in a time warp are living a
fiction in a time warp built on myths. Israel was
never in danger from its impotent but bombastic
neighbours: we saw this in 1956, when it invaded
Egypt together with Britain and France, and we saw
it again in 1967, which we now know was being
planned for by Israeli leaders ever since the 1956
fiasco.
Yet, our community leaders, including – I am sorry
to say – the Office of the Chief Rabbi, would never
publicly acknowledge this. I have no idea what they
think or believe in private, in their own
conscience, between themselves and God, but I cannot
imagine any intelligent, well-educated and
open-minded person not recognizing matters as they
are. And if they are conscious of reality but act
differently, what does that make them? I think I’ll
leave you to answer that question.
It pains me to say this but our self-appointed
leaders, including the Chief Rabbi, have built our
community institutions on foundations that are more
appropriate to 1930s Germany than the Europe of the
21st century. You cannot have healthy institutions
based on a make-believe world of fear and distrust
of everyone and everything that is not Jewish. If
we Jews are to have Jewish institutions per
se, then these institutions should have as
their primary objectives community cohesion,
including full integration into our wider society,
British society. We cannot – and should not want to
– live in a ghetto. Our focus should be on our own
country, the UK, not on promoting, speaking on
behalf of, answering or apologizing for Israel.
As far as Israel is concerned, our approach should
be no different than that of any other British
organization, be it Amnesty International, a trade
union or a professional association. In other words,
we should condemn it when it is in the wrong and we
should praise it when it does the right thing. In
other words, our approach should be based entirely
on merit. Unfortunately, I see no signs of this
happening any time soon.
The Jewish Chronicle – “engaging in
subterfuge”
Our whistleblower at the Jewish Chronicle
gave a damning assessment of the internal crisis
engulfing the UK’s Jewish institutions, as reflected
in the Chronicle, Britain’s top Zionist
newspaper and Israeli mouthpiece.
According to the whistleblower, the newspaper is “in
denial” and “sticking its head in the sand” in
response to the changes in UK public opinion,
especially following Israel’s onslaught on Gaza.
Echoing some of the views expressed by our source at
the Office of the Chief Rabbi, our contact at the
Jewish Chronicle said that, instead of
acknowledging the changing reality around it and
adapting accordingly, the paper’s management has “gone
in the opposite direction and is “engaging in
subterfuge”. However, our contact says, this “isn’t
washing and it won’t wash”.
According to our whistleblower, the Jewish
Chronicle is making a conscious effort to brand
itself as a moderate newspaper that is focused on the
affairs of Britain’s 280,000 Jews and in tune with
mainstream British public opinion. However, our
whistleblower says, in reality it is “embracing the
neo-conservative agenda on the Palestinian-Israeli
conflict, lock, stock and barrel”, and its primary
concern is “to be on-message with Israeli foreign
policy, whatever Israeli government is in power –
Likud, Kadima, Labour or some abominable
ultra-far-right party”.
Our whistleblower was especially scathing about the
Jewish Chronicle’s editor, Stephen Pollard,
describing him as “uncharismatic, myopic and an
inarticulate and clumsy spokesman” who has “bought a
one-way ticket to a parallel universe”. The
whistleblower said that Mr Pollard “is so detached
from reality and so out of touch with British public
opinion that the notion that anyone with just an
average intelligence might see right through what he’s
doing could not even cross his mind”.
According to our whistleblower, the idea of breaking
with tradition and recruiting Martin Bright in
September 2009 as the Jewish Chronicle’s
first-ever non-Jewish chief political editor was Mr
Pollard’s “master-plan for creating an image of the
Jewish Chronicle as a mainstream newspaper
and to boost its circulation, which currently stands
at just over 30,400 for the UK and the Republic of
Ireland – slightly more than your average local
newspaper rag”.
Shortly after his appointment Mr Bright told the
Independent: "The idea is to broaden the scope of
their [the Jewish Chronicle’s] political
coverage. It would be fair to say that they want to
move the political coverage away from the more
parochial approach they have had in the past and
rather than saying 'What will interest our Jewish
readers?' they are saying that what interests readers
will be what interests anyone in politics."
But, our whistleblower says, Mr Pollard “picked the
wrong goy” [gentile] because “not only is
Martin Bright a media has-been, but he’s also a card
carrying neo-conservative with strident views against
Muslims and a strong affinity to Israel and,
therefore, would carry little credibility with the
wider newspaper-reading public”.
Martin Bright’s career has followed a trajectory that
has taken him from the national to the fringe media.
After a steady rise between 1993 and 2005, which saw
him move from a minor BBC magazine to the Guardian
(national, circulation: 430,000), the Observer
(national, circulation: 500,000) and the New
Statesman (national, circulation: 30,000), where
he was appointed political editor, in 2009 Mr Bright
left the magazine under a cloud, amid speculation that
his strong support for Israel, especially after the
slaughter in Gaza, was too much for it to stomach. His
career prospects then took a dive when, in September
2009, he joined the Jewish Chronicle (fringe,
circulation: 30,400) as chief political editor.
A self-proclaimed leftist, Mr Bright subscribes to a
broadly neo-conservative agenda on Islam and the "war
on terror", and believes that opposition to Israeli
policies and actions “on the left was only explicable
as anti-Semitism”. He is the author of a pamphlet for
the right-wing think-tank Policy Exchange in which he
attacked UK government dialogue with Muslims, a
pamphlet that was warmly praised by the leading US
neo-conservative Richard Perle. His friends include
Observer columnist Nick Cohen who infamously
declared after meeting Iraq war architect Paul
Wolfowitz for drinks at the Mayfair nightclub
Annabel's: "I was in the presence of a politician
committed to extending human freedom." Since his
appointment at the Jewish Chronicle, Mr
Bright has begun writing for the website of the
right-wing Spectator.
Our contact at the Jewish Chronicle said:
As a strategy for extending the scope of the
Jewish Chronicle’s appeal, the choice of Martin
Bright as our chief political editor just underlines
how out of touch with the real world Stephen Pollard
is. It isn’t just a question of Martin’s
neo-conservative and Israel baggage – and the
circumstances under which he left the News
Statesman – but what about the rest of the
Jewish Chronicle’s coverage?
Take a look at some of our commentators and
columnists. The average British reader would take
one glance and say “What a rogues gallery!” You have
Tzipi Livni, that broken record Melanie Phillips
and, worse of all, Geoffrey Aldeman. For God’ sake,
Geoffrey Alderman is one of our regular columnist,
believe it or not! For a newspaper that’s struggling
to keep its readers, the choice of Geoffrey Alderman
is a damn strange one, but that’s Stephen Pollard
for you.
Alderman believes that Jewish settlements in the
occupied Palestinian territories are legal, even
though they are universally acknowledged as illegal
under international law.
Moreover, in an article published in the Jewish
Chronicle, he said that Islam was founded "in
part, on an explicit anti-Jewish discourse".
Most controversially, in early 2009 Alderman argued
that according to Jewish religious law, it was
"entirely legitimate to kill" every Palestinian in
Gaza who voted for Hamas.
For our whistleblower at the Jewish Chronicle,
the fact that Mr Alderman was still a regular
columnist for the newspaper after making these
comments was not just “bad, bad public relations”, but
was “scandalous and outrageous, morally and
politically”. The whistleblower said:
Geoffrey Alderman spits out stuff that not even
the British National Party, Combat-18 and the Ku
Klux Klan would dare say these days.
Just imagine what would have happened if a British
Muslim columnist said that it was fine to kill
Israelis who voted for a government that slaughters
Palestinian civilians. The whole country, from
Westminster to the media, from the tabloids to the
so-called “quality papers” to the BBC and ITN, would
be up in arms with condemnations day and night, day
after day for weeks on end. Politicians and others
would be calling for prosecutions, Stephen Pollard
would be rushing from one TV studio to another
bellowing “anti-Semitism”.
But here we go, Alderman in effect condoning the
murder of innocent civilians and he still writes for
the Jewish Chronicle. What a way to appeal
to the broader public! What morality!
All of our whistleblowers, some of whom are not
quoted here but who nevertheless gave us an invaluable
insight into the Jewish institutions to which they are
affiliated, said that their experience in their
institutions had been life-changing, in that it had
altered their views of Britain’s Jewish “leaders”,
Israel and the Palestinian cause in a most profound
way.