Written
by Les Levidow
Amidst internal
conflict over the International Holocaust Remembrance Alliance (IHRA) Working Definition
of Antisemitism, some Green Party members have said that we should avoid the
Labour Party's mistake on antisemitism. Indeed,
yet ‘the mistake’ has contrary meanings. On the pro-IHRA side, some apparently accept
the dominant storyline that the Labour Party tolerated widespread antisemitic behaviour.
The anti-IHRA side instead means that
the Labour Party pursued many false allegations of antisemitism.
So, which was
the real mistake around ‘the antisemitism crisis’? And what
was its underlying politics?
As this article
argues: The socialist anti-imperialist
Corbyn leadership posed a threat to the British ruling elite, especially its
partnership with the Israeli regime. Hence the leadership’s diverse enemies jointly reinforced false
allegations of antisemitism from the pro-Israel lobby. These allegations conveniently
displaced the racism problem away from the settler-colonial Israeli regime onto
its anti-racist critics. For this racist
pro-Israel agenda, the IHRA mis-definition of antisemitism has been a key
weapon in the Labour Party and plays a similar role in the Green Party, as promoted
by the leadership.
For the full
version of this argument, see my May 2021 journal article, ‘Bad
Consciences: projecting Israel’s settler-colonial racist aggression onto
Labour Party antisemitism’.
Denying and projecting racism
Like other settler-colonial regimes, the Zionist one has subordinated, dispossessed and expelled the indigenous people. These aims formed the basis of the Israeli state in 1948. It has denied its own racist aggression and projected this onto the Palestinians, increasingly since Israel’s 1967 expansion to the West Bank and Gaza. In recent decades Israel has further promoted itself as a front-line defence against ‘Islamist terrorism’, whereby Israel’s regional counter-insurgency role protects the West from mortal threats. This narrative should be understood as paranoic, i.e. denying unsavoury parts of one’s self or nation, splitting off these parts and projecting them onto one’s victims.
This paranoic narrative has complemented the securitisation agenda of Western states, supporting allies abroad as ‘counter-terror’ forces against threats to the West. This paranoiac displacement has a long history in UK state-sponsored domestic practices over many years, such as ‘inter-faith’ events suppressing pro-Palestine dissent and the Prevent programme targeting it as ‘extremism’. So-called preventive measures have pursued ‘extremism’ through pervasive surveillance identifying pro-Palestine views. Thus Britain’s domestic practices have internalised Israel’s racist paranoiac projections.
Moreover, state
practices have essentialised Jews as a pro-Israel ‘Jewish community’ being
victimised by pro-Palestine antisemitism and so needing special protection. Within the Western elite, this philosemitic narrative has
constructed Jews as heroic colonists in the Middle East and pro-Israel model
citizens at home. Jews’
essentialization has gained a broad appeal for various reasons. Many Western Jews identify with Israel, while also
needing to feel morally special. Their
sensibility is offended by reminders of Israel’s institutionally racist
practices, provoking a bad conscience;
the offence is projected onto the putative antisemitism of Israel’s
critics.
Elite philosemitism for a UK-Israel
partnership
Those practices reinforce a homogeneous social identity, as a basis to
demand universal deference to a single pro-Israel
‘Jewish community’, especially as a test of antisemitism. Instrumentalising that narrative, UK
politicians justify their pro-Israel commitment along two lines:
as crucial for ‘social cohesion’, i.e. reassuring Jews about British support
for Israel, as well as ‘national security’, i.e. needing Israel as a front-line
defence against the Islamist threat. This elite philosemitism has helped to
shield the
UK’s pro-Israel commitment from criticism.
Along similar lines, over several
decades the Labour Party leadership has made great efforts to contain and
stigmatise pro-Palestine dissent. The
New Labour leadership promoted a more aggressively pro-Israel policy within the
‘war on terror’ securitisation agenda since 2001, complemented by the Prevent
programme since 2006. Together these
efforts stigmatised Israel’s opponents as security threats, e.g. as
‘extremists’ or ‘radical Islamists’.
Sponsored by dominant Western
states, the IHRA was established in 1998. It has served to sanitise Nazi
Germany of its racist colonial legacies and its Western capitalist complicity. This framing helped to legitimise Western
states as anti-racist forces and to instrumentalise Holocaust memorial
education for this political purpose.
As the IHRA’s next step, its website
posted the Working Definition of Antisemitism (with all the examples) from a US
pro-Israel lobby group, the American Jewish Committee. This document provided an extra weapon for
false allegations of antisemitism by conflating this with anti-Zionism. As the wider context, Palestine solidarity
activists had been highlighting how Israel’s institutionally racist character
was driving its systematic violations of international law. They could be falsely accused of antisemitism
by deploying the so-called IHRA Definition.
Together those practices provided a
ready-made framework to contain the Corbyn-led Labour Party during
2016-19. When the membership greatly
rose to support a pro-Palestine anti-imperialist leadership, this rise
jeopardised the Labour Party’s century-long role within the elite pro-Zionist consensus. Members’ pro-Palestine voices aggravated and
offended the bad consciences of Jewish Zionist members, who resented the
offenders.
Given the Corbyn leadership’s diverse enemies, they jointly mobilised an elite pro-Israel strategy to stigmatise and silence pro-Palestine voices: In the dominant narrative, the Labour Party was tolerating ‘endemic antisemitism’, creating an ‘unsafe space for Jews’. According to the pro-Israel lobby, moreover, the leadership posed ‘an existential threat to Jewish existence’. The racist aggression of Zionist settler-colonialism was denied, split off and projected onto pro-Palestine critics.
Antisemitism was more broadly
equated with ‘hurt to the Jewish community’ or simply ‘offence to Jews’. Pro-Israel Jewish
organisations demanded and gained a monopoly voice to speak for ‘the Jewish community’. The pro-Israel lobby demanded that the Labour
Party create a ‘safe space for Jews’, i.e. for a racist Zionist identity beyond
debate.
The Labour
Party’s disciplinary procedure increasingly targeted pro-Corbyn anti-racist members
(including Jewish ones) who were falsely accused of antisemitism. The procedure
in turn often accused them of ‘behaviour bringing the Labour Party into
disrepute’; this euphemistically evaded the political issue. At the same time, the procedure delayed any action
against the real antisemitism of other members; hence the pro-Israel lobby
could more easily claim that the Party was tolerating antisemitic behaviour.
The British elite strategy conflates
anti-Zionism
with antisemitism as perceived by pro-Israel Jews, thus inverting racism and anti-racism. The inversion has
been put sarcastically by Hajo Meyer, a Holocaust survivor: ‘An antisemite used to be a person who
disliked Jews. Now it is a person whom Jews dislike’, especially Israel’s
critics.
IHRA
mis-definition serves a racist pro-Israel agenda
Given that political context, let us
return to the initial question: What mistake of the Labour Party should be
avoided? At recent Green Party of England
and Wales conferences the
leadership has supported a motion that would incorporate the IHRA Definition
into the disciplinary procedure.
According to the motion, it’s irrelevant how the Definition has been
used by other organizations. Such a
claim is politically naive, disingenuous or both.
The IHRA
mis-definition has already been the basis for external organisations to make
false allegations against some pro-Palestine Green Party members, who then had to
undergo the disciplinary procedure. This has ominous
analogies with the Labour Party’s procedures. Adopting the IHRA Definition has obvious consequences, namely: to
encourage more false allegations of antisemitism, to reinforce them internally
and to deter criticisms of Israel’s racist character.
More generally, the IHRA Definition
has been widely cited worldwide for false allegations against pro-Palestine events, speakers
and comments. In response to such
allegations, major institutions have suppressed or severely restricted pro-Palestine
events. Such incidents have been well
documented, e.g. in a journal
paper on the UK, and in the Jewish-led global report, The IHRA Definition at Work.
In all those ways the IHRA mis-definition
helps to protect Israel’s institutional racism from criticism, thus serving the
pro-Israel commitment of the British ruling elite. By promoting the mis-definition, the Green
Party leadership has shamefully
colluded
with this
racist pro-Israel agenda since 2017. Let’s
reject it and so avoid the mistake of the Labour Party.
Author: Les Levidow is a member of Green Left within the Green Party of England and Wales (GPEW). Since the 1980s he has participated in several Jewish pro-Palestine groups, including many Jews who have faced false allegations of antisemitism by the pro-Israel lobby. His current focus is Jewish Network for Palestine (JNP), loosely connected with the US-based Jewish Voice for Peace (JVP).
Thanks are due to Les Levidow for so clearly exposing the paradoxes involved in accusing critics of Israel, including in many Jews, of being antisemitic.
ReplyDeleteThe Green Party now must avoid repeating the mistake of conflating anti Zionism with Antisemitism, a (deliberate) 'mistake' that was disgracefully deployed in the Labour Party in order to undermine the socialist and antiracist leadership of Corbyn