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We don’t need another definition of Jew hate

Those behind the ‘Jerusalem Declaration’ risk setting back the fight against antisemitism, writes Dave Rich

April 1, 2021 11:04
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3 min read

Last week, 200 academics published the Jerusalem Declaration on Antisemitism, which they recommended to replace the International Holocaust Remembrance Alliance (IHRA) working definition. You might wonder why: in the five years since the IHRA drew up their working definition, it has been used as an informal tool for investigating antisemitic incidents by governments, police, prosecutors, local authorities, football clubs, universities and regulators. It has been endorsed by the European Parliament and recommended by the United Nations Secretary General, and in the UK is accepted as the standard guide to defining and identifying antisemitism.

For these academics, though, the IHRA definition is a problem because of what it says about anti-Israel language. For example, the IHRA definition says that when people deny Israel’s right to exist, compare Israel to Nazi Germany or discriminate against Israel while using double standards, it could be antisemitic.

As its name suggests, the Jerusalem Declaration is largely focused on the appropriate language when discussing Israel and Palestine. It mentions Palestine or Palestinians nine times but has not a single mention of hate crime. Ten of its 15 “guidelines” are devoted to Israel and Palestine, despite criticising the IHRA definition for placing “undue emphasis” on this same issue. The Declaration is over twice as long as IHRA and is much less relevant for incident investigators. The academics who wrote it did not consult with Jewish community organisations, hate crime monitors or other complaint investigators, and it shows. It reads like guidelines for an academic seminar on Israel and Palestine.

Even then, the Jerusalem Declaration has serious flaws. Its core definition tells us antisemitism is “discrimination, prejudice, hostility or violence against Jews as Jews (or Jewish institutions as Jewish).” This formulation risks missing all but the most overt cases. The Hungarian government’s campaign against George Soros never mentions the fact Soros is Jewish but it derives its resonance and force from the use of antisemitic language.