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The Schmooze

Why we need to keep on marching against antisemitism

On Sunday, the Jewish community and its supporters will take to the streets to call out the rise in Jew-hate

December 4, 2024 15:29
Eddie Marsan, Rachel Riley and Dame Maureen Lipman at the March Against Antisemitism in November 2023
With Eddie Marsan, Rachel Riley and Dame Maureen Lipman at the March Against Antisemitism in November 2023
4 min read

On October 7, Jewish students tried to mourn those murdered on that day a year earlier in Israel – many of them their age. But their commemorations did not pass without incident.

At UCL, protesters called for Intifada and chanted: “From the river to the sea”, forcing students to use side entrances and fear attending lectures. At Queen Mary, students surrounded a vigil, chanting “Globalise the intifada”, with at least one Jewish student being followed home to shouts of “F*** Israel”.

At King’s, chants for the eradication of Israel; at SOAS, signs calling the Jewish state a “baby killer” and threats that “You will never be free of us until Palestine is free of you!” ; at Goldsmiths, chants of “From Gaza to Beirut, all our martyrs we salute” and “When people are occupied, resistance is justified”; at London Met, an effusive eulogy for the leader of Hamas published by a lecturer; at a Jewish student party, an Israeli flag burned by a gatecrasher.

And that’s just London. There was also the swastika etched onto the Chabad student centre at Oxford, the abusive stickers at Newcastle and Edinburgh Universities, the Cardiff student union representative “joking” about bullying Zionists and the abuse of a Nova massacre survivor at Birmingham.