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ByKaren Yossman, Karen Yossman

Opinion

America used to be my safe haven. But now it’s all changed

'Like many diaspora Jews, I have an exit strategy'.

May 9, 2019 11:22
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3 min read

Like many diaspora Jews, I have an exit strategy. When Dame Margaret Hodge recalled in an interview last year her father’s advice to “keep a packed suitcase at the door in case you ever have to leave in a hurry,” there was shock and even incredulity that a British Jew might ever need to heed such counsel.

To me, it was prosaic. One of my earliest memories is getting the same talk from my father, whose parents escaped the Holocaust in Lithuania by dropping everything and heading east. My maternal grandparents, who didn’t, were less fortunate.

For Jews, whose habitual persecution is etched into our collective consciousness, if not our skin, intuiting which way the wind is blowing is as much part of our cultural identity as apples and honey.

Today, those with their fingers in the air will tell you that Europe, with its government-sanctioned Holocaust distortion in Poland, repeated homicidal attacks on Jews in France and the pandemic of leftist antisemitism in the UK, has once again begun to feel like an increasingly uncomfortable place to be a Jew.