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Beware of false friends like Rod Liddle and Katie Hopkins, their motive is hateful

British Jews may be anxious and in want of allies but we must be wary, writes Jonathan Freedland

August 8, 2019 10:52
Katie Hopkins
3 min read

At times like these it’s natural to seek friends wherever we can find them. Given the anxiety that currently pervades the British Jewish community, much of it built up over the past four years and tied to the seemingly unending saga of Labour antisemitism, it’s only human for Jews to seize on every apparently warm gesture towards us, without examining too closely its origin or its motive. In a situation like ours, we can’t afford to be choosy, right?

Wrong, but we’ll get to that. A prime example of just such an apparently friendly hand extended in our direction came in last weekend’s Sunday Times magazine, from the pen of Rod Liddle.

He had been despatched to Israel to meet British Jews who had made aliyah. The piece was gentle and sympathetic towards those who had made new lives in Tel Aviv or Zichron Ya’akov, infused with melancholy that loyal British citizens no longer felt safe in the land of their birth and so had moved thousands of miles away to the Middle East. 

In one passage, Liddle confesses his surprise that Ben and Sarit Nessi, who once lived in West Sussex, have now made their home in a place that “is about 30 miles from Lebanon, maybe 40 from Syria and only 10 miles from the Palestinian-run West Bank. Hell, West Sussex must be pretty bloody lively these days for people to feel safer here, in one of the most shelled countries on the planet.”