Become a Member
Opinion

Fighting Jew-hate like Covid

Antisemitism is like a virus that mutates and creates new variants throughout history, writes Jonathan Boyd

March 31, 2021 16:17
Miguel Angel Moratinos GettyImages-91589498
Spanish Foreign Minister Miguel Angel Moratinos waves upon his arrival for a meeting with his Syrian counterpart Walid Muallem in Damascus on Septamber 8, 2009. Moratinos is on a regional tour that has already taken him to Egypt and will include Israel and the Palestinian territories. AFP PHOTO/LOUAI BESHARA (Photo credit should read LOUAI BESHARA/AFP via Getty Images)
2 min read

In my darker moments, I sometimes wonder if we’ll ever rid the world of antisemitism. It’s been around for centuries, changing its form and potency at different times and places, but always somehow present. Even when fairly dormant, we know deep down that it could be awoken at any time, so we constantly take precautions. Data gathered by JPR for the EU show that 60 per cent of British Jews avoid wearing, carrying or displaying items that might identify them as Jewish, at least on occasion. In France, the equivalent proportion is 82 per cent.

Antisemitism is often likened to a virus that mutates and creates new variants, changing form and potency over time and across space. It drew on Christian theological ideas in medieval Christendom, and on pseudoscientific findings in late nineteenth and early twentieth century Europe. Today, it takes root in the world of fundamental rights, where the cardinal sins are ethnic cleansing and apartheid, both charges levelled periodically at Israel and too often, by association, Jews.

And just like a virus, it infects different people to different extents. One of the ways in which it is commonly researched is by presenting survey respondents with a set of antisemitic statements and asking them whether they agree with them or not. “Jews get rich at the expense of others.” Agree or disagree? “The Holocaust is a myth.” Agree or disagree?

Very few people agree with all the statements they are showed, in Britain at least. Presented with eight such statements in our most recent study, 0.1 per cent of the population — about one in a thousand — agreed with every one. But at the same time, 30 per cent of the population — about one in three — agreed with at least one, even if they disagreed with the others.