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ByRobert Philpot, Robert Philpot

Opinion

Gove's timely wake-up call

September 18, 2014 12:01
2 min read

I'm neither a fan of Michael Gove nor a supporter of his party. However, the speech he delivered last week to the Holocaust Education Trust, an edited version of which appeared in the JC, was - of the hundreds he has delivered since becoming a cabinet minister - probably the most important. And while I confess to not having read all the others, I am happy to wager it was also probably his best.

For what the former education secretary did in a few short passages was to slice through all the cant and excuses and provide absolute moral clarity on both the cause and consequences of the cancer of antisemitism, which metastasises throughout Europe today. To state that one's views on free schools, reforming GCSEs or how we teach British history rather pales into insignificance set against this hardly needs saying.

Gove began by reminding his listeners of the monstrousness of the Nazis' crimes. "We should never forget what we are commemorating," he said. "Wars generate crime; conflict breeds horrors but no crime is as wicked as the Holocaust, no crime as enormous." These words may appear to be self-evident. But they are no longer uncontested. The challenge is not direct but it is no less nefarious for that.

It comes in the form of boycotts and banners. Boycotts, as the Tory chief whip recalled, "began with a campaign against Jewish goods [and] ended with a campaign against Jewish lives".