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How I managed to get a psychotherapy journal to apologise after October 7

By standing up to them, they eventually said sorry. That has lessons for all of us in fighting antisemitism

January 11, 2024 11:22
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Scenes of houses destroyed when Hamas terrorists infiltrated Kibbutz Be'eri, and 30 other nearby communities in Southern Israel on October 7, killing more than 1400 people, and taking more than 200 hostages into Gaza, near the Israeli-Gaza border. October 25, 2023. (Photo by Edi Israel/Flash90)
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As a mental health practitioner and senior psychology lecturer at the University of Central Lancashire, I was keen to share with my fellow practitioners my thoughts on the impact of the October 7 massacre. My article for the British Association of Counselling and Psychotherapy’s journal was about the trauma that the Jewish community experienced after the worse massacre of Jews since the Holocaust.

On the eve of publication, however, the article — Community in Traumatic Stress — was pulled over “unease” about “ramifications”.

I knew I had to fight this injustice. No other community would be treated like this, having their trauma invalidated in case it offended others. My journey to a full public apology and reinstatement of the article by the BACP has implications for the whole community in terms of how we deal with antisemitism post-October 7.

When I first received the email advising me the article was to be pulled, I had no idea how to respond and fight this. What was the best strategy? Should I go public? In what format — to the national press? Or on social media? Were there any legal implications? What were the risks — both professionally and personally? Might I become on the receiving end of the ramifications that the BACP were so afraid of if I fought it?