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Opinion

I won’t be bullied into hiding my Magen David

My mother told me to remove any obvious Jewish symbols, “just in case” my Jewish identity counted against me, says Sabrina Miller

July 8, 2021 10:27
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2 min read

Last week, British Jews were rattled by two shocking antisemitic incidents, both aimed at Yochai, a visibly Jewish researcher from north London (see page 9). The viral clips show Yochai being accosted by a man who threatened to “slit his throat for Palestine’’, on a London bus, and then later harassed by a different man yelling “I f***ing hate the Jews” on the tube. Chilling.

Though antisemitic incidents are on the rise, CST’s figures show that the majority take place on social media. Secular Ashkenazim are often not identifiably Jewish and are able to ‘blend in’ when out and about, keeping them safer from antisemitic attack or harassment.

When I walk London’s streets, my Jewish heritage is disguised. My Jewish identity is not written on my skin. I am a white Brit and almost never fear the racist abuse I have grown accustomed to online, where my Jewish identity is just a Google search away.

This came to the fore during the latest escalation between Israel and Hamas. Many of my friends consciously stopped wearing Jewish symbols in order to hide their identity: baseball caps instead of kippot, Magen David necklaces tucked under shirts, t-shirts with Hebrew lettering left at home. They were scared they might be confronted if strangers were able to recognise that they were Jewish.

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