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The only issue has been when and where the first mob attack on Jews would happen

One of the most obvious lessons from history is that when verbal and written Jew hate is normalised, violence always follows

November 8, 2024 11:17
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Amsterdam's Anton de Komplein square ahead of the UEFA Europa League football match between Ajax and Maccabi Tel Aviv (Getty Images)
2 min read

I’ve just been listening to the news. The report on last night’s events in Amsterdam included an explanation of the meaning of the word ‘pogrom’. Because that’s where we now are. In 2024, in the middle of a European capital city, pogroms are back.

Not that anyone, surely, is surprised. The only issue in the past year has been when and where the first large scale mob attack on Jews would happen. (Although it was nothing of the sort according to Sky News, which this morning told us that “football hooligans target Israeli supporters as disorder unfolds”. Nothing to see here, move along.)

There were, it’s clear, racist chants from some Maccabi fans in Amsterdam. But if your response to that is to believe it’s therefore fine to have a pogrom against Jews in response, then you are part of the problem.

One of the most obvious lessons from history is that when verbal and written Jew hate is normalised, violence always follows. Always.