Become a Member
Opinion

The UN vote exposes dilemma at core of British Jewry

Faced with a difficult choice, Jewish leadership has clearly opted to cling to the controversial policies of an Israel government rather than think through an approach which takes into account the concerns of British Jewry.

January 6, 2017 16:38
AFP_9N3X5
2 min read

By withdrawing its protection at the UN on the question of Israeli settlement expansion, the fading Obama administration has caused turmoil within many Jewish organisations. Despite a recent American $38 billion military aid package to Israel, many viewed the move as a wholesale betrayal and a deliverance into the hands of Israels enemies. 

Was the official communal reaction then solely a question of responding to a hostile UN? Or was it also an indirect endorsement of the settlement drive after many years of studied neutrality? After all, Theresa May said that the conflict is far more complex than the issue of the settlements. The President of the Board of Deputies, Jonathan Arkush, subsequently claimed that there was a consensus among British Jews in condemning the UN vote.

Yet the glossing over of the vexed question of the settlements neither reflected the views of British Jews nor presented a credible defence against the biased anti-Zionism of many UN member states. A City University survey (2015) — in which I was involved as an adviser — and a JPR survey (2010) both suggested that around 75 per cent of British Jews opposed the settlement drive.

In the City University survey, 
64 per cent expected “unstoppable international sanctions against Israel if it continues to expand the settlements”. Yet very few (32 per cent) were prepared to support tougher action by governments. This contradiction between private Jewish views and public non-Jewish action seems to be at the heart of the dilemma which haunts many Jewish organisations.