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Opinion

Time to shame those who spread prejudice

Instead of protesting against antisemitic or anti-Israel propaganda - or worse, teaching - on campus, defenders of the Jewish people need to go on to the offensive

January 4, 2018 14:38
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3 min read

University antisemitism is a serious and growing problem. Jewish students increasingly say they fear being on campus because of anti-Jewish vilification or harassment. Last year, an NUS study found more than a quarter of them had been subjected to personal abuse on social media or other channels.

The universities minister, Jo Johnson, made an important speech last week at Limmud, the acclaimed Jewish learnathon. While the universities had to defend free speech better than they were doing, he said, there could be no place on campus for antisemitism.

A welcome statement; but the implications are unclear.

The dividing line between obnoxious speech that must nevertheless be protected and speech that is truly beyond the pale is a difficult one to draw.