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Opinion

UK has always worn two faces

Britain has a mixed history regarding antisemitism, argues the director of the National Holocaust Centre and Museum

May 28, 2021 15:39
bw Ian Forsyth 2ARC9Y5
2ARC9Y5 Ian Forsyth MBE speaking during the UK Holocaust Memorial Day Commemorative Ceremony at Central Hall in Westminster, London.
5 min read

William Shakespeare caused the Holocaust. Charles Dickens helped. And the citizens of Norwich.

Am I exaggerating? Yes. But the creation of Shylock and Fagin cemented the pre-existing trope of Jews and money in the popular imagination. Because English language and culture so comprehensively permeated the planet for centuries (firstly with the printing press in 1440 and then with the British Empire), British writers, policymakers and opinion leaders helped to distribute and reinforce across Europe the notion of Jewish ‘otherness’ and even social unattractiveness — such that when the Nazis arrived to act on these culturally institutionalised perceptions, it was a not uncommon belief that ‘they had it coming to them’.

In 1144, the community of Norwich invented the idea that Jews sacrifice gentile children to mix their blood into matzah for Pesach. This was how they explained the disappearance of a 12-year old called William. His death was never solved and no-one was tried for his murder. But a wondrous new myth, dripping in religious dogma and visual possibilities, was born: the blood libel. William of Norwich was canonised as a Christian martyr and became the face that launched a thousand blood libels across Europe.

This is why the Ministry of Information’s famous injunction to “Keep Calm and Carry On” in World War II included turning a blind eye to the Nazi mission to eradicate European Jewry. Foreign Secretary Anthony Eden made a speech in the Commons on 17 December 1942 condemning the Nazis’ “bestial policy”. The House rose for a minute’s silence to mourn the victims. So Britain’s refusal, for example, to bomb Auschwitz when the opportunity arose in 1944 — or even the supply lines to it — is famously hard to understand. Dominic Kennedy, writing in The Times in August 2018, said: “A long withheld file, called ‘Antisemitism in Great Britain’ and disclosed by the National Archives, shows that officials confronted by reports of rising prejudice decided that Jews themselves were to blame”.