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David Aaronovitch

ByDavid Aaronovitch, David Aaronovitch

Opinion

Unsavoury bedfellows

August 27, 2015 12:48
2 min read

Is Jeremy Corbyn a Jew-hater? Not in a million years. If he were, he'd not try so hard to look like a Reform rabbi. So what gives with all the meetings and contacts with people who edge off into that dreadful world in which evil Jews run everything, kill everyone, take part in secret plots and have all the money?

When I was researching for my book on conspiracy theory, Voodoo Histories, I came across some fascinating examples of what you might call a "cross-over" between far right and far left on the question of what they would always call "Zionism". This wasn't an entirely new phenomenon. In the first place, an identification of Jews with finance-capital goes back to William Cobbett's notions of the betrayal of the authentic human being by usurers. In the second, a dislike of "cosmopolitan" Zionism and Israel was a common feature of late Stalinism and the Arabist sections of the Trotskyist fringe. The Worker's Revolutionary Party was part-funded by Colonel Gaddafi and the far left British Anti-Zionist Organisation almost certainly received money from the Ba'ath regime in Iraq.

Read: Corbyn supporters post vile racism and he says nothing

The animating spirit behind much of this was what you might call "Fanonism", after the author of the 1961 French book, The Wretched of the Earth, written during the Algerian war and understood as endorsing the need for the colonised to use violence against their colonial and post-colonial masters. It divided the world into two camps - not Communist and capitalist but oppressive white and oppressed brown. And Israel was, like America and Britain, white and the Palestinians brown. The irony, of course, was that - in Fanonite terms - Jews saw themselves as very much the oppressed.