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Why can those on the left never see their own antisemitism?

People who hold Marxist assumptions cannot cope with seeing Jewish achievement, says Melanie Phillips

February 5, 2021 13:52
GettyImages-1186141919.jpg Corbyn-a
DARWEN, ENGLAND - NOVEMBER 07: Labour leader Jeremy Corbyn gestures to photographers after giving a speech to supporters at an election campaign event at Darwen Library Theatre on November 07, 2019 in Darwen, England. Conservative held Darwen is the first stop for the Labour Party's 'battle bus'. Politicians have stepped up a gear in the election campaign, bidding to win the December 12 general election and put an end to the Brexit deadlock. (Photo by Christopher Furlong/Getty Images)
3 min read

In his new book Jews Don’t Count, David Baddiel observes that people on the left don’t treat the problem of antisemitism on the same level as prejudices over race, sexuality or gender.

I personally started to detect a double standard over antisemitism in the 1980s, when I wrote that antisemitism had become “the prejudice that dare not speak its name”.

This was when the left was calling Israelis “Nazis” for trying to root out from Lebanon the Palestine Liberation Organisation’s terrorist infrastructure. It was when people started saying openly: “Jews make so much money / they’re so clannish / they always stick together against everyone else”.

Merely to mention the word “antisemitism” among left-wingers, though, caused an instant glacial chill, provoked eye-rolls or produced the charge: “You’re using antisemitism to sanitise Israel’s atrocities”.