Nicola Richards (West Bromwich East) (Con) I beg to move, That this
House has considered the matter of increases in anti-Semitic
offences. It is a pleasure to serve under your chairmanship, Ms
Vaz. I will begin by reminding colleagues that 7 October saw the
biggest loss of Jewish life in a single day since the holocaust.
The number of Jewish people currently displaced within Israel is
the largest since the holocaust. In response to this, antisemitic
incidents...Request free trial
(West Bromwich East)
(Con)
I beg to move,
That this House has considered the matter of increases in
anti-Semitic offences.
It is a pleasure to serve under your chairmanship, Ms Vaz. I will
begin by reminding colleagues that 7 October saw the biggest loss
of Jewish life in a single day since the holocaust. The number of
Jewish people currently displaced within Israel is the largest
since the holocaust. In response to this, antisemitic incidents
worldwide have soared.
Since 7 October, Auschwitz-Birkenau has been called an
“embarrassment to humanity”. “Heil Hitler” has been shouted at
Jewish students in the UK. Protests have included shouts to “burn
the Jews” on the streets of London. The hats of Jewish men have
been thrown off them in our capital, and menorahs have been
attacked. We have seen threats from a professor to blow up the
Jewish Labour Movement conference. University societies have
championed “the resistance”, glorified Palestinian “martyrs” and
denied the murder and rape of Israelis at Nova music festival.
Synagogues have been targeted and threatened, Jewish schools have
been attacked, and Jewish businesses have been vandalised.
In Bristol, “Free Palestine” was shouted at visibly Jewish men
walking to a Sabbath lunch. In Leeds, a Jewish university
footballer was called a “big nose Jew” by a member of the
opposing team. In Manchester, a Jewish school was sent a letter
saying
“warning your school is being targeted, No one is safe, no one
should support killers, Palestine forever”.
In London, the Wiener Holocaust Library, a great organisation
named after Lord Finkelstein’s grandfather, who escaped the
Nazis, had “Gaza” spray-painted on its sign. In my area of the
west midlands, a swastika was painted on a bridge, and a curry
house announced its full support of Hamas. I thank West Midlands
police for its support over the last few days in dealing with
localised incidents incredibly fast.
That is by no means an exhaustive list; rather it is just a small
insight to the Jewish experience in Britain over the last few
months. Dr Dave Rich of the Community Security Trust
describes antisemitism as a
“light sleeper lying just beneath the surface of society, ready
to raise its head whenever the opportunity arises”.
These worrying statistics make clear the disturbing reality of
the current situation.
Mr (East Londonderry)
(DUP)
I congratulate the hon. Member on the timeliness of her debate.
Does she agree that there is not much that unites the far right
and the hard left, but what does seem to unite them—for whatever
reason that mystifies me, and possibly her as well—is their
innate hatred of Jewish people?
The hon. Member is of course right.
Around the world, we have also seen arson attacks on synagogues
in Germany, Tunisia and Armenia. In Canada, Jewish buildings were
firebombed and Jewish religious schools were shot at. Terrorist
plots against Jewish targets have been foiled in Germany, Cyprus,
Denmark, the Netherlands and Brazil. Israeli flags were burnt
outside synagogues in Spain and Sweden. In Vienna, part of the
Jewish cemetery was set alight and swastikas were painted on
walls. Jewish homes were marked by antisemitic graffiti in Paris
and Berlin. In the US, a man fired shots outside a synagogue, and
declared “Free Palestine” to the police who arrested him. In
Russia, a mob stormed an airport looking for Jewish passengers to
attack. A Jewish American, Paul Kessler, was killed by a
pro-Palestinian protester in Los Angeles. A holocaust memorial in
Berlin was defaced.
(Edinburgh West) (LD)
I congratulate the hon. Lady on securing this debate. Does she
share my concern that so much of the work done in this country by
the CST and Tell MAMA to build bridges and understanding is being
undermined by what is happening across the world and,
frighteningly, in this country? Does she share my fear that there
are people up and down this country—students, schoolchildren and
the elderly—living in fear in a way that we never envisaged in
this century?
The hon. Lady is right. We see some great examples of communities
working together. A few months ago, I visited the Jewish
community in Birmingham, who told us about the support they had
had from the mosque in Birmingham and faith leaders across the
board. This by no means describes everything that is happening at
the moment, but there are plenty of examples. We have a chance on
Thursday to debate some of the more positive aspects of community
relationships, but sadly today’s focus is on what is going wrong
at the moment.
Across the UK, in the days following Hamas’s barbaric massacre on
7 October to 13 December, the Community Security Trust recorded
2,098 antisemitic incidents. That figure is expected to rise and
2023 is expected to be the year in which the highest ever number
of antisemitic incidents was recorded in the UK. The figure of
2,098 dwarfed the 800 or so incidents recorded up until 7 October
and was the highest ever number reported to the CST across any
similar period, even during other conflicts in the middle east.
To clarify, that is 2,098 incidents of antisemitism as a
result of a massacre of innocent Jewish men, women and children
in Israel. The impact of this is massive and should not be
underestimated.
Whereas the police require only for victims to say that they have
been the target of a hate crime, the CST requires evidence
of antisemitism The CST
logged at least another 1,288 incidents, which have not been
classed as antisemitic. Those include criminal acts affecting
Jewish people and property, suspicious behaviour near Jewish
locations and anti-Israel activity that is not directed at the
Jewish community or does not use antisemitic language. Many of
those potential incidents involve suspicious or hostile activity
at Jewish locations.
The 2,098 incidents included hateful comments, threats of
violence and death threats. Among them were 95 assaults, 165
direct threats, 127 instances of damage and desecration of Jewish
property, and 1,677 incidents of abusive behaviour. One hundred
and thirty-three incidents related to schools and included the
abuse of schoolchildren and teachers; I will talk about
universities later.
Meanwhile, some of the focal points of the recent rise remain a
source of concern. Rallies have taken place across our nation
weekly. Of course people have a legitimate right to protest, but
that is not the same as feeling free to support terrorist groups
or attack Jewish people. The Select Committee on Home Affairs
recently investigated the protests, and I think that it will be
helpful to highlight some of the contributions from the CST’s Dr
Dave Rich.
Dr Rich explained that 7 October left the Jewish community in the
UK “completely traumatised and grief-stricken”. He explained that
within 24 hours of that largest murderous assault on Jews since
the holocaust, the first pro-Palestinian, anti-Israel
demonstrations were beginning—some of them while the attack was
still continuing. The protests appeared supportive of the
barbarism: for example, the announcement on Facebook about one
such march called the attack “heroic”. More people have been on
these marches than there are Jews in Britain. The CST has had
impact statements from British Jews explaining that they feel
unsafe living in this country and are changing dates of hospital
appointments, forbidding their children to get on the train, and
so on.
There have been some 300 arrests at protests—instances where the
police have identified, located and arrested someone. There have
been antisemitic placards and expressions of support for
terrorism, which the organisers are not doing enough to stamp
out. Their communications about a rally must include warnings not
to engage in antisemitic conduct or support for terrorism, and
the communications of the police during the rally must prioritise
accuracy over speed. It would be helpful if my hon. Friend the
Minister set out what the Government are doing to ensure that the
rallies are not hotbeds of antisemitism and how
much it has cost to police them effectively.
Social media platforms must act too. My right hon. Friend the
Secretary of State for Science, Innovation and Technology has
been holding meetings with the companies, asking them to set out
their actions and policies. Despite that, the companies are
failing in their duty of care to the users. The Institute for
Strategic Dialogue found a fifty-fold increase in antisemitic
comments on YouTube immediately after the 7 October attack. It
found a major rise in threats made against Jewish institutions
and individuals, as well as posts on X supporting and glorifying
Hamas’s terror attacks. By 12 October, this content had been
viewed more than 16 million times on the platform. TikTok has
insufficient systems for monitoring live-streamed content,
including antisemitism voiced at
rallies. The antisemitism Policy
Trust and the Woolf Institute have already demonstrated a number
of trends across social media platforms, including antisemitic
supply rather than demand on Instagram. There are two antisemitic
tweets for every Jewish person in the UK per year on X. It would
be helpful if the Minister set out in detail the work that Ofcom
is doing in relation to not just the platforms that I have
mentioned but small, high-risk platforms such as 8kun and Rumble,
both generally and specifically with regard to hate being spread
by technology systems during the current middle east
conflict.
The situation on university campuses, no doubt compounded by
social media, is dire. Since the 7 October attacks, antisemitism on campus
has risen sixfold, with 157 recorded incidents according to the
CST. Jewish students have been the victims of death threats,
physical assaults and violent abuse. There has been explicit
support for Hamas and calls for an intifada. The Union of Jewish
Students has provided examples, including a student in Scotland
being pelted with eggs, graffiti on a poster in Manchester
encouraging students to kill more Jews, and participants in an
online lecture at Queen Mary University of London joking about
Hitler’s gas bill and about getting a Hitler reboot card. The
result is that some students remove visible signs of their Jewish
identity, while others simply avoid campus altogether.
The Union of Jewish Students has been running training for
thousands of union officials up and down the country. Are
Government willing to support that effort? Last year, we
witnessed what many had hoped would not be possible: three grown
adults unable to clarify whether calling for the genocide of Jews
was problematic, arguing that it depended on context. Those were
not uneducated women; they were university leaders, and not just
any university leaders; they were leaders of some of the most
respected universities not just in the US, but in the world.
(Warley) (Lab)
I thank the hon. Lady for for introducing this very important
debate, as we see the oldest hatred in the world resurfacing so
badly. Should we also deal with the argument about free speech?
Free speech and discussion is vital in a democratic society but,
in the words of Oliver Wendell Holmes of the US Supreme Court, it
is not
“the right to shout fire in a crowded theatre”.
Words have consequences. Should not universities and public
authorities be cracking down on this and taking determined
action?
I totally agree with the right hon. Gentleman. Just in the past
few days, I have been alarmed by the responses I have received on
Twitter, having reported an antisemitic incident to the police,
and by the support for Hamas, but also by the number of people
who do not understand why hate speech, tweets and what they call
freedom of speech are being reported to the police. They do not
understand the consequences. The statistics I have read out today
about the number of Jews living in the UK and the number of
antisemitic tweets—two antisemitic tweets per year for every
Jewish person in the UK—show why it is important to crack down on
it.
Since 7 October, the call for an “intifada until victory” has
been plastered up and down campuses, and a model motion calling
for that was passed at University College London and the
University of East Anglia students’ union. Does the Minister
agree that motions passed that call for an “intifada until
victory” are disturbing, and that calls to globalise the intifada
are extremely worrying? Perhaps we could have some clarity on the
legality of the term in those contexts. Will he say something
about the role of the prevent duty in relation to speakers and
other activity on campus? Will he make it clear that support for
Hamas, whether voiced by individual students or groups such as
the Socialist Workers party, must be investigated by the police,
because support for proscribed terrorist organisations, including
Hamas, is illegal?
As we begin 2024, let us be clear. Policing must be robust, with
zero tolerance. Sentencing must not be lenient. Education must be
improved and widespread. Relevant authorities, whether they be
universities, councils or companies, need to work to support
Jewish colleagues, employees or students, and ensure that they
recognise their duty of care.
This is my message to those engaged in antisemitism in
response to a conflict in a place they are unlikely to have
visited or know much about. Last week, I met people my age who
had survived a massacre at a music festival purely because of
their immense courage and chance. I met heartbroken but
determined families of hostages and people killed. I witnessed a
nation still overcome with grief. For those who diminish what
happened on 7 October—or worse, seek to justify it—I hope they
will never witness what those strong and brave people did. I
watched 47 minutes of the gleeful spree and slaughter by Hamas
and Palestinian Islamic Jihad, as well as civilians. Nothing will
erase those images from my mind: the look of fear in their eyes
that I did not know was possible. Nothing will ever be the same
again for Jewish people around the world following that dreadful
day in October last year, so have some humanity, recognise the
impact of your language and ask yourself what you stand for.
Antisemitism is centuries old, but it still persists. It does not
give up, so neither should we. We must remain unwavering and
uncompromising in our efforts to challenge it, and I thank all
colleagues present for doing so. I hope this debate will play its
part in doing that.
(in the Chair)
I propose to take the first Opposition spokesperson at about 3.28
pm.
2.45pm
(Washington and Sunderland
West) (Lab)
It is a pleasure to serve under your chairmanship, Ms Vaz. I
thank the hon. Member for West Bromwich East () for securing this very
important debate.
It has been the most horrific time since the attack in Israel. I
was in the country with a delegation from Labour Friends of
Israel almost three weeks to the day before the attack occurred,
and I visited the Kfar Aza kibbutz. Luckily for the young lady
who showed us around, she was with her husband and family further
up, near Tel Aviv, at the time of the attack, so they survived.
Sadly, her parents did not, and she is having to deal with that
grief. Having seen the close proximity to Gaza, I just cannot
imagine the fear that they must have all felt for the hours and
hours that the attack went on, and the horror and atrocities that
occurred. I am someone who witnessed the footage that the Israeli
embassy shared with some of us, and there are things in it that I
will never, ever forget.
As the hon. Member for West Bromwich East has outlined for us
today, the wave of antisemitism we have
seen across the country since 7 October is shocking and
appalling. We have heard “Burn the Jews!” shouted at protest
marches. Jewish children have been advised not to wear their
school blazers. Swastikas have been graffitied in public places,
and Jewish schools vandalised with red paint. Jews have been
harassed, intimidated and assaulted in the street and as they
leave their places of worship. The roll call of incidents is both
long and shameful. It is shameful that in Britain, in 2024, our
fellow citizens are subject to such racism and hatred. Sadly,
however, it is not surprising.
As the Community Security Trust suggests, whenever Israel is at
war there is an increase in antisemitism incidents,
and an acute rise is usually reported specifically in and related
to educational establishments, as the hon. Lady spoke about with
regard to universities. None the less, the Community Security
Trust suggests that, even compared with periods of previous
conflicts involving Israel, the current statistics are
unprecedented. This is grimly ironic, given that the state of
Israel was established to provide the Jewish people with a safe
haven, after centuries of persecution which culminated in the
Nazis’ attempt to annihilate Jewish history and the Jewish people
of Europe. The persecution continues to this day.
Let us be clear: these antisemitic attacks are nothing less than
the latest iteration of the oldest hatred. In the charges
levelled against Zionists—that they control the media and the
Government, that they are disloyal, greedy and bloodthirsty, and
that they are ideologically akin to, and collaborated with, the
Nazis—we see the repetition of classic antisemitic tropes and
smears. Our country, which rightly prides itself on its tolerance
and its rejection of extremism, cannot allow antisemitism to go
unchecked and unchallenged. We need swift, tough and
comprehensive action to tackle anti-Jewish racism.
First, as the shadow Home Secretary, my right hon. Friend the
Member for Normanton, Pontefract and Castleford (), has rightly argued, we need
an increase in policing and stronger action to tackle and
monitor antisemitism and we
must ensure that the police have the powers they need to tackle
to hateful extremism. Secondly, it is appalling that Jewish
venues and institutions need extra levels of security and
protection, but as long as that remains the case, it is
imperative that the Community Security Trust receives the funding
it needs to do its vital job. Thirdly, what is said online rarely
stays online. The hateful conspiracy theories and lies about Jews
and Israel that are peddled on social media by antisemites
directly contribute to racism on our streets. Social media
companies must enforce their own rules against hate speech, and
where crimes are committed, they must co-operate with the police
to ensure that the guilty are punished.
Fourthly, in relation to universities, the National Union of
Students and student unions must do more to fight antisemitism and to
ensure the safety of Jewish students. At the same time, surveys
indicate shocking levels of ignorance about the holocaust, and
strong public support for greater holocaust education. The work
of organisations such as the Holocaust Educational Trust is of
paramount importance; they are on the frontline of the battle for
hearts and minds.
Finally, Iran is a leading purveyor of holocaust
denial, antisemitism and
extremism. Its terrorist proxy armies slaughter Jews, while its
ideological arm, the Islamic Revolutionary Guard Corps, attempts
to incite and perpetuate violence and spread disinformation
globally, including throughout Britain. As Labour has argued, we
must proscribe the IRGC and begin to turn off this pipeline of
hatred.
In two weeks’ time, we will mark Holocaust Memorial Day. This
year’s theme is the fragility of freedom, and that is especially
relevant in the light of the antisemitism that
we have seen on our streets over the past three months. Without
security, there can be no freedom. Freedom from fear and violence
is the prerequisite of any civilised country. We cannot allow
Britain’s Jewish community to be denied that freedom.
2.52pm
(Cities of London and
Westminster) (Con)
It is a pleasure to serve under your chairmanship, Ms Vaz. I
thank my hon. Friend the Member for West Bromwich East () for securing this
important and very timely debate.
According to the Metropolitan police, in my constituency of the
Cities of London and Westminster, we have sadly seen an
unprecedented 1,350% increase in the number of antisemitic
incidents since the awful scenes on 7 October in Israel. I
received an email from a Jewish constituent who is in her late
70s, I believe, and was born and bred in the United Kingdom. She
says:
“Some of my non-Jewish friends ask me if I feel safe now. The
answer is generally yes, but I would not want to wear my necklace
with its star of David when it can be seen. I would not feel safe
walking past the pro-Palestinian protests if they knew I was
Jewish. I love this country. I cannot think of living anywhere
else. I have never been to Israel, but Palestine supporters, when
I spoke to them in the street a couple of years ago, said I had
no business being here, and a neighbour told me I should not be
living in Belgravia; I should go to Golders Green or Stamford
Hill.”
Over recent months, my constituency has been the location of
protests in solidarity with Palestinians. I support peaceful
protest, and always will. It is important to recognise that the
vast majority of people taking part in these protests do so
peacefully, but I fear that a minority are using them for
antisemitic purposes. I am glad to see that these protests no
longer tend to end at the Cenotaph, and that the protest
organisers have been more sensitive about moving start times and
locations to reduce clashes with Shabbat services in nearby
synagogues in my constituency. I really hope that that will
continue.
As I said, the majority of those on the protests are peaceful,
and that has been the case across the country, but we have seen
too many incidents of antisemitism on these
marches. The police were slow to react initially, but they have
got better, and hundreds of people have rightly now been
arrested. We cannot live in a country where we shrug our
shoulders when somebody is antisemitic. We would not do it if
someone was being racist towards a black person or somebody of
Muslim heritage; equally, we must not allow it to happen to the
Jewish community.
The incidents are wide-ranging, and include the use of
intimidating language, physical abuse and criminal damage to
property. They have all been reported. One of the biggest issues
raised with me as the local MP is abuse on university
campuses—places where students should feel free to express
themselves and their identity without threat of intimidation.
The hon. Lady is making a very salient point. I was frightened by
a recent conversation with a University of Glasgow student who
went to a meeting about the war in Gaza. He thought it would be a
wide-ranging discussion, but he suddenly found himself at the
centre of a meeting that was very antisemitic. He did not feel
comfortable; he felt under threat. Does the hon. Lady agree that
part of the problem is that the public are not aware of this?
They do not see it, and the media is not expressing the danger of
growing antisemitism in this
country in the way that we would like.
I absolutely agree. One of the most important books I have read
over the past couple of years is David Baddiel’s “Jews Don’t
Count”. I have always been a supporter of the Jewish community— I
have spoken about going to a kibbutz when I was 18, and I have
been to Israel several times—but I had never really thought about
the cultural antisemitism in this
country. None of us really thinks it is racism—well, many of us
do, but it is seen as, “Oh, they are Jewish; it’s fine.” As I
said earlier, if the target was a black person or anybody of
colour, it would be considered completely differently. Those
involved in that type of “humour” would be cancelled, and might
even be prosecuted for hate crimes.
According to the Union of Jewish Students, there has been a
staggering 500% increase in antisemitism on
university campuses. I heard about that at first hand soon after
the 7 October attacks, when a group of Jewish students from my
constituency, from King’s College London, the London School of
Economics, the University of Westminster and Imperial College
London, came to visit me. One young man of Jewish heritage,
British born and bred—from north London—experienced his
first antisemitism on the
tube coming to visit me. That was shocking for both of us. Those
students, who are part of the UJS, have been doing absolutely
fantastic work to support Jewish students over the past few
months and before that. They informed me that they have received
more than 400 calls to their hotline reporting antisemitic abuse
over the past few months. The UJS not only supports students but
provides training to thousands of people on campus to help them
spot antisemitism and root
it out before it can harm students. As has been said, one of the
big points is understanding that antisemitism is
racism, and that we need to call it out.
After I met the UJS, I wrote to all the vice-chancellors and
their equivalents at King’s College London, the University of
Westminster, Imperial College London and the London School of
Economics and Political Science. I highlighted that, although of
course it is critical to protect freedom of speech, there is a
fine line between speaking freely and causing harm to groups of
people and minorities. I reiterated in my letters that we must
have a zero-tolerance approach to antisemitism and
Islamophobia on campus. I also asked the vice-chancellors to
inform me whether they were providing additional support to
Jewish staff and students after the 7 October attacks. I was
encouraged by their responses, which were far more rigorous in
their condemnation of antisemitism than some
US college presidents have recently been.
Initiatives such as the LSE’s “Report It, Stop It” allow students
to safely and anonymously report abusive or threatening
behaviour. However, that sort of mechanism is effective only if
the reported abuse is met with swift repercussions for the
offenders, which I hope the vice chancellors of the universities
will continue to provide. University campuses are rightly hotbeds
of debate, sometimes on contentious topics and views, but as I
say, there is a fine line between the protection of freedom of
speech and the protection of people’s rights. People need to feel
safe and welcome on their campus, at lectures and elsewhere.
It is not only Jewish students who feel intimidated.
Unfortunately, Jewish primary school children are being targeted
as well. Some feel so uncomfortable that they cannot show their
true identity when on school trips. This struck me so clearly in
November last year, when a group of Jewish primary school
children visited me. They were from the constituency of my hon.
Friend the Member for Finchley and Golders Green (). He could not make their
meeting, so he asked me to meet them. They were boys, about 10
years old. The first thing I noticed when I met them was that
they were all wearing baseball caps. I asked their teacher why,
and it was to hide their kippahs. British children in the House
of Commons were hiding their identity for their own safety. How
have we come to that? That has to stop.
I have heard from rabbis across my constituency. I am blessed to
have so many synagogues in the Cities of London and Westminster,
but I have been told how fearful and scared their communities
are. We must do all that we can to protect them. I am pleased
that the Metropolitan police in Westminster borough have taken
that very seriously. They have increased the number of patrols
around synagogues, and now liaise with rabbis. I thank the
Westminster borough command and the neighbourhood teams for their
work.
I hope that through today’s debate, and the continuing hard work
of organisations such as the Union of Jewish Students,
the antisemitism Policy
Trust, the Community Security Trust and the Board of Deputies of
British Jews, we can continue to support those impacted, and
slowly and surely rip out any form of antisemitism in this
country. We should celebrate and thank the Jewish community for
the amazing contribution that they have made, and continue to
make, in our country.
Several hon. Members rose—
(in the Chair)
We have three more speakers. The wind-ups will start at about
3.28 pm. I call .
3.02pm
(Strangford) (DUP)
It is a real pleasure to serve under your chairship, Ms Vaz.
Thank you for calling me. I thank the hon. Member for West
Bromwich East () for leading today’s
debate. She and I spoke in the Members’ canteen today. She said,
“I suppose you will be there,” and I said, “I certainly will.” I
ran the whole way from Horseferry Road, where I was meeting the
Transport Minister, to be here on time, because I told the hon.
Lady that I would do my best to be here. For a guy of a certain
vintage, I am not sure whether that was a good idea.
It is good to see the Minister for Housing, Planning and Building
Safety in his place. I look forward to hearing what he will say.
He has always been positive in his response to these debates, and
he encapsulates our concerns and requests. I also look forward to
the contributions of the shadow Ministers, the hon. Members for
East Renfrewshire (), and for Blaydon (), two hon. Ladies with whom I
have had many debates. Their contributions will mirror what we
all say; I am positive about that.
When we look at this important issue, especially this month, in
which we celebrate Holocaust Memorial Day and recognise the
devastation that the Jewish community has been subject to in the
past, it saddens me—it saddens us all—to see that across the
United Kingdom, including in Northern Ireland, we have seen a
torrent of antisemitic attacks, more recently throughout the war
on Israel. It is great to be here as a friend of Israel, as my
hon. Friend the Member for East Londonderry (Mr Campbell) and I
were when we were both on the Northern Ireland Assembly. We were
in the Friends of Israel group there, and we are pround and
privileged to be friends of Israel today in the House of
Commons.
The hon. Member for Cities of London and Westminster () was absolutely right in what
she said, and I agree with it—I was nearly going to start
cheering, so I was. I am the chair of the all-party parliamentary
group for international freedom of religion or belief. We speak
up for those of the Christian faith, those of other faiths, and
those with no faith, because we believe in our hearts that
everyone who has a religious belief has a right to express it.
The Jewish people have a right to express theirs, without any
fear of threat or hindrance whatsoever.
Mr Campbell
On the issue of freedom of religious belief, does my hon. Friend
agree that the protests, which get out of hand more than
occasionally, are based on a false premise, and on misinformation
peddled on social media? For example, in Israel there are
hundreds of mosques, and freedom of religion for Muslim people to
go to them. That is in sharp contrast with the very low number of
synagogues in some of the adjoining Arab nation states. Those
facts need to be spelled out, so that people have correct,
factual information before they embark on any type of protests,
which sometimes end up being violent.
Often—indeed, always—my hon. Friend brings forward very serious
points. In my major town of Newtownards, we have a mosque. My
second son grew up with the young boys from the mosque. We
welcome that, and we speak up for them, and I am pleased to have
the mosque in my town of Newtownards.
I attended an event in the synagogue in Belfast some time ago. I
will speak about this issue quickly, because others have referred
to it. There was a full house of people there, including some
students. I sat beside a young student, and I said, “Tell me
this: how are things in Queen’s University in Belfast?” That was
where she attended. She told me that she felt threatened by some
elements, but not by Queen’s University staff members—its policy
is absolutely clear that there is to be none of that. However,
there were threats, and I focus on them, from students of a
different political opinion. She clearly felt threatened.
At times of conflict between countries, there are always
religious and cultural tensions, with some communities feeling
threatened and frightened to live in their own country. At the
outbreak of the Israel-Palestine conflict, I received calls and
emails in my office about an incident that occurred at the city
hall in Belfast. There were pictures and videos going around on
social media of Lasair Dhearg activists—those of a nationalist
opinion—projecting on to city hall an image of Hamas fighters
paragliding into Israel, alongside the words “smash the
Zionists”. I want my police service, the Police Service of
Northern Ireland, to make those people accountable for their
actions. A section of the Jewish community contacted local
representatives stating that they felt frightened—I felt
frightened for them—and that the antisemitic language used
threatened them. We reported that to the police as a hate crime,
and thankfully the projections stopped, because the police acted
properly and without much more correspondence from me.
Further to that, in North Down, a neighbouring constituency, a
local Bangor Central councillor had incidents of antisemitic hate
language scribbled on a local park bench reported to him. That is
completely unnecessary and threatening, and it gives the local
area such a bad look. It could have been left for children of all
ages to see. There are those who think that they can do things
and get away with them—no, they cannot. Let us make them
accountable.
We usually see a string of attacks, or certainly an increase in
them, when issues are going on across the world, but those
attacks are often inflicted on minorities in our communities,
further isolating them and causing a feeling of fright. I have
heard of so many attacks recently, especially on the mainland. I
am so sad to hear of the antisemitic attack on the office of the
hon. Member for Enfield North ()—that is disgraceful. There
is absolutely no place for that kind of behaviour in our society.
I am so pleased that the police took swift action in response. I
am quite sure that the Minister encouraged the police to take
that strong action.
Antisemitic crime in the UK has risen sharply amid the renewed
conflict in Gaza, with 1,000 incidents logged by the Jewish
charity Community Security Trust. What is taking place is just
astounding. The trust works closely with police at local,
regional and national level on joint patrols in Jewish areas,
training classes and exercises, and exchanging antisemitic
incident data, and in numerous advisory roles. As many will be
aware, regional integration is so important to me and my
colleagues.
I conclude with this, Ms Vaz, because I am conscious that you
asked me to be fair to the other speakers, and I will be. There
is no place in society for racially motivated groups who use
threat and terror to achieve their aim. A just and harsh
punishment must be implemented to ensure that these crimes do not
go by with a mere slap on the wrist. I thank Members for their
correspondence, for their comments today and for all they have
done on behalf of my constituents in Newtownards and my
constituency of Strangford. I support what the hon. Member for
West Bromwich East has said, and I look forward very much to what
the Minister will say to encourage us on behalf of our
constituents.
3.10pm
(Brigg and Goole) (Con)
Thank you, Ms Vaz, for your chairpersonship. I also thank my hon.
Friend the Member for West Bromwich East () for raising this
important issue. I thank all those who work in Jewish community
groups—the CST, the antisemitism Policy
Trust, the Union of Jewish Students, the Jewish Leadership
Council or others—who do so much to bring attention to this
appalling issue and to keep the Jewish community safe.
We know that a survey conducted by the Institute for Jewish
Policy Research found that 30% of the public hold at least one
antisemitic view, so it is fair to assume that up to a similar
percentage of people who attend some of these marches, which have
been deeply distressing for Jewish people, also hold some of
those views. It may be true that the majority of people who have
attended the marches have been peaceful, but if they find
themselves marching alongside people who call for jihad, display
symbols in support of terrorism and call for an intifada, perhaps
they should consider whether they should be keeping that company.
Certainly, if I ended up on a march where there were neo-Nazis, I
would exit it fairly swiftly.
I will say more on the marches at another opportunity. This
afternoon, I want to focus specifically on the issue of
Israelophobia, which is really just a new and updated form
of antisemitism and
particularly on what I think is institutionalised Israelophobia
in parts of our media. When, in 2017, I had the privilege of
responding to the Holocaust Memorial Day debate as the Minister,
I said:
“Unfortunately, there has been an increased Israelification of
anti-Semitism, using Israel and Zionism as a proxy for Jews. I
have seen that and been on the receiving end of it, particularly
on Twitter. There are pictures of the Star of David represented
as the Nazi flag—that is unacceptable and a form of
anti-Semitism.”[—[Official Report, 19 January 2017; Vol. 619, c.
1168.]](/search/column?VolumeNumber=619&ColumnNumber=1168&House=1)
That is exactly what we have seen displayed on the streets of
this country in recent weeks. I have become increasingly
concerned about the tone and what I believe is the one-sided
nature of the coverage of this conflict in parts of the media,
and about what that is doing to fuel Jew hate in this country. As
has been said, it is bad enough that we already have people on
the streets of Britain calling for an intifada. Let us remember
what the last intifada involved: the bombing of a pub, the
blowing up of buses and the murder of a nine-year-old Israeli
child whose head was smashed between a rifle butt and a rock.
That is what an intifada means, yet people are on the streets of
this country marching for that and are not arrested for it.
Indeed, at times, it has looked as though the Metropolitan police
in particular have been the public relations arm of some of the
protests.
My fear is that this Israelification of antisemitism—this
Israelophobia—is now engrained at every level of British society.
As Members have mentioned, we find it today in academia among
university lecturers; it seems that it is tolerated in schools;
it is promoted by ignorant football pundits, senior professionals
and actors; and I am sorry to say that it is given succour in
parts of the British media. Behind it sit age-old but updated
antisemitic tropes, which include that Jews are too powerful and
that they are untrustworthy, sneaky and greedy. That
Israelophobia has been on display in recent weeks. It is a poison
that has dripped into every aspect of western life and has been
promoted by very clever activists who, over decades, have created
a false history and a false narrative about Jews in the middle
east, have smeared Zionism and, in so doing, have played on the
victimhood of Palestinians which, itself, has taken away agency
from Palestinians.
What is this Israelophobia—this updated antisemitism As the
editor of The Jewish Chronicle put it, it has three elements:
demonisation,
“smearing Israel as evil and a threat to the world”;
weaponisation,
“exploiting social justice movements as a Trojan horse for hatred
of Jews and their national home”—
how we have seen that on the streets of Britain; and
falsification,
“echoing the lies and canards of the Nazi or Soviet
propaganda.”
That is what we have seen on the streets: people marching with
banners and saying things about the state of Israel and this
conflict that are directly drawn from Nazi and Soviet antisemitic
propaganda. Never mind that Hamas want to murder all Jews. Never
mind that the majority of Palestinians in recent polling reject
co-existence with Israel. It is Israel, or rather Jews, who are
the problem. As the late and great rabbi, , said:
“In the Middle Ages, Jews were hated because of their religion.
In the nineteenth and early twentieth century they were hated
because of their race. Today they are hated because of their
nation state, the state of Israel.”
A Jewish banker of the past antisemitic tropes is now the Israeli
lobby. Never mind the truth of how much other countries spend on
lobbying, which is far more than anything spent by the state of
Israel, the medieval bloodthirsty Jew, who drank the blood of
Christian children, is now the bloodthirsty Israeli. There is
nothing new here. Israelophobia is antisemitism pure and
simple.
Sadly, we have now seen that ingrained in parts of the media. I
am a big supporter of the media and the BBC, and I have never
bought into the Defund the BBC campaign. However, I have serious
concerns about some of the coverage we have seen—about how Israel
has been singled out for special treatment, which is directly
putting Jews in this country at risk. It plays into those tropes
of bloodlust. Hamas’ figures on civilian casualties are reported
without qualification or reference to the BBC being unable to
verify their figures. The imagery of this conflict, as it would
have us believe, is a well-armed Israel Defence Forces soldier
versus a civilian of Gaza, never mind that the IDF is obviously
seeking to destroy a despotic, terrorist death cult. For example,
we are told by Jeremy Bowen that
“Israelis have hardened their hearts”.
That was in a report without any evidence, any reference to
polling to back it up, or any reference to the Israelis who, even
in this conflict, work hard for peace between Palestinians and
Israelis to this day.
Where the reporting suggests that Israel’s claims are
untrustworthy, they are treated differently to those of Hamas. We
are repeatedly being told of the BBC being unable to verify
claims. When the BBC reported on witness statements of Israeli
Jewish women being raped and murdered, not only did it challenge
those statements directly to the people making them, it included
within its reports that it had been unable to verify those
claims. I do not remember that appearing when we had reports
about the awful rapes of Yezidi women by ISIS. It certainly was
not included in BBC reporting of alleged incidents involving
released Palestinian prisoners, some of whom not only owe a debt
to Hamas but are convicted or accused of very serious offences.
They were released and allowed to tell their story, with the BBC
choosing not to mention in its reporting that it had been unable
to verify the numbers.
Then, of course, we had the reporting of the “strike” on the
Al-Ahli Hospital. Hamas propaganda immediately reported that
there were 500 deaths and that it was an Israeli strike. We know
that is untrue. It was a smear, it was a lie, and it remained on
many media outlets and still remains on some of issues now. But
when the IDF uncover a hospital that has weapons inside or is
being used to hold hostages, what are we told? Once again, that
the BBC has been unable to verify those claims, yet an unverified
claim about a strike that never took place was push notified on
social media. It is no wonder that 75% of British Jews consider
the BBC biased in its coverage of this conflict. We have good
reason to feel that.
I am conscious of time, and I think another Member wants to
speak, but I would like to give a couple of other recent examples
in the media that need calling out. On 23 December, Sky analyst
Sean Bell said that Hamas’s strategy may prove to be “prudent”.
The rape, murder and torture of Israeli women, the cutting off of
children’s limbs and the slicing off of women’s breasts may prove
to be a prudent strategy—Sky News. On 28 November, Dominic
Waghorn of Sky said in a series of tweets that Yahya Sinwar had
assured hostages that they would be well treated, and, indeed,
that some hostages had said the only thing they feared was
Israeli bombardment. His exact words were:
“They were held in reasonable conditions, reportedly, though
those held above ground lived with the fear of being killed in
Israel’s bombardment.”
Let us consider the facts. Never mind the mental health impact on
these people; never mind the fact they were taken against their
will; never mind that Mia Schem, one of the released hostages,
described living in constant fear of rape and being operated on
without anaesthesia; never mind that hostages were held in cages;
never mind the reports of sexual assault on the hostages that
have come out since 17-year-old Agam Goldstein-Almog was
released. Never mind any of that. It is okay, according to Sky:
the hostages were treated well because Yahya Sinwar, the leader
of a terrorist death cult, assured them they would be okay. These
are the things that are going on in our media. Is it any wonder
that Jew hate is being fuelled in this country? We have
institutionalised Israelophobia in the BBC and other parts of our
media, and it needs to be called out.
I congratulate my hon. Friend the Member for West Bromwich East
on securing this debate, as well as other Members present on
their contributions. I know that another Member wishes to speak,
so I will end on those numerous examples—all of which, I must
add, I have made complaints about beforehand. I believe in making
those complaints privately; the reason I mention them today is
that none of them has been resolved properly. On that, I shall
end.
3.21pm
(Warrington North)
(Lab)
It is a pleasure to see you in the Chair, Ms Vaz. I thank the
hon. Member for West Bromwich East () for bringing forward this
important debate at such a critical time. It is a pleasure to
follow the hon. Member for Brigg and Goole (), who is a member of the same
synagogue as me, and with whom I have enjoyed mixing Hanukkah
cocktails in the past.
As a proudly Jewish parliamentarian, this is an issue that has
significance both to my constituents, of all faiths and none, and
to me personally. The devastating attack on 7 October had a
far-reaching impact on the Jewish community in the UK, not least
because its scale means that most of us are only one degree of
separation from someone killed, taken hostage or otherwise
impacted, as well as the huge surge in antisemitism that has
so shamefully followed the attack. The war in Ukraine has also
led to an uptick in the conspiratorial filth I have received and
seen online, in part due to the Jewish faith of Volodymyr
Zelensky, but also the offensive denazification pretext for
invasion by Russia. I had wrongly thought that this sort of
conspiratorial nonsense was on the wane after covid and the
George Soros and 5G conspiracies, but they have now been replaced
by nonsense about Rothschilds, satanists and Putin
propaganda.
I pay tribute to CST, which is such an invaluable resource to our
community and to me personally, providing practical and moral
support when things are at their most difficult. I also pay
tribute to Warrington Borough Council, which has always acted
speedily in clearing up the incidents of antisemitic graffiti we
have reported, including the swastikas recently daubed on local
playparks.
The hon. Member for West Bromwich East made specific reference
to antisemitism online,
which it is vital to mention. Twitter, or X, in particular, has
mainstreamed antisemitism The
number of times I have reported objectively antisemitic tweets,
with posters and names that specifically reference nazi ideology,
only to get an email back saying the tweets have not broken any
of the website’s rules since Elon Musk’s takeover is, frankly,
staggering. More must be done to hold tech companies accountable
for the hate that is peddled on their platforms.
Antisemitism online is bad enough; it not only has an insidious
impact on the individuals to whom it is directed, but poisons the
overall atmosphere of those sites. However, the online sphere
does not stay online. Recently, I was accosted by a man on the
street. While he was filming me—he later posted the video
online—he made repeated references to me being part of a Jewish
and Masonic conspiracy to commit genocide against Catholics and
Muslims and shouted at me that I was a murderer. Thankfully, my
team intervened and the police were nearby, so things did not
escalate to where they so easily could have. Nevertheless, it
left me shaken on that day and has led me to feel less safe when
out and about, and to take additional measures for my physical
safety.
Ultimately, hatred is only defeated by solidarity. We have some
incredible local initiatives to build relationships between
communities, which are more important now than ever, but
constraints on local government finance mean that some of the
more targeted support that can make the most difference is
under-resourced. I welcome the additional funding for the CST as
a result of the latest increases in antisemitic incidents, but
there is much more that the Government could do here. There is
also more that we can do with schools around education about the
Jewish community. With the Jewish community as small as we are,
it cannot be left to us to educate others about Jewish life and
our common humanity to build that understanding.
I hope and pray that we will see peace in Israel and Gaza
speedily, but ensuring that our vibrant and multicultural society
is one in which all our constituents can feel safe is something
that we must be proactive about. Our interventions and focus as
Parliament in this area cannot be led by events overseas.
(Leeds North West)
(Lab/Co-op)
I know that my hon. Friend shares my concerns about antisemitism on
university campuses. I recently spoke to Jewish students at Leeds
University, where there have been a number of antisemitic
incidents. One of those was when Moazzam Begg, who has diminished
the role of Hamas in the 7 October massacre, was invited to
speak. Jewish and other students raised concerns, but the student
union did not cancel the room booking, citing the Higher
Education (Freedom of Speech) Act 2023, which my hon. Friend and
I both warned would create scenarios that could
unleash antisemitism on campus.
It appears that we have been proved right, as the horrific events
in October and the misguided aim of allowing freedom of speech on
campuses have unleashed a wave of antisemitism Is
it not time that we looked at the legislation again, to protect
Jewish students on campus?
My hon. Friend is absolutely correct that there have been some
unintended consequences from that legislation, which were warned
about. The very people that it sought to stop from coming on to
campus have in fact been protected on campus. That is something
we need to look at again.
Hon. and right hon. Members have picked up on a number of points
in this debate, which I hope will help us to ensure that, as we
tear antisemitism out of our
society by its roots, we plant something better and more hopeful
in its place. This is a good place to start.
3.27pm
(East Renfrewshire)
(SNP)
It is a pleasure to serve under your chairship, Ms Vaz. I am
grateful to the hon. Member for West Bromwich East () for securing today’s
debate. This is obviously an issue of great importance to her, as
it is to me and others here. She spoke powerfully about the
worldwide phenomenon and about the nature of this concerning
upturn in antisemitism She also
spoke powerfully and clearly, as did the hon. Member for
Warrington North (), about the online
space, which is often just a cesspit. I am keen to hear more from
the Minister about how Government see the role of artificial
intelligence in this space, which I agree is a serious cause for
concern. The hon. Member for Washington and Sunderland West (Mrs
Hodgson) talked about the conspiratorial nature of much of this
material, particularly online, and the need to tackle it. I would
also be keen to hear more about that.
My constituency of East Renfrewshire is, on the face of it—and
indeed under the surface—a very nice but perhaps unremarkable
place. But scratch the surface even slightly and we are very much
more than that. East Renfrewshire is one of the most diverse
communities in Scotland. We have a fantastically active and
growing Muslim community locally, which enriches the life of our
area in many ways. We have a thriving and broad spectrum of
Christian congregations, which are also all doing good work, and,
similarly, significant Hindu and Sikh communities, which are all
contributing brilliant things to our area. Our Baha’i community
does so much to improve our local environment, and we are home to
a significant Jewish community also. In fact, the majority of
Scotland’s Jews have their homes in East Renfrewshire, and we are
very much the better for that. We are the better for the
contribution that the Jewish communities and these other faith
and non-faith groups make locally. We are fortunate as well to
live in a community where we respect, value and work with one
another, and where we support each other in difficult times. That
has never been more important, and it has never been clearer to
me, than at the moment.
We have all watched in horror as events have unfolded in the
middle east. Like the hon. Member for Warrington North, I have
constituents with family members and friends in Israel and
Palestine. People have been heartsore and so worried, and the
wider community has worried along with them and continues to do
so. Of course, these worries are now amplified by the spectre of
hatred and the scourge of antisemitism which has
been described eloquently today. Some who have expressed concern
to me locally have actually been members of other faith
communities, troubled by the worries their neighbours face. I
visited an excellent local Muslim centre recently to discuss the
worrying rise in Islamophobia, and was struck by the sincere
concerns raised by the people I was speaking to about the impact
on the Jewish community locally and the increase in antisemitism
The headlines might not always reflect that kind of thing, but
there is a deep and broadly held concern about the impact of the
terrible stain of antisemitism on our
communities. The hon. Member for Cities of London and Westminster
() spoke well about the issues
with neighbours and people’s worries. This is a real stain on our
society; and it is increasing, and alarmingly so. We have heard
today that antisemitism always
rises at home when there is conflict in the middle east. We have
seen overt threats. We have seen the horrible denial, the
stereotypes and the tropes online, but not only online. The
Community Security Trust, which does hugely important work,
reflects all that in its output. It has shared eye-watering
figures, which we have heard today, that should give us all pause
for thought. I was struck by the description we heard earlier
of antisemitism as a
“light sleeper”, according to the Community Security Trust. That
is true, and there is no excuse, no justification and no reason
why antisemitism should
ever raise its head or be accepted. Conflict somewhere else can
never justify hatred here.
No one’s identity should ever be a reason for hatred. That is
never acceptable. There is no place for antisemitism or hatred
in our communities. Nothing can justify expressions of racial or
religious hatred—nothing at all—and history has surely shown us
the peril of not standing up and rejecting intolerance and
prejudice. That rings particularly true today, and we need to
heed the lessons of history.
I hope the hon. Lady will allow me to use her as a conduit to the
Minister. She is talking about people holding particular views,
and I mentioned the Institute for Jewish Policy Research’s
previous study, which showed that up to 30% of British people
hold at least one antisemitic trope. Does she agree that now is
perhaps a good time to update that, and for the Minister to look
into whether we can fund another piece of research in the
area?
I am grateful to the hon. Gentleman for making that point. The
more we can do to shine a light on the realities of people’s
lives, the realities of communities and the issues people face,
the better. We are all the better—Scotland is the better, and I
am sure that others would agree that the UK is the better—for our
diversity and for the different contributions that communities
make to that plurality of cultures.
We’re always better together.
I am ignoring that contribution from the hon. Gentleman!
[Laughter.]
Scotland’s Jewish community plays a very important part in our
country and civic life, along with other faith communities. It
was right that the Scottish Government formally adopted the
International Holocaust Remembrance Alliance definition of
anti-semitism, as did my own party, and the continued dialogue
and solidarity is particularly important at the moment.
I was privileged to speak alongside our First Minister, , at a moving and profound
service at the Giffnock Newton Mearns synagogue in October, and
the mutual sorrow, concern and respect between the Muslim First
Minister of Scotland and the Jewish hosts of the ceremony was
clear. We have to stand collectively. The joint statement of
solidarity issued by the First Minister and faith leaders in
Scotland is really important; that joint commitment to working to
foster cohesion and good will across Scotland really matters. I
am grateful for the meetings between the Glasgow Jewish
Representative Council, the Scottish Council of Jewish
Communities and the First Minister, and for the exemplary ongoing
work of those organisations. The hon. Member for Brigg and Goole
() mentioned a number of other
organisations that are similarly doing important work.
It is really important that, as elected representatives, we have
zero tolerance of hate crime and Islamophobia. The hon. Member
for Edinburgh West (), who is no longer in her
place, spoke about the worry that antisemitism creates,
and it is really important that we accept that in our roles. Like
others, I have spoken to students and parents who feel
vulnerable, anxious and unable to express their identity. That is
unacceptable. Again, I am grateful to the First Minister, who has
committed to meet those students to hear their concerns, and to
ensure that they are well understood and can be dealt with. Our
universities are there for all our communities, and everyone must
feel safe and able to be themselves in them.
When I spoke to my constituents about Remembrance Sunday events,
I was very sorry to hear some of them express a reluctance to
wear medals or carry wreaths that showed their Jewish identity.
Nobody should fear laying a star of David wreath or wearing a
star of David medal. The irony that they were fearful at that
event should not be lost on us. We have heard about incidents at
such occasions and in day-to-day life. We heard about the young
pupils who wear baseball caps over their kippahs. People’s
identities are not to be toyed with; we absolutely must respect
them. We all matter, and we must all feel safe.
It is not just the horrible spectre of antisemitism—we have heard
some terrible examples of antisemitism—but the cumulative worry,
the build-up of concerns and the impact on people’s general
confidence about going about their business that matter. We need
to seriously take account of the anxiety that people experience
about the prospect of antisemitism There is
obviously considerable anxiety at present.
I am pleased that the Scottish Government recently published
their hate crime strategy, which was informed by communities with
lived experience of hate crime and sets out strategic priorities
for dealing with hate crime, including antisemitism That
really matters. I also thank Police Scotland, which has been
outstanding and constructive in my local community; it is very
aware of communities’ worries.
I am heartsore that we have to have this debate, but I am
grateful to the hon. Member for West Bromwich East for securing
it. I am deeply concerned that a creeping intolerance has
evidently ramped up over recent times. Scotland is a safe place,
but it is important that we are clear that we are not immune from
this old hatred. We need to stand collectively
against antisemitism We have a
particular responsibility here, and I am keen to hear further how
the Minister believes the Government can support that work.
3.37pm
(Blaydon) (Lab)
It is a pleasure to serve under you in the Chair in this
important debate, Ms Vaz. I thank the hon. Member for West
Bromwich East () for securing it, and my
hon. Friends the Members for Washington and Sunderland West (Mrs
Hodgson) and for Warrington North () for their important
contributions.
The horrific attacks carried out by Hamas on 7 October have
caused and continue to cause widespread grief within the Jewish
community here in Britain. On top of that, the substantial
increase in antisemitic incidents and offences in the months
since has created an environment in which many members of our
Jewish community feel threatened, vulnerable and unsafe, as we
have heard.
We thank the Community Security Trust for its tireless efforts
alongside the police to protect and support the Jewish community
across Britain. Between 7 October and 13 December, the CST
recorded more than 2,000 incidents of antisemitism including
95 assaults and 165 direct threats. That is the highest total
number of incidents it has recorded in that kind of time period
since its records began 40 years ago. Police forces around the
country have similarly recorded spikes in antisemitic offences in
the months since 7 October. We know that many hate crimes go
unreported, so those figures by no means reflect the full
picture, and nor can they fully capture the deep and tangible
impact that these incidents are having on the Jewish community as
a whole.
Of course, events unfolding internationally have had alarming
repercussions on many facets of community life. As we heard from
my hon. Friend the Member for Warrington North, some of the most
shocking incidents have included graffiti on a holocaust library
and a Jewish primary school vandalised with red paint. We have
also seen unacceptable words on placards at protests and rallies,
and a steep rise in antisemitic incidents at schools and on
university campuses. Threats have been made against Jewish
institutions and individuals across major online platforms. All
those disturbing developments have heightened feelings of
vulnerability among British Jews, a sizeable majority of whom
have said that they have felt less safe in this country since 7
October.
Sadly, the appalling spike in antisemitism over
the past few months has been paralleled by rising antisemitism across the
world. In Russia, a mob stormed an airport looking for Jewish
passengers to attack. We have seen arson attacks on synagogues in
Germany, Tunisia and Armenia. Jewish homes in Paris and Berlin
were marked by antisemitic graffiti. It is essential that we
stand together in condemning such horrifying attacks.
Urgent action must be taken to prevent antisemitic hate crime, as
well as all categories and strands of hate crime, which have
soared over the last decade in Britain. We must take steps to
ensure that incidents are reported, investigated and prosecuted,
and be clear that we mean business in tackling antisemitism Labour
stands totally and wholeheartedly with the Jewish community in
that vital task. That is why we are grateful for the reassurance
policing work that has been taking place across communities, and
why we supported additional funding for the Community Security
Trust. However, we remain concerned that the Government are
taking too little action, and that the monitoring
of antisemitism and
Islamophobia has been downgraded by the Government in the last 12
months. Specifically, incidents that do not cross the criminal
threshold are no longer being recorded by the police, despite the
Home Office’s assessment that such data is vital for targeting
resources and preventing serious crime.
Over the past decade, the staggering year-on-year rises in hate
crime have laid bare the Conservatives’ decade of failure to keep
our communities safe. More than 145,000 cases were recorded in
2022-23, and violent crime rose sixfold in the 10 years prior.
Hate and division have surged in response to conflict in the
middle east, and we desperately need reassurance from the
Government that they take hate crime seriously and that
perpetrators will face the full force of the law. We cannot and
must not accept this hatred, which corrodes our communities. Will
the Minister back our calls to strengthen monitoring requirements
around antisemitic and Islamophobic hate incidents in response to
the current tensions? There has not been a refresh of the hate
crime action plan since it expired in 2020. A refresh is vital.
Do the Government intend to refresh the plan? If so, when?
Between 7 October and 13 December, the CST recorded 133 incidents
of antisemitism related to
the schools sector and 157 incidents related to universities, and
there have been similarly shocking reports of Islamophobia in the
education sector. Has the Minister, or any of his colleagues,
issued full guidance on how schools should respond to such
incidents? Does he support calls for secondary schools to teach
about contemporary antisemitism
At a time when antisemitism and
Islamophobia divide our communities, cross-community and
interfaith activities can bolster community cohesion. What action
have the Government taken to promote positive, long-term projects
to support community cohesion, and have they sought to identify
and share examples of best practice at local authority level?
Based purely on incidents that have been proactively reported,
the CST recorded 625 incidents of antisemitism online
between 7 October and 12 December last year. Does the Minister
agree that, as colleagues have said this afternoon, the Online
Safety Act 2023 was stripped of its powers to effectively monitor
and challenge online safety incidents? What steps are the
Government taking to tackle antisemitism online?
Finally, can the Minister say when the last meeting of the
cross-Government working group on antisemitism was
held, and will the Government arrange for an urging meeting of
the working groups on antisemitism and
anti-Muslim hatred?
It is essential that swift and firm action is taken to prevent
antisemitic crime. In government, Labour will take firm action to
do so.
(in the Chair)
I will call the Minister next, but I remind him to finish his
remarks by about 3.58 pm to allow to wind up.
3.44pm
The Minister for Housing, Planning and Building Safety ()
I am genuinely grateful to my hon. Friend the Member for West
Bromwich East () for giving us the
opportunity to speak about this hugely important subject, and to
almost all hon. Members for their contributions. To the hon.
Members who have sought to politicise this, I would just say that
there are times and there are places, and this was neither the
time nor the place.
It is customary to start debates like this by saying that it is a
pleasure to serve—and, of course, it is an absolute pleasure to
serve under your chairmanship, Ms Vaz—but in truth, it is not a
pleasure to be here today. It is not a pleasure to have listened
to some of the absolutely outrageous stories that we have heard
over the past half hour. It is not a pleasure to be sat in a
debate that should not be needed at all. There is no pleasure to
be had in this discussion, and I know that all colleagues here
and outside this place share in that.
This debate is not a pleasure, but it is most definitely a
necessity. It is a necessity, because in this seat of democracy
there is an opportunity to call out the appalling acts of a tiny
minority in recent months. It is a necessity for us to shine
light on unacceptable behaviour, and to speak and articulate what
we have sadly seen in recent months from a tiny group of
people—that is, pure antisemitism It might
be dressed up as something else: it might be shrouded in a
plaintive sense of emotion; it might be a preamble of obfuscation
or confusion; it might be an inaccurate reference to fighting for
something else; it might be the imposition of a horrifying
hierarchy where Jewish deaths, Jewish injuries and Jewish blood
appear to be less important than any other; or it might be the
extraordinary insertion of context into the deaths of 1,200
people on 7 October. In truth, some are not even that subtle, and
are now explicit about it, but whatever it is—whether implicit or
explicit—we see it: it is present. If it walks, talks and acts
like what it might be, then it probably is. It is antisemitism
I want to be clear that no one in this room, nor the Government,
seek to close down debate. No one here seeks to conflate
legitimate criticism of one actor, one country, or one situation
with explicit discrimination and prejudice. No one does not
acknowledge the horror of war and the inhumanity of conflict—any
conflict, anywhere, anytime, in any part of the world. No one is
saying that we should not hear hard things; that is the mark of a
civilised, educated, compassionate and curious society. But the
other mark of a civilised society is calling out when things have
gone too far, both implicitly and explicitly.
Part of the answer is law—you cannot incite violence—but another
part is personal responsibility. There is a term that I hate; it
is massively overused and I never thought I would be saying it.
That term is “gaslighting”. But with the “From the river to the
sea” chant, there is the most incredible abdication of
responsibility for those who have used it casually, willingly,
publicly—even, for some, joyfully. It may not be the case that
everyone who has said it is antisemitic, but it absolutely is the
case that all antisemites would be happy to use it.
There may also be a staggering misapplication of emotion via the
trusted, weird logic of post-modernism that has taken root in so
many of our universities, which abolishes the agency of the
individual, dismantles the principle of the nation state and sees
society only through the prism of a power dynamic where everyone
either holds no power whatsoever, or holds all the power; and it
follows that, as a result, anything that those without power do
is virtuous and everyone who may have some semblance of power
must be disregarded, ignored and dehumanised.
Will the Minister give way?
I will not give way. Postmodernism is an insidious, regressive
and depressing call to all our worst selves, relying on false
binaries and erroneous arguments. Most of the time, it sits in
front of us without incident, in weird ideologies and daft PhDs.
Yet occasionally it pops to the surface and the utter
baselessness of it is revealed. At its heart, it needs to be
ripped out of our society. This is not Britain. It is not
supposed to be like this. This debate should not have happened;
we are supposed to have moved on from this. It is clear that we
have not.
(Pontypridd) (Lab)
Will the Minister give way?
I will not, if I may.
Like so many others in this debate, I have seen examples as a
constituency MP. Individual one: an employee at a Russell Group
university who raises money for charity in her spare time. She
started to email me on Saturday 28 October to ask whether it is
donations to my party or the selling of weapons to Israel that
influences my stand. She tells me that she does not agree with me
about “from the river to the sea” being a call for a race to be
wiped out. She tells me that groups such as Hamas will continue
while Israel does what it does.
Next, individual two: a nurse practitioner just over the border
in Sheffield, who lives in my constituency. She asks me how I
sleep at night, tells me there is collective punishment, that
there is a war crime and that there is genocide. Then individual
three: an ex-civil servant, an economist and a volunteer at a
children’s society, who decided to debate with me on Facebook how
much terrorism would be acceptable. Or individual four: a retired
nurse who posts sunsets on Facebook and talks about a plan to
free up land, with some rubbing their hands together for oil
deals and expansion. It is just incredible.
If someone had told me on Friday 6 October that within three
months we would have seen Jewish schools vandalised, missing
persons posters torn down, a massive rise in crime, Jewish
friends telling me they sometimes no longer feel safe in this
country and words that have real meaning being casually tossed
around, I would not have believed them. If they had told me on
Friday 6 October that the apparent genesis of that hatred was the
execution of 1,200 innocent Jewish people simply for the crime of
being Jewish, that would have been doubly shocking.
Recently, I spent a few days on holiday in America. When I was
there, for the first time, I visited the site at Dallas. One of
my favourite, although lesser known, quotes of John F. Kennedy
said that history
“is the memory of a nation.”
Just as a memory enables the individual to learn, choose goals
and stick to them, it prevents them making the same mistakes
twice. That is exactly what we need to do here and that is what
the Government and all decent people in society need to do.
The Prime Minister and a senior set of Ministers have already met
Jewish community members and key organisations to listen to their
concerns. As has been outlined by colleagues here already, we
have adopted the International Holocaust Remembrance Alliance’s
working definition of antisemitism and we
encourage other bodies to adopt it and consider its practical
implementation. The Community Security Trust, which Members on
all sides have referenced, has reported that incidents often
occur near Jewish community buildings, such as synagogues and
schools. The Government are providing protective security, such
as guarding, CCTV and alarms at schools, colleges, nurseries,
synagogues and community sites through the Jewish community
protective security grant, which has provided more than £110
million since 2015.
In response to my hon. Friend the Member for West Bromwich East,
I should say that we continue with efforts to reduce
radicalisation through the network of Prevent practitioners, who
provide training to school staff on radicalisation and empower
teachers to challenge extremism in the classroom. The reporting
extremism online form allows concerns to be raised directly with
the Department for Education. Since 7 October, the Government
have engaged with schools, colleges and universities to offer
support and guidance. The Education Secretary wrote to the sector
urging them to respond swiftly to hate-related incidents and to
actively reassure Jewish students so they can study without fear,
harassment or intimidation, as hon. Members rightly said they
must.
At the opening of the autumn statement, the Chancellor made clear
his deep concerns about the rise of antisemitism
underscoring the Government’s commitment to tackling it. His
commitments were backed by a further £7 million in funding over
the next three years to help tackle antisemitism in
education. I will take away the point made by my hon. Friend the
Member for Brigg and Goole () about research. I would be
happy to do that, and, if we can, I am sure we will try. The
autumn statement will ensure that support is in place for
schools, colleges and universities to understand, recognise and
deal with antisemitism effectively.
It was absolutely right and reasonable for the hon. Member for
Blaydon () to ask about the online space.
Ministers from the Department for Science, Innovation and
Technology recently convened social media companies and community
voices to discuss online antisemitism and to
understand the impact of this abhorrent content on communities.
As part of the implementation of the Online Safety Act, we will
remain in contact with social media platforms, and we have been
clear that they need not wait for regulation before taking
action.
I want to end with something that a Jewish friend once told me
many years ago, long before the recent challenges. We were in
conversation about our backgrounds, childhoods and families. In
truth, I thought I would educate her, as the working class kid
from Derbyshire talking to the posh girl from London. I told her
about my background, and I waited for her to contrast it with her
Twickenham upbringing, her gilded life at private school and her
middle-class comforts, which she did. At the end, she turned to
her Jewish heritage. It is something that she has always been
hugely proud of, and she spoke about it with verve, passion and a
reverence for history.
Casually, right at the end, my friend said one of the most
arresting things that I have ever heard. “Of course, Lee,” she
said, looking at me right in the eye, “I always keep a bag packed
under my bed.” Confused, I did not immediately catch on. I had no
knowledge, no background, no experience—I do not think I had met
a Jewish person until I was 18. I am not saying that this is
indicative of everybody in the community, but she said, “For me
and my family, it is something we have done for decades. History
taught us that we needed to be ready in case something ever went
wrong, as it did for my forefathers and their forefathers before
them. I don’t think it will ever be necessary, but it’s there in
case it is—in case this country ever stops being my home.”
That must never ever happen. We are proud of our Jewish
communities, just as we are proud of every single other community
that makes up this rich patchwork of the United Kingdom, and we
stand with them today. The United Kingdom is so much more than
the isolated ugliness that we have seen. This Government and this
Parliament—all parties here—and this country will continue to do
whatever we can to build a stronger foundation to support our
Jewish community in the months, years and decades ahead.
3.57pm
I thank all Members for taking part today. I want to quickly plug
the debate on Thursday, when, thanks to my hon. Friend the Member
for Cities of London and Westminster (), the House will be debating
the contribution of the Jewish community to the UK. I hope that
the Jewish community in the UK and around the world will be
reassured by the warmth that the debate will create, in contrast
to the very sad statistics and incidents spoken about today.
I thank all hon. Members for being here, particularly the hon.
Member for Strangford (), who ran here—no Westminster Hall debate would be
the same without him. I thank the Minister for his incredibly
powerful response. The commitment from this Government to stamp
out antisemitism has always
been a priority, and I am very proud of that.
The Minister also mentioned that he was asked how he sleeps at
night given his support for Israel. As other Members—my hon.
Friend the Member for Brigg and Goole () and the hon. Member for
Washington and Sunderland West (Mrs Hodgson)—will know, having
visited Israel last week, I have not slept very well. I watched
47 minutes of innocent Jews—children, women, men—being
slaughtered; I saw evidence of rape. I have not slept very well.
No person at the moment in Israel, or any Jewish person around
the world, is sleeping well.
It is impossible to get one’s head around the evil displayed that
day, so it is hard to explain how disgusting it is for people to
blame 7 October on Jews or on Israel, or try to use what happened
as a springboard for their own antisemitic beliefs. A rise
in antisemitism in the UK
in 2024, in response to the 7 October attack in particular,
serves as a national embarrassment. I am pleased to hear the
commitment from colleagues today to do all we can to reverse
that.
Question put and agreed to.
Resolved,
That this House has considered the matter of increases in
anti-Semitic offences.
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