Anti-Israel culture war of British elites is not a grass roots movement

Too many of our leading British academic and cultural institutions are in the thrall of left-wing activists, but anti-Semitism is far from rife at the British grassroots

By Peter C. Glover, The Commentator

It’s not just Hamas rockets that regularly strike Israeli interests these days. It is just as likely to be the long-range politicized ‘ordnance’ of British liberal elites. Given, that is, the British Left’s penchant for cultural boycotts against Israel.

Over the past few years the unions for British journalists, architects, doctors, even the Synod of the Church of England, have all sought boycotts or censure motions against Israel. In 2007 British academics added themselves to the list – imposing a boycott of relations between British and Israeli universities at a conference of the British University and Colleges Union (UCU).

In 2009, after yet another violent spat with Hamas in Gaza, Britain’s leftist culture warriors again took to the streets. In March, 400 British academics lined up outside London’s Science Museum to protest against workshops merely celebrating the achievements of Israeli Scientists.

A letter to the museum’s organizers, written by Professor Rosenhead from the London School of Economics and signed by 150 academics, said, “This is a dubious venture at the best of times but at this particular moment, after the offensive in Gaza, it’s particularly insensitive.” It went on to claim that the seven academic institutions involved in the workshops were “up to their necks” in Israel’s actions in Gaza.

In April the same year, London’s Bloomsbury Theatre was forced to cancel a Zionist Federation event that included an act put on by an Israeli Defence force dance troupe. That May, the Anglican Communion, yet again, condemned Israel for allegedly creating “severe hardship” for Palestinians. In the same month Liverpool city council cut funding for a festival that was to include an anti-Semitic play after the organisers rejected the chance to include a response play by Richard Sterling. And May ended with the hypocritical victimization of a young British Jewish film director at the hands of international British film director Ken Loach and others. The anti-Semitic nastiness of the British elites – every bit a match for the vileness of the leftie Hollywood glitterati – is exemplified by this particularly illogical spat.

Prior to his appearance at the Edinburgh International Film Festival (EIFF), Loach put out a statement, ostensibly under the auspices of the Scottish Palestinian Solidarity Campaign. In it Loach rounded on the Israeli embassy’s funding the attendance at the EIFF of the 31 year-old Israeli film-maker Tali Shalom Ezer.

“I’m sure many filmmakers will be as horrified as I am to learn that the Edinburgh International Film Festival is accepting money from Israel,” said Loach. Loach went on to call for “all who might consider visiting the festival to show their support for the Palestinian nation, and stay away.”

Such strong views expressed by a leading light at the festival, was sufficient to prompt the EIFF to hand back the small sum involved, however, the EIFF did subsequently agree to fund the film-makers attendance themselves. For the record, Ezer’s film, ‘Surrogate’, was a romance set in a sex therapy clinic – hardly the stuff of frontline politics. Ezer was simply targeted by Loach because she was from Israel. None of this bigotry is anything new.

A short history of boycotts

In April, 2007 the National Union of Journalists, which represents 40,000 British journalists, voted by meagre 66 to 54 to call for a boycott of Israeli goods demanding that the British government impose sanctions on Israel after denouncing Israel for its “military adventures” in Gaza and Lebanon.

The conservative Daily Telegraph suitably skewered the move by journalists as “brilliantly singling out the only country in the region with a free press for pariah treatment”. Even former Guardian reporter and Yahoo Europe news director, Lloyd Shepherd, was moved to respond cryptically: “I look forward to similar boycotts of Saudi oil (abuse of women and human rights), Turkish desserts (limits to freedom of speech) and, of course, the immediate replacement of all stationery in the NUJ’s offices which has been made or assembled in China.” They didn’t come.

Perhaps the greatest irony, however, was that on the very day the British NUJ passed their condemnation of Israel, the International Federation of Journalists was calling upon the Palestinian Authority to secure the release of captured British BBC journalist Alan Johnston. At the time, kidnapped five weeks before the NUJ meeting, Johnston’s kidnap did not even warrant a mention on the British NUJ’s mean-minded agenda.

Similar small groups of activists have equally influenced key votes at British medical and architect union meetings. British trade unions have also encouraged The South African Congress of Trade Unions and key ANC members to work for a boycott of Israeli goods. In February 2006, the Church of England’s General Synod voted to sell off shares , amounting to £2.5 million, in the US earth-moving equipment company Caterpillar as a company “profiting from Israel’s illegal occupation” of Palestine.

The British boycotters know what they are doing by striking at Israel’s higher educational institutions. Steven Rose, secretary of the British Committee for the Universities of Palestine, making his case for why Israel should be targeted, explains, “It is precisely because Israel prides itself on its academic prowess…that the idea of an academic boycott is so painful. Israel has uniquely strong academic links with Europe…and…receives considerable financial research support from the EU.”

All of which begs two fundamental questions: why single out Israel? And why is Britain leading the international boycott movement so obsessively?

Why Israel? Why Britain?

Writing in the Jerusalem Post in May 2007, Gerald Steinberg noted the impact that years of campaigning by politically active non-governmental agencies (NGOs) such as Amnesty International, Human Rights Watch, Christian Aid, War on Want and Pax Christi will have had. But still: why Israel?

Well, Evelyn Gordon, addressing the issue “Why Britain?” in the Jerusalem Post a couple of years ago, identified what she described as “two obvious reasons”. First, Britain’s association as America’s closest ally and, second, (back then) Tony Blair’s personal support of Israel’s right to defend itself. But, for me, Gordon gets far nearer the mark when she identifies the role of the activist liberal in British society.

“After all,” says Gordon, “the NUJ controls what Britons read in their papers, hear on their radios and see on their televisions; the Anglican Church controls what they hear from the pulpit; the UCU controls what college students hear in class; unions play a major role in setting and carrying out policy.” All absolutely true; but not the whole picture, I think.

It is clear from these various union boycotts that leftwing, highly vocal activists, having ingratiated themselves into key executive power in the UK, are turning the leadership of institutions into bastions of Western liberalism – fed by graduates from equally left-dominated universities. These same universities turn out most of our leading journalists.

As already noted, BBC, anti-Israel, anti-American political bias, in particular, is a thoroughly well documented reality. And though the Anglican Church has many evangelicals (and thus conservatives) in its parish pulpits, the General Synod and hierarchy of the Anglican Church, at least in Britain, remains yet another bastion of leftwing liberalism. I should know, I am an Anglican Lay Reader.

Even so, when the Anglican Church entertained more general calls for full boycott of Israel the subsequent grassroots and public reaction was sufficient to divert them to focus on the divestment issue only, the only issue within its specific remit. Similarly, trade union debates on boycotts have often led to calls being rejected outright.

In short, it is premature to conclude, as Evelyn Gordon did in the piece noted above, that as far as the security of the people of Israel is concerned Britain should be written off as “a lost cause”.

While it is patently true that too many of our leading British academic and cultural institutions are in the thrall of cabals of left-wing activists, factor in public backlash that often does not attract mainstream – read liberal – media coverage, and the inherently English (note, I do not say British) instinct for fairness, and anti-Semitism is far from rife at the British grassroots.

That fact alone ought to be anything but culturally ‘academic’ to our Israeli friends in the Middle East’s only real democratic, non-despotic, state.

Peter C Glover is a British writer specialising in international affairs, energy and media issues. See: http://www.petercglover.com

July 6, 2012 | 6 Comments »

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6 Comments / 6 Comments

  1. Some may remember the anti-Israel/pro-Fatah antics of Vanessa Redgrave several decades ago (she also liked to share certain hallucinatory substances with Gadhafi in his air-conditioned tent a decade or two before his ignoble death…). Not only was she prone to prancing around ‘half naked'(as one Fatah member complained to an Israeli participant in a ‘peace conference’ between leftwing Israelis like Uri Avnery and ‘palestinians’ in Cyprus decades ago)waving a Kalashnikov rifle while shouting anti-Israel slogans at Fatah training camps, she and her brother Colin set up a far-left group in England which was just as anti-semitic as it was anti-Israel. So much so, that a young, very pretty, leftwing English Jewish girl felt so uncomfortable at the blatant Jew-hatred directed also at her, that she fled without looking back.
    Then, in 2007, we had Susannah York making an “impassioned plea” for atom-spy and traitor Mordecai Vanunu as she stood on the stage of the Cameri Theatre in Tel-Aviv, until most of the audience started booing her (she later apologized).
    Previously, in August 28, 2002, Julie Christie and Emma Thompson added their signatures to those of another 217 peabrained, leftwing, anti-Israel Brits and others (incl. Israeli useless idiots)to the first British ‘boycott Israel’ petition named: “University Professors Call For European Boycott of Research and Cultural Links With Israel” which was the brainchild of Uri Avnery’s ‘Gush Shalom’, the Palestine Solidarity Organization and a group of weirdo British Jews calling themselves:’British Jews for Justice for Palestinians’ (nothing to do with the Neturei Karta weirdos!)
    And now we have Emma Thompson continuing to call for BDS (boycotts, disengagement and sanctions) against Israel. However, she isn’t honest enough to go the whole way and demand that her movies should not be shown in Israel – not in cinemas nor on TV movie channels. So let us all, individually, do unto her as she does unto us and ‘Send her to ‘Coventry’ (an English idiom meaning to ‘ostracize’ someone) together with the rest of the loathsome, Jew-hating, hypocritical motley crowd like Loach and his revolting ilk.

  2. The arrogant English are still smarting the loss of Palestine. Sorry punk ass losers. It is a very good thing, for the Brits, that they live on an island. They would have lost that years ago.

  3. Boycotting Jewish owned businesses, the idea that certain areas should be forbidden to Jews and confining them to a ghetto. Does this sound familiar? It is of course what nazi Germany did. What the elites advocate cannot be differentiated from nazism. They may think they are better than the punks who walk around with shaved heads and swastikas, but the academic, media, entertainment, artistic and government elites of England and Europe are the same as them. The entire “palestinian” movement is about negating the Jewish right to self-determination. By supporting palestinianism, they are in effect supporting Jewish genocide.

  4. Scottish Palestinian Solidarity Campaign

    I wonder if they included the folks in Glasgow (outside of academia of course) in this group, such as it is. After the failed attempt to blow up and burn down Glasgow Airport, I don’t think there’s much sympathy for muslims among the Glasgow “proletariat”. But I’m quite surprised at the patience that appears to be prevalent in my home city. Perhaps if the muslims formed their own soccer team, that would raise the energy level/enmity somewhat.

    Loach is just like the rest of the folks of the pretentiously artsy ilk: an overpaid and overvalued bully.

  5. Let us remember that the british created a state religion so that their ruler could divorce and remarry. They drew up the middle east on divide and conquer boundaries. It is not on the basis of morality that they were able to maintain an empire for hundreds of years. They still defer to kings, queens lords and ladies. It is an odd culture full of schizophrenia.

  6. Bah humbug. Same as here. Gays, minorities, palestinians are all trendy causes for these pathetic clergy who will do anything to try and seem hip and relevant.

    On a change of subject, I was watching a current affairs panel show here last night and they were discussing the possibility of a terrorist attack during the upcoming olympics. It was telling that they discussed, how and where. But they deliberately avoided the subject of who.