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Why London Jews fear for their future in the capital
Evening Standard
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2 months ago
Why London Jews fear for their future in the capital
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00:00
Evil!
00:02
Kill killers!
00:04
What's wrong with you?
00:06
You're a Zionist, that's your problem.
00:11
October 7 changed my world, turned my world upside down
00:14
as it has for many British Jews and Jews around the world.
00:18
I saw that there was a party going on
00:20
outside the Israeli embassy in Kensington.
00:23
I remember the shock and the horror of thinking
00:26
that people were actually celebrating
00:29
this massacre, this massacre of innocent people,
00:32
this massacre of children,
00:34
of people who were simply at a party
00:36
and there were fireworks
00:39
and there was hatred
00:41
and since then I've had a kind of dual role
00:44
in writing a bit about the war
00:46
and a lot about antisemitism in this country.
00:49
Go back to Israel!
00:51
My name's Nicole Lampert, I'm a freelance journalist.
00:54
I've written an investigation into antisemitism in London.
00:58
From the moment I started writing about antisemitism,
01:01
I started getting antisemitism online.
01:03
Horrendous stuff, people would send me swastikas
01:06
mixed with the Star of David,
01:08
they would call me a fascist,
01:10
Zionist bitch,
01:11
scum,
01:13
apartheid lover,
01:14
baby killer.
01:15
That was online.
01:17
I have a history of some antisemitism,
01:21
but for most of my life,
01:23
hardly any.
01:24
When I was a school child,
01:26
I was uninvited from someone's house
01:28
when their parent had found out I was Jewish
01:31
and they started calling me a dirty Jew.
01:33
Then they would stand behind me and pee lessons
01:36
and say,
01:37
oh I don't want to go behind you,
01:38
you're a dirty Jew.
01:39
But generally,
01:41
that had been my antisemitic experience
01:44
until October 7.
01:47
And people then started messaging me
01:51
about what was going on
01:53
and people very quickly started sending me their experiences
01:57
and what was going on in the schools,
01:59
the universities,
02:00
they were sending me pictures of hateful messages.
02:03
And it then just continued
02:06
and I started looking particularly at schools.
02:09
That was one kind of growth area.
02:12
Children were being attacked,
02:14
they were beaten up,
02:15
they were being bullied in school.
02:17
Even in those very early days,
02:19
there were parents who spoke to me
02:21
and said,
02:22
I think we're going to have to move our children.
02:24
There were Palestine flags going up everywhere,
02:27
even before Israel had retaliated.
02:30
And although in some ways,
02:33
of course I can understand,
02:34
people want to support Palestinians,
02:35
I don't think they realise how that feels to us.
02:39
Like, that means you're against me,
02:41
that you hate me.
02:42
And of course for Londoners,
02:43
the demonstrations were a massive issue.
02:46
From the start,
02:47
it was clear that there was antisemitism
02:49
on these demonstrations.
02:50
And even if lots of people were there
02:52
for the right reasons,
02:53
they wanted peace,
02:54
there was a huge cohort of people
02:56
who were happy to have antisemitic placards.
02:59
And to call for jihad,
03:01
and call for the eradication of the Jewish state
03:04
by singing from the river to the sea.
03:06
From the river to the sea!
03:08
You will see!
03:09
You will see!
03:10
You will see!
03:11
You will see!
03:12
You will see!
03:13
So one of the people I spoke to for my pieces,
03:16
she lived in Islington
03:18
and considered herself at the heart
03:20
of a kind of diverse community.
03:22
Her husband is Asian,
03:24
she wasn't really part of the Jewish community.
03:27
She works in the theatre,
03:29
so she has a lot of LGBTQ plus friends,
03:32
and she would have these mad parties.
03:35
And then she described how,
03:37
on October the 8th,
03:38
she saw all her neighbours
03:40
putting Palestine flags up.
03:42
And I think it's quite hard
03:44
to explain the connection
03:46
Jewish people have with Israel.
03:48
And that's because there's only 15 million Jews
03:51
in the entire world
03:52
and more than half of them live in Israel.
03:54
And even people who didn't think
03:57
of themselves as particularly Jewish
03:59
or care that much about Israel
04:02
or think about it,
04:03
they saw this massacre,
04:05
which upset them
04:06
because that feels like
04:07
you're kind of your cousins almost.
04:09
And then they saw the reaction,
04:11
which was joy at the murder of Jews.
04:14
And I think that's what affected her
04:16
and lots of other people
04:17
who really didn't consider themselves
04:19
very Jewish,
04:20
weren't part of the kind of bigger community
04:23
as it were.
04:24
Quite a lot of Jews,
04:25
some are hiding
04:26
and others are doing the opposite.
04:28
They are wearing the Stars of David,
04:30
they wear a yellow hostage ribbon.
04:32
And sometimes she told me
04:34
how she literally got it
04:35
from her jewellery box
04:36
from when she was a child.
04:38
And it was a necklace
04:40
with Hebrew writing on.
04:42
And she talked about
04:43
how she was on the bus
04:44
and two young women with hijabs
04:46
came to talk to her
04:47
and because her stepdaughter
04:49
had grown up in the area,
04:51
she thought it might be two girls
04:52
that she knew.
04:54
Then they said they weren't,
04:55
they said Jew
04:56
and then they spat at her.
04:57
And then she talked about
04:58
how later on
04:59
there'd always been a menorah,
05:00
which is a kind of candelabra
05:02
that's part of the Hanukkah festival.
05:05
Quite a few London boroughs
05:07
have them out
05:09
and how within a day
05:10
in Islington
05:11
had been dismantled.
05:13
And this helped her decide
05:15
she had to leave London,
05:16
which is one of the most depressing things
05:19
in my article I think,
05:20
that people,
05:21
children are having to leave schools
05:23
and people feel they have to leave London.
05:25
I think stories like that show
05:28
that there is perhaps
05:30
this wonderful melting pot
05:32
that we imagine we live in.
05:34
It's not one community,
05:36
it's lots of different communities
05:38
and when you've got a war
05:39
that is as divisive as
05:41
what's going on in Israel and Palestine,
05:43
then it can create more problems
05:45
between communities.
05:46
So I wouldn't compare the experience
05:49
that I have as a white-looking Jewish woman
05:53
to someone who's of colour.
05:55
They will face different types of hatred.
05:58
I know from my black friends
06:00
they get followed around shops,
06:02
things like that.
06:03
And you know,
06:04
if you are brown,
06:05
you may get Islamophobia,
06:07
that sort of thing.
06:08
I don't get that.
06:10
But what we have is called
06:12
passing white.
06:14
So we might look white,
06:16
although often I'm asked where I'm from
06:18
because I don't look typically
06:21
blonde and tall and British.
06:24
But I won't get the same type of racism
06:28
but I'll get a different type of racism.
06:30
So I'll get called a Jewish princess
06:34
or I'll be,
06:35
obviously the things I've talked about,
06:37
I'll be called a Nazi
06:40
or a baby killer
06:41
or an apartheid lover.
06:43
What's wrong with you?
06:44
You're a f***ing Zionist.
06:45
That's your problem.
06:46
You like depravity and death
06:49
and torture.
06:50
You're right.
06:51
One pattern that surprised me
06:53
that I hadn't really come across before
06:55
was this idea of spitting.
06:57
So three of the case studies that I spoke to
06:59
had all been spat at,
07:01
which is quite shocking,
07:04
just the idea of just spitting at a stranger.
07:07
Another is just vandalism.
07:09
And one of the more chilling case studies
07:11
is this woman called Natalie,
07:13
who when she goes for dog walks,
07:16
she knows that there's someone who's watching her,
07:19
knows where she walks
07:21
and has written Natalie, baby killer,
07:24
Natalie, IDF lover.
07:26
So that's chilling that she knows that there's someone
07:29
who's watching where she's walking
07:30
and is deliberately writing stuff to upset her.
07:34
It's coming from all over the place.
07:35
Social media is obviously a big pusher.
07:37
For TikTok, it's been recognised
07:40
that it particularly pushes anti-Semitic content.
07:43
I spend a lot of my time on X
07:47
and I get the worst sort of hate
07:49
and none of that is ever taken down.
07:52
For us Londoners,
07:53
I would like to hear our mayor
07:55
speak out against anti-Semitism.
07:57
For too long, we've seen anti-Semitism on the marches.
08:00
For too long, we've seen anti-Semitism in schools.
08:04
We've seen anti-Semitism on the streets
08:06
and we have not heard enough from him.
08:09
He, as a prominent Muslim man
08:11
and as someone who is the mayor
08:13
that the entire capital city should be saying more.
08:17
One of the things that worries me
08:19
is that the Holocaust itself,
08:21
last year we found a number of councils
08:23
that didn't mention Jews
08:24
when they mentioned the Holocaust.
08:26
So for me, Holocaust Remembrance Day,
08:29
which is part of the curriculum in January,
08:32
it should be a day to learn about anti-Semitism as well
08:36
and to learn about how the same kind of hatred
08:39
that led to the Holocaust
08:41
is leading to hatred against Jews now.
08:43
But instead what we're getting is that
08:45
the Holocaust has become a kind of
08:47
catch-all definition for
08:49
let's not hate people,
08:51
which doesn't help.
08:53
So that would be a solution for me.
08:56
It feels like we're at epidemic levels.
08:58
New figures came out just this week
09:01
from the Community Security Trust
09:03
which looks after the security for Jewish communities
09:07
and we're at a new high.
09:09
So while it massively peaked after October 7,
09:13
we're at a new normal
09:15
where it's about twice as bad as it's ever been in the past.
09:19
And even when the war is over,
09:21
and I hope that war will be over soon,
09:23
I worry that it won't ever go back to figures
09:27
that it was before Corbyn perhaps.
09:31
You know, it will go back to the kind of figures
09:34
where it exists but only in a small number of cases.
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