Media Storm - S5E3 Antisemitism: Israel, Anti-Zionism, and the politics of hate
Episode Date: February 21, 2025Between the rise of the far-right and Israel’s ongoing warfare, today’s world is a feeding frenzy for antisemitism, and many Jewish people are afraid of prejudice and attack. But as many provocat...eurs turn antisemitism into a political weapon, the root causes of racism are being overlooked and enabled. All the while, the mainstream media has become a weapon of mass destruction in the war of words - often failing to spotlight the biggest drivers of hate. Is it possible to be anti-Zionist without being antisemitic? What does Israel’s war mean for Jewish protection worldwide? Are Elon Musk and Kanye West’s competing for the most “Nazi swag”? These are all questions we’ll put to our guests - Anthony Feinstein, son of a Holocaust survivor and former comrade of Nelson Mandela in the war against Apartheid, white supremacy and antisemitism in South Africa. And Alex Kane, senior reporter at the historic, post-Nazi Jewish Currents in the US. The episode is hosted and produced by Mathilda Mallinson (@mathildamall) and Helena Wadia (@helenawadia) The music is by @soundofsamfire Support us on Patreon! Follow us on Instagram, Bluesky, and TikTok Learn more about your ad choices. Visit podcastchoices.com/adchoices
Transcript
Discussion (0)
The Hulu original series Murdoch Death and the Family dives into secrets, deception, murder, and the fall of a powerful dynasty.
Inspired by shocking actual events and drawing from the hit podcast, this series brings the drama to the screen like never before.
Starring Academy Award winner Patricia Arquette and Jason Clark.
Watch the Hulu original series Murdoch Death in the Family, streaming October 15th on Disney Plus.
What did your ancestors really do all day?
Beyond names, what were their lives like?
With Ancestry's global historical records,
you can discover incredible stories about how your ancestors lived and worked,
and for a limited time, you can explore select occupation records for free.
Imagine finding your great-grandfather's RCMP records
or discovering your ancestors' name in the UK and Ireland Nursing Register.
Don't miss out.
Free access ends August 24th.
Visit Ancestry.ca for more details.
Terms apply.
Hi, Media Stormers. Welcome to your Friday deep dive. Hi, Tilda. Hi, I'm here too. You are.
How are you today? I'm good, but I think I have an injury from editing this podcast. Is it like
finger cramp? Beyond that, though. So my arm started hurting and it was hurting when I was making
like a very particular move. And I was confused because I was like, what is the
this movement that is making it
hurt so much. And then I started doing some editing
for this podcast and I was like, oh my God,
it's repetitive strain injury from
a particular editing movement.
You know when you like zoom in and out of the timeline.
Yeah.
You can't see it. But I was like, oh my gosh,
I pulled a muscle from editing. So that's how
dedicated I am to you media stormers.
It's like real blood, sweat and tears going into the same. I know.
That's how much I love you. And it's not because of all
the tragedies happening in the world. It's because it's really
hard work zooming in and out of the timeline.
Yeah, it really is, guys.
Don't try it. Get an editor.
Okay, yes, this is your Friday deep dive.
And today we're doing an episode that was directly requested by a listener.
Some time ago, and we've been wanting to do it for a while.
And actually, every single episode so far this season was suggested by either a guest or a listener.
Oh, yeah.
Yeah. God, we're so good at listening.
Yeah, that is how much we love you guys.
So what is the topic?
So today's topic, as we said, suggested by listener, is anti-Semitism.
What is anti-Semitism, its hostility to or prejudice against Jewish people?
Anti-Semitism is, of course, a long-standing in historical issue, but it's intensifying in the current moment.
Now, hate crime figures are notoriously difficult to pin down, but the Metropolitan Police reported a 300% increase in anti-Semitic hate crimes in 2023, rising from 500,000.
262 incidents to 1,729 in a year.
Why is this happening?
Well, we'll dig into that on this episode.
But it's no secret, sadly, that the rise of the far right
has seen neo-Nazi politics re-enter the mainstream,
shattering a massive taboo in post-war Western societies.
And another global crisis fueling polarization and racism of many shades
is, of course, the ongoing conflict in Palestine.
The state of Israel's combined vulnerability and violence in the region
has been used on the one hand to justify indiscriminate, racist rage against Jewish people
and on the other, to appropriate the fight against anti-Semitism
as justification for an array of war crimes.
It's complicated in this political climate,
but the thing that cuts through politicisation is lived experience.
The violence in Israel and Gaza has had terrible,
consequences for Jewish people here at home. The number of people in Britain with anti-Semitic
attitudes rose by 50% in just 12 months. The fight against anti-Semitism and anti-Zionism, they
are won. Tonight, a political taboo has been shattered, a far-right party winning a state
election in Germany for the first time since the Nazis. Welcome to MediaStorm, the news podcast that
starts with the people who are normally asked last. I'm Matilda Malinson and I'm Helena
Warrior. This week's Media Storm, anti-Semitism, no one's political weapon.
Welcome to the Media Storm studio. Our guest today is an author, global experts in corruption
in the arms trade and former South African politician. The son of a Holocaust survivor,
he was the first MP to introduce a motion on the Holocaust in the South African Parliament,
where he served in the country's post-apartheid government as a member of Nelson Mandela's
A-N-C. For the second time, welcome to Media Storm, Andrew Feinstein. Thank you so much. It's great
to be here. That is a hell of a CV. Can I just say, do you ever hear it and just think,
yeah, all right? You know what? Not at all. It just happened to be where I was at a particular
time in my life. And when you're in that moment, you don't realize what you're involved in. And it's
only sort of subsequently when I refer to Nelson Mandela as my former boss.
And people's sort of jaws drop that I think, oh my gosh.
Yeah.
You never know when history happens.
Exactly.
Exactly.
And I think it's a function of circumstance.
I mean, obviously I'd been involved in the struggle against apartheid.
And I'd had to leave the country in 1986 at very short notice.
And if anyone had said to me, oh, don't worry, because, you know, in eight years' time, you'll be a member of parliament, we'll be in government, et cetera, et cetera.
I would have offered them a straitjacket.
I mean, at that time, was the party that you were part of it?
of even, was it still seen as a terrorist organization?
Of course.
Yeah.
It was regarded as a terrorist organization.
Nelson Mandela was described by both Ronald Reagan and Margaret Thatcher as a terrorist.
In fact, Thatcher privately encouraged the apartheid state to have Mandela killed in jail
because she thought it was too dangerous to keep him alive.
There's the first scoop of the episode.
Honestly, we could and we should at some point do a whole episode.
I actually really rather first side of things.
But all of this will inform, I think, what we're going to talk about today, which is anti-Semitism.
And for listeners, we'll also be hearing a little bit later on from Alex Kane, senior staff reporter at Jewish Currents, a US magazine founded in 1946 after the collapse, of course, of the Nazi regime in Europe.
He'll share some American media insights.
He just couldn't quite join us live in the studio due to time zone differences, and it would be a bit too early in the morning for him to discuss such a heavy topic.
anti-Semitism is of course in today's political climate quite a divisive and explosive subject
but it shouldn't be it's racism discrimination hate and it's on the rise
from january to june 2024 the british charity community security trust recorded reports of
1,978 anti-Jewish hate incidents up from 964 in the first half of 2023
That's a rise in line with the police statistics we shared in the intro.
And the report relies on self-reported incidents.
So the likelihood is it's a shy estimate.
Andrew, most of us don't see discrimination that doesn't happen to us.
So could you just share with us what does anti-Semitism look like in the UK today?
I'm going to start a bit earlier.
My own experience of anti-Semitism, I'm Jewish and very proudly Jewish.
And when I was growing up in apartheid South Africa, a state run by,
avowed neo-Nazis. I'll never forget my mom would take us to football practice in her little old
mini, me and a few friends. And one day there were too many of us to get into the car. And one of the
guys just sort of dropped a little thought. How do you get 12 Jews into a mini? You put a half-cent
piece on the back seat. And I didn't fully understand it at the time. I think I was nine. And my mom just
exploded, which was very unlike her. And afterwards, I sort of asked her, and she explained to me,
anti-Semitism is the hatred of Jews as Jews, and that this was an example because it assumed we
were all money-grubbing awful people. And it's this notion that all Jews think with one mind,
that all Jews are alike, et cetera, et cetera. So anti-Semitism is something that I've obviously
experienced myself as ever most Jews. It's something there was a huge part of my growing up because my mom
was a Holocaust survivor. In Britain today, I think we importantly need to put it in context.
One incident of anti-Semitism is one incident too much, because as you say, this is a form of
racism. It's a vile form of racism. But we also shouldn't get obsessed by just one form of racism.
So we have to consider anti-Semitism in the context, particularly at the moment because of what
is happening in Israel-Palestine, of Islamophobia at the same time. Now, there has definitely been an
in anti-Semitism over the last couple of years in Britain, which is horrific. At the same time,
there's been an even larger increase in Islamophobia. And we need to be aware of that. Because as Nelson
Mandela used to say, you are either against each and every form of racism or you're part of the
racism problem. And I think it's important for us to understand that being the victim of racism
and abuse isn't a competition. And sometimes when we think that anti-Semitism should be treated as
exceptional and it's more important than Islamophobia or anti-black racism or whatever else.
I think we get ourselves caught up in problems. But there is no doubt that it is rising.
And that's partly, in my opinion, a function of our politics having moved so far to the
right of racist politicians becoming completely mainstreamed that a lot of people feel
enabled to give expression to what a vile racist thoughts. And to a lot of
large extent why anti-Semitism is at the front of that is unfortunately because of the
state of Israel. There has been an attempt by arms of the Israeli state, by supporters of the
Israeli state, to equate anti-Zionism with anti-Semitism. Antisemitism is a hatred of Jews
as Jews. And therefore, in my opinion, to equate anti-Zionism and anti-Semitism is incredibly
dangerous, of course. Anti-Zionism can be used to be anti-Semitic, but to then draw from that
that all anti-Zionism is anti-Semitic, given that many Jews are anti-Zionists, is obviously an
absurdity. I wonder if quickly for our listeners, just define for us anti-Semitism, anti-Zionism,
what you mean by those terms. So Zionism is a political ideology that believes that the only way
to protect Jewish people, or the best way to protect Jewish people, is by having a Jewish
homeland, a Jewish state, which is what the state of Israel is today. Anti-Zionism, which, interestingly,
at the time that Zionism was developed, was also developed by Jewish intellectuals, but it had
exactly the opposite view. It was an ideology that believed that creating a Jewish state or a
Jewish homeland, in fact, undermined the safety of Jewish people and made them even more
of a target, and they were therefore anti-Zionist. Now, there was nothing about anti-Zionism
that was in any way anti-Semitic. These were all Jewish intellectuals. Today, even in Israel,
there are tens of thousands of Jewish Israelis who are anti-Zionist, who live in a state
that they don't believe should exist as a purely Jewish state. They believe that it should be
a completely democratic state where every citizen is treated equally.
for the law. And then as against that, as I mentioned earlier, anti-Semitism, and we need
to understand it very simply. There's no need to try and make complex what is a very simple
concept. Anti-Semitism is a hatred of Jews as Jews. Am I reading correctly then that to be
anti-Zionist, you were not necessarily even saying that there shouldn't be a state of Israel,
but that there shouldn't be a Jewish state in that land because the Jewish state in that land would
by nature be an apartheid state.
It would be undivocratic because there are non-Jewish Arab populations there.
That's exactly the point.
So what this tells us is if we actually analyze the way in which anti-Semitism
is being weaponized for a far-right political agenda,
in so doing it has turned the world upside down.
Because the state of Israel today is prepared to label Jews
who are not uncritical of the state of Israel as anti-Semites.
While at the same time, the state of Israel, amongst its closest relationships are obviously with Donald Trump's administration,
who has his supporters when they invade the capital over two years ago, standing with an Israeli flag and the chap next to him is wearing a t-shirt saying 6 million was not enough.
The state of Israel is incredibly close to, Nehendra Modi, the Indian Prime Minister whose entire political philosophy is based on anti-Semitism.
Victor Orban, the Hungarian Prime Minister, who uses anti-Semitic imagery in every single election campaign.
I have Jewish friends in Germany who have been beaten up by the German police because they are critical of Israel.
This is a country that has led to genocides and it is allowing the agents of that state to attack Jews because of their political views as Jews.
That is the state of the world in which we live today.
Thank you.
Now, I think that false equivalence between anti-Semitism,
anti-Semitism is going to be a big theme in this discussion.
And the first place we like to look here at Media Storm is, of course, the media.
Absolutely.
So let's take a look at some recent media mishaps in spotlighting and calling out anti-Semitism.
Now, when the first free Palestine, Palestine, Solidarity or ceasefire marches began happening in London
and across the UK, there was a lot of misinformation about the nature of the marches,
misinformation that was either started by or spread by the media.
Towards the end of 2023, then Home Secretary Soella Braverman
described the demonstrators as being involved in hate marches.
She said tens of thousands of people had taken to the streets
and had chanted for the erasure of Israel from the map.
Now, crucially, there have been some displays of anti-Semitism by individuals,
and groups attending these rallies.
These people are neither associated with the organizers,
nor are they championing the cause for which these marches are organized,
but they should be identified and penalized.
Thing is they should be called for what they are,
not pro-ceasefire or pro-Palestine, solidarity campaigners,
but racist anti-Semites.
Conflating them with an entire popular cause, as you've described,
not only serves a deeply political agenda,
but it's probably pretty panicking for people deemed at risk.
Just to give you a sense of this conflation, in March 2024,
the previous government's counter-extremism commissioner Robin Simcox
said London had become a no-go zone for Jews during the weekend ceasefire marches
and wrote about an increase in extremist disruption in the telegraph.
March organisers made a point that many Jewish people attend the marches,
a point that was often left out in media discussion.
March organisers also placed blame back on Minutes.
such as Robin Simcox for frightening the Jewish community.
Andrew, you've attended the marches yourself.
What have your experiences of the marches been like?
First of all, I have to preface what I say about the marches
by saying, I think in the world today, not just in Britain,
the US particularly, but in the so-called Western world,
what some people refer to as the global north.
Our politics are in crisis.
Because of the economics of politics and the amount of power
involved in politics, it is the least moral amongst us who go into
politics. And I say this as what Al Gore would describe as a recovering politician. You know,
you mentioned Suella Braverman. It's extraordinary that someone who is so hate-filled every time they
open their mouths is the person describing these marches as hate marches. But this is the reality
of our politics. And unfortunately, part of the reason in my opinion that this has come about
is because the media is no longer doing its job. The media, unfortunately, has become,
a vessel for the trumpeting of a lot of the very work, and this is I'm talking about the sort of
what we'd refer to as the traditional or mainstream media, of the trumpeting of some of the
worst excesses in our politics, rather than actually analyzing them and critiquing them,
they're simply trumpeting them, which is why we've seen, thank goodness, the rise of alternative
media and why so many people are getting so much of their news and information from podcasts,
for instance, which I think is a great thing. So to come back to the marches, I've spoken in
marches, I've been involved with some of the organizers, some of whom are Jewish, by the way,
the organizers themselves, let's not forget this. And I've marched. And they are the exact
opposite of hate marches. There is a solidarity and a coming together of sentient human beings,
human beings who feel for other human beings. There is a huge Jewish block on every march. So I do
not recognize this notion of hate-filled marches. And as I say, I think it comes largely from
the hate that is consuming the people who enunciate these sorts of views. Yeah, I spoke to
Holocaust survivors at the marches. That's the only time I've ever spoken to them.
It's not hard when you're there to find, you know, many, many Jewish campaigners and, you know,
either the media is not even turning up to these rallies to fact-check the hate that they are
just regurgitating from politicians, you know, or they don't care to fact-check it.
And when we stare up fear indiscriminately, it makes it hard to, you know, identify the real causes for fear.
And when we falsely use hate to diminish anything in anyone that doesn't agree with us, we often miss hate within our own ranks.
Now, the kind of anti-Semitism that has occasionally appeared at, you know, these marches, for example,
they often appear in every sector of society, including most of the political parties condemning these marches for it.
and also by some of the most influential and powerful individuals in our society.
Now, sadly, there is no shortage of examples of this in recent headlines.
Examples of people with extreme power demonstrating anti-Semitism
and chunks of the media have been accused of downplaying it when it is powerful people.
One example, of course, is Elon Musk and his hotly contested salute.
At an event following Trump's swearing in as US president,
Musk twice made a gesture that appeared to be the Heil Hitler Salute
banned for its Nazi links in Germany.
I'm sure you've all seen the footage.
The gesture was as much celebrated as a Nazi salute by white nationalists
as it was condemned as one by anti-hate groups and of course political rivals.
Musk later responded to criticisms of his behaviour on X,
tweeting, frankly, they need better dirty tricks that everyone is Hitler attack is so tired.
Firstly, I want to draw listeners' attention to something that may not have come onto their radar,
but it came onto mind due to friends in South Africa.
I used to work there.
I imagine it probably crossed your radar as well.
Right, some South Africans recognize this salute instantly as one used in the context of apartheid
by pro-Hitler, white supremacist Afrikaner resistance movement.
Now, South African-born Musk, of course, grew up in the context of apartheid.
He is also repeatedly claimed that the country is now oppressing white people who, just for context, own 77% of the land in South Africa, despite being 7% of the population.
Andrew, you grew up in apartheid South Africa and you encountered firsthand the anti-Semitism that often went hand in hand with white supremacism.
Did you happen to make this connection with the Musk salute?
Absolutely. I mean, unfortunately, Elon Musk is a cross.
creation of apartheid South Africa. He feels to me like a child of Hendrik Favut, who was
the racist Nazi, who was the architect of apartheid after the Second World War.
Elon Musk grew up in Pretoria, which was the sort of center of the apartheid state.
His family left apartheid South Africa when there was the first inkling we might become a democracy
in which all were treated equally. In the first gigafactory,
of Tesla. Gigafactories are these huge factories where the cars get made. There is an area
where all black workers have to work that management refer to as the ghetto. There is an ongoing
court case about this in the United States of America. This is a guy who has internalized racism
to deal with his own insecurities growing up in a racist state. Now, anybody who thinks that that
wasn't a Nazi salute should just be aware of the reality that two days later, a
Don Musk appeared as the keynote speaker of the neo-Nazi far-right-wing German movement, the AFD.
In December, Musk publicly endorsed the German alternative for Deutschland, or AFD, a far-right political party with deep ties to the neo-Nazi movement.
Its founder and former leader, Alexander Golan, has said that Germany should be proud of its soldiers in the World Wars
and that people should no longer reproach Germans for World War II.
Another prominent AFD leader openly plays with Nazi themes, shouting at meetings, everything for Germany.
A Nazi stormtrooper slogan banned in Germany.
This is the thing.
The main media debate that followed the salute was whether or not it was a salute rather than an intricate looking at Elon Musk's ties to the far right.
It's not just the Nazi salute that has shown us that Musk is anti-Semitic and racist.
Elon Musk did something yesterday.
He retweeted a post, a highly offensive, anti-Semitic post.
What do you know about that?
He sure did.
You guys, the post was by a user on X that claimed the Jewish communities push, quote, hatred against whites.
He responded saying, quote, you have said the actual truth.
Just, you know, I just want to pull this back to, again, the real life impact that this can have on people, on Jewish people who are living in a society where
neo-Nazi views, Nazi views are being normalized. A second recent example of very high-profile
anti-Semitism lately has been Kanye West, who shockingly ran an ad during the Super Bowl, right,
which means it was aired nationally across Fox TV stations. And this ad directed people to a website
where they would find one item on sale. A swastika t-shirt listed H-H-H-O-1, H-H, an acronym signifying.
Heil Hitler. And now once again, as with Musk, many, many media rushed to diminish industry
responsibility in facilitating his disgusting stunt. Variety reported that his ad couldn't have set off
any red flags at the time because, you know, at the time the swastika shirt wasn't listed on
the website. The Fox CEO emailed all staff saying the advert was, quote, completely outside of our
stations control. And yet, West has repeatedly, publicly, proclaimed himself to be a Nazi.
Weeks before the ad, he went on a multi-day anti-Semitic rant on X. He wrote, I love Hitler,
now what? He wrote, tellingly, Elon stole my Nazi swag. A couple of years ago, he was
literally banned from Instagram and X for anti-Semitic comments. Musk brought him back. He has
since had to remove him again. West has a social media following of more than 31 million people.
What is the impact of global celebrities displaying attitudes like this with practical media,
public, political impunity on real people?
The impact of this is terrifying because impressionable, young predominantly, but not exclusively
people will see this and think it's actually okay for me to behave like a Nazi.
And let's just bear in mind how Nazis behave.
They slaughtered 12 million people,
six million of whom were Jewish and they were slaughtered because they were Jewish.
Six million of whom were slaughtered because they were either gay or queer,
because they were physically or mentally impaired in some way,
because they were travelers, because they were socialists or communists.
So the fact that he's actually making money out of being a Nazi should be illegal.
Its impact on our society is terrifying.
And I fear that unless we do something about it, people are going to die as a consequence of this sort of complete insanity from people like Kanye West and Elon Musk.
And this is where we go from the territory of being angry about this to being deeply, deeply concerned about what the actual consequences might be.
and unfortunately, our politicians and our media again are responsible for this
because they make big stories out of all of this insanity.
So much of this narrative in the mainstream is a politics of division.
It's this mechanism of turning people needlessly against each other
that only serves the oppressors.
It comes back to the nature of our politics.
Our politicians generate fear so they can claim falsely that they can protect us from whatever the fear they're generating is.
And it starts with my own member of parliament, Kier Stama, who has aided, abetted, enabled and facilitated racism.
And that's someone like Kirstama, who's clearly an intelligent human being, says people who arrived in this country on boats must go back to where they came from.
Overall returns since this government came to office on our 9,400, that's up almost 6,000 since the end of August.
In force returns are up almost a fifth on the same period last year.
He's referring to refugees to people who are in the worst conditions of their lives, who are fleeing conflicts that Britain is often
enabling and profiting from through the sale of weaponry. This is the level of our political
discourse in this country. What this is is incitement to hatred and disunity. And all of our
mainstream politicians are using it in order to further their political careers. And it disgusts
me. I can agree with you more that Labour's like theatre around punishing refugees who have
fled war via the only routes available to them,
routes which happened to be illegal
because the last Conservative government criminalised them.
I think that that is straight out of the Nazi playback.
I don't think that's an exaggeration.
Absolutely. I would agree with you entirely.
And we should remember that Kirstama
who weaponised anti-Semitism
to become leader of the Labour Party,
they took probably the most anti-racist member of Parliament
and they labelled him an anti-Semite.
Now obviously I'm talking about,
Jeremy Corbyn.
Throughout his time as Labour leader,
the party was plagued with accusations of anti-Semitism.
Now, Jeremy Corbyn has been suspended from the Labour Party
over his reaction to a report condemning Labor's handling of the issue.
The report by the Equality and Human Rights Commission
identified serious failings in the Labour Party leadership's attempts to tackle anti-Semitism.
Now, Jeremy Corbyn is someone I've known for decades,
through his involvement in the anti-apartheid struggle and his international peace work.
I happen to be a friend of Jeremy's and I'm very proud of that.
I don't mind what people think of Jeremy Corbyn.
The point here is the double standards.
And that today in the world, it is the anti-racists who are being called racist.
Maybe something worth acknowledging and recognising is that,
while, yes, the time we are living in is shifting dangerously
towards an extreme version of what we would call right-wing,
you know, politics in a very binary way
of defining left-right politics.
Anti-Semitism is not exclusively a problem on the right.
Yes, as you've just very strongly demonstrated,
the identification of anti-Semitism among labor groups
was very clearly weaponized.
And I think one of the biggest takeaways we have from today's episode
is that, you know, anti-Semitism is not your political weapon,
wherever you stand.
But there is evidence that, you know,
it is not necessarily just like a right-wing thing.
21% of the...
I'm just going to read you, yeah,
a figure from an EU survey,
which basically said like a fifth of perpetrators
of anti-Semitic harassment
were described as left-wing
by the recipients of this abuse.
And at the peak of the anti-Semitism crisis
in the UK Labour Party in 2019,
and 42% of British Jews
said that they would seriously consider
leaving the country if Jeremy Corbyn became Prime Minister at that time.
Right.
So when you look at those sort of figures, you've got to look at the methodology.
That's what investigators do.
Absolutely.
So you are asking, of course, there is anti-Semitism on the left.
I think let's just suggest that because yes, yes, the campaign was weaponized.
I want to say something else about that.
Okay.
I have been politically active in the most racist state that had existed until that time in the post-World War II world, okay,
in South Africa. And of course, I've seen various forms of racism on the left. But let me tell you
something that is so blatantly obvious to anybody who has been engaged in politics for any length
of time. The amount of racism, including anti-Semitism that comes from the right, is so much
bigger than the racism you find on the left. And the reality is the scaremongering about the
Labor Party and about Jeremy Corbyn was to me particularly ironic. Why? Because the EHRC decides to do a
report specifically into anti-Semitism and the Labour Party. That wasn't about anti-Semitism. That was
about the Labour Party under Jeremy Corbyn. And the massive fear of the British establishment of
Jeremy Corbyn, somebody who said he would suspend all British arms sales to non-democratic governments
on the day he came into office.
That's what terrifies people, okay,
and the way in which the media projects what Jeremy Corbyn is.
The LSC, the London School of Economics, did a survey
that found that 74% of the statements
that Jeremy Corbyn made during the 2017 election campaign
were misrepresented by the media.
74%.
So the point I'm trying to make is let's not skew the narrative
and that what we need to look at is the real.
real picture, not just in Britain, but globally. And that picture, whether we like it or not,
shows that political entities to the right of the political spectrum. And of course, we're
defining this in very normative terms. And especially political entities to the far right
of the political spectrum exhibit far, far greater instances of racism, including anti-Semitism.
Absolutely. But doesn't that whole discussion we just had, I mean, doesn't that point to the issue
here, which is that as soon as anti-Semitism or any kind of racism is weaponised, as soon as,
you know, the investigation to anti-Semitism is actually a political campaign, we stop talking
about anti-Semitism. It becomes about politics. No, we don't. You know, why do you say we
stop talking about anti-Semitism? I get called on at least a weekly basis.
Wait, wait, can we just take the tone down? Because I'm not trying to undermine anything that
you just said. I just, I think that there's a really universal.
a lying issue, that anyone listening, wherever their political views may be, something that they
can take away from this is that we need to separate politics. It isn't a political question. It's a
human question, right? Is hate or not hate? But human questions are political questions. And I don't
think one should... But hate is in all of us, right? That's the enemy. Of course it is. But the reality
is that you can't separate issues of racism from issues of politics because politics uses issues of
I mean, I would agree with you that when anti-Semitism is weaponized, the idea of
anti-Semitism loses its meaning because people define anti-Semitism as something to suit
their political position.
And what that does is it means anti-Semitism, which is very simple.
Hatred of Jews as Jews, which is where we started, loses its meaning.
But to say we stop speaking about anti-Semitism, the reason that I respond to that is the
opposite happens when we weaponize it.
So, for instance, not a week goes by where on social media or in some event or broadcast that I'm doing,
someone doesn't either call me a self-hating anti-Semitic Jew or describe my mother
because she survived the Holocaust, hidden in a coal cellar for three and a half years
and lost dozens of her family, mainly in Auschwitz, where I've lectured on genocide prevention.
And I am called a self-hating anti-Semitic Jew.
And they say, and your mother must have been a cap, which is a Nazi collaborator, if she survived.
She was seven years old in 1938 when Austria was occupied by the Nazis.
And amongst other people, a rabbi made that statement on social media.
My God.
So it's not that we stop talking about anti-Semitism.
It's that the weaponization of anti-Semitism is very, very dangerous for Jews.
And unfortunately, our politicians, including my own MP, who should be defending Jews in his constituency,
is actually part of the mob attacking Jews in his own constituency if we happen to have political views that are different to his.
That is the state we are in.
Now, when we think about what this all comes down to, I agree with you entirely.
And what I appreciate about the fact that you've had this topic on today
is because the weaponization of anti-Semitism
undermines our ability to live in a non-racial world,
to live in a world in which everybody is treated
with the respect and dignity they deserve.
Andrew Feinstein, thank you for joining us.
And before we lose you, is there anything that you have to plug?
Is there anywhere that listeners can follow you?
I'm on all of the usual social media.
For my sins, I have quite a big profile on X and look at the work of my organisation,
Shadowworld Investigations at shadowworld investigations.org
because the world of militarism and the arms trade, unfortunately,
has become so tied in to issues of politics, two issues of racism.
Now, before we wrap up, one more person we want to hear from for some insights into what
this debate and topic looks like in the US is Alex Kaine. Welcome, Alex. Thank you for joining me.
Thanks for having me on. So we asked our guest, Andrew Feinstein, about what anti-Semitism in the UK
looks like today. What does it look like in the US? Is anti-Semitism escalating?
Yeah, it's a complicated question. I think it's clear that particularly in the time period that I've been focusing on issues around anti-Semitism and the politics of Israel, Palestine, and where they intersect, that it has been on the rise. And there's a number of various trigger points that we can point to, I think, beginning in 2015 and 2016, we had the rise of Donald Trump as a major political force and that,
empowered the so-called alt-right, which was openly white supremacist and was a, you know,
a coalition of neo-Nazis and online trolls and that far-right political spectrum in between.
And we saw that, of course, sort of culminate in the infamous Charlottesville protests and riot
that resulted in the death of Heather Heyer in 2017.
That was an important trigger point.
But I think probably the more recent trigger point was October 7th and the aftermath.
when Israel began its genocidal campaign in retaliation for the Hamas alat October 7th attacks,
we did see a spike in anti-Semitism.
This is often the case.
Academics have studied this, that when Israeli military operations occur,
incidents of anti-Semitism spike,
and we have definitely seen that in the United States.
Because people, in doing so, are conflating American Jews with Israeli Jews
and Zionism with Judaism.
And we have to, of course, be very careful to differentiate between those two
because, of course, there are a large minority of Jews who are anti-Zionists.
And, of course, just as a general principle,
people should not be holding individual Jews
or individual Jewish institutions accountable for the actions of a foreign government.
Now, that said, there is also a lot of what is claimed or classified
as anti-Semitism by major American Jewish organizations that, in my view, and many other
scholars and activists and advocates' view is simply not anti-Semitism and is rather
criticism of the Israeli government or anti-Zionism. For example, the most prominent organization
that tracks anti-Semitism in the United States is the Anti-Defamation League.
They release reports every year saying that there are massive spikes in anti-Semitism
in the United States. And I don't doubt that there are, in fact, massive spikes.
But the problem with the ADL data, as we have shown at Jewish currents in a number of pieces,
is that they classify basic anti-Zionist speech as anti-Semitic.
And so that's where it gets difficult to actually quantify.
So just to sum up, yes, it is a problem.
Yes, it has spiked.
But there's also a lot of nuance and gray area within that.
Is the U.S.
unequivocal in its support for Israel?
And if so, why?
I mean, it is sort of the million-dollar question here.
I mean, there has been a very large Palestine solidarity movement in the United States.
And so there has been a massive shift in public opinion in terms of how people in the United
States are viewing the Israeli government.
But that shift in public opinion has certainly not translated into shifts in policy in the
United States.
There's many reasons for that.
And it also depends on what side of the political spectrum you're talking about.
So on the sort of right-wing side of the political spectrum, you have white Christian evangelicals
who form a core of the Republican Party base, who have sort of biblical, inflected worldview that
sees support for Israel as integral. And I think that mixes in with an imperial worldview, a worldview in
which the United States should be the world hegemon, the global hegemon, and that Israel is a very
important partner in that. And so that's obviously not a worldview only shared by Christian
evangelicals or only shared by people in the Republican Party, but I think it's widely shared
across the Washington political establishment. I mean, after 9-11, Israel cast itself as on the front
lines of fighting for Western civilization against Islamist terror. And now you have a sort of shared
antipathy to Iran in the region. And then, of course, there's the domestic sort of money and
politics question where you have over the decades a very influential moneyed political
lobbying operation, the most famous of which, of course, is APEC, the American Israel
Public Affairs Committee, that is significant. And then I would say the last thing to consider
is one of the reasons why Republican politicians and frankly Democratic politicians as well
are so freaked out about the Palestine Solidarity Movement is because people are talking about
issues of settler colonialism and reparations and refugee return. And all of these are issues
that strike at the heart of the United States. You've long had calls to, say, issue reparations
to black Americans and their families who were impacted by slavery, to issue reparations to
indigenous Americans whose land was stolen. And so I think people in the United States who
view the United States as an exceptional nation sees calls.
for the right of return for Palestinians, for reparations for Palestinians, for the end of Israeli
colonialism as having echoes that they do not want to hear apply to the United States.
Thank you so much for that answer. Very thorough and very helpful. I wonder just finally,
does this mean that the bulk of the Jewish population in the U.S., they do feel attacked
when people criticize Israel or the actions of the Israeli government?
I think significant amounts of Jewish people do in the United States.
Not all.
And I just want to say it at the outset that it's certainly not all.
And there are differences even among sort of Jewish denomination.
You know, there's reform Judaism.
There's Orthodox Judaism.
These different communities have different relationships to the state of Israel.
But despite those differences, I do think there is something of a consensus for many Jews that,
and this was particularly the case after October 7th that, you know,
criticizing Israel is an attack on Jews.
The basic cultural, the sort of baseline Jew in America grows up and is told that Israel is
your homeland and Israelis are your people and, you know, Judaism and Zionism and one
of the same.
And so when you hear people attack Zionism, you hear it as an attack on Jews.
And so it's not surprising when people are educated in those institutions that send that
message that that is the case. Now, last thing I'll say is that I would say that there's a
significant minority of Jews, whether they say they're anti-Zionist or non-Zionists or even
sort of liberal Zionists who believe in Israel's a Jewish state, but are critical of Israel's
occupation. We don't take it as an attack. And I think that it's a very large group of people
as well. So there is no one singular Jewish community. There's a significant minority, growing
minority of Jews who are horrified by Israel's actions and are speaking out just as other groups
of people are speaking out against the genocide in Gaza.
Thank you for listening. If you want to support Media Storm, you can do so on Patreon for less
than a cup of coffee a month. The link is in the show notes and a special shout-outs to everyone
in our Patreon community already. We appreciate you so much. And if you enjoyed this episode,
please send it to someone.
Word of mouth is still the best way
to grow a podcast, so please do tell
your friends. You can follow us
on social media at Matilda Mal
at Helen Awadia and follow
the show at MediaStorm Pod.
MediaStorm is an award-winning podcast
produced by Helen Awadier and Matilda Malanson.
The music is by Samfire.
Thank you.
