Week of antisemitism in Scotland comparable to entire 2013

The
Scottish Council of Jewish Communities (SCoJeC) released figures this week
indicating a huge upswing in antisemitic sentiment in Scotland since the start
of Operation Protective Edge.

 

According to the SCoJeC website, in the past week alone, the council
has received as many reports of antisemitic incidents as in 2013. Incidents
include synagogue graffiti, threatening emails and phone calls, and two cases
of incitement to break the law.

 

Community members have relayed to SCoJeC a
reluctance to wear Jewish symbols and speak Hebrew on the street. Scottish Jews
are limiting contact with non-Jews to “to avoid aggressive attempts to draw
them into arguments about the Middle East,” and university students report
feeling unsafe on campuses.

 

The council says community members
“are worried and depressed, and unable to sleep. A number of people have
said they no longer feel welcome in Scotland and are actively considering
moving to Israel; some Israelis who have made their lives in Scotland have said
they are afraid to say where they are from.”

 

The council website
lists four examples of what it calls “the disproportionate obsession with
Israel in Scottish public life,” which are increasing Scottish Jews’ unease,
including the Glasgow municipality’s decision to fly the Palestinian flag on August 5 in solidarity with
its twin city, Bethlehem.

 

In a statement from the Glasgow municipality Monday,
Councillor Archie Graham explained the flag raising as “a gesture of
humanitarian solidarity with the innocent civilians of Gaza who have suffered
disproportionately from the effects of the economic blockade and especially
from the recent incursion by the Israeli army.”

 

In the run-up to the
Glasgow flag raising, pro-Palestinian activist Yvonne Ridley published a tweet
calling for a “Zionist-free Scotland.” Members of the Jewish community have
reported Ridley to the police for this tweet, as well as for a blog she wrote discussing Israel’s
genocidal intentions in Gaza
.

 

Other examples include: Of the 260 members’
motions relating to foreign nations since the 2011 Scottish Parliamentary
elections, 50 involved Israel. In second place is Malawi with 14 motions,
and tied for third are Syria, South Africa, and Iraq with 12.

 

Additionally, since July 9, there have been
eight Scottish government statements about Gaza. “By comparison, there
have been just 4 Scottish Governments statement about Syria since January
2013,” states the council.

 

As a final example, the council writes that
since July 16 there have been three Scottish Human Rights Commission
statements about the conflict in Gaza, bringing its statements relating to
Israel to six – out of only seven statements about countries outside
of the UK since the establishment of the commission in 2008.

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