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  • Corbyn organised the Apr. 1977 defence of Jewish populated Wood Green from a Neo-Nazi march

  • EDM3933 7 Nov. 1990: Corbyn signs motion condemning the rise of antisemitism

  • EDM634, 11 Apr. 2000: Jeremy Corbyn signs motion condemning David Irving for being a Holocaust Denier

  • EDM1124, 6 Nov. 2000: Jeremy Corbyn praised the ‘British Schindler’, Bill Barazetti, for his WW2 kindertransport

  • EDM742, 28 Jan. 2002: Jeremy Corbyn signs motion praising football clubs for commemorating Holocaust Day

  • EDM1233 30 Apr. 2002: Corbyn was a primary sponsor on a motion condemning antisemitism

  • 11 May 2002: Jeremy led a clean up of Finsbury Park Synagogue after an anti-Semitic attack

  • EDM1691, 23 July 2002: Corbyn condemned attacks on a synagogue in Swansea

  • EDM123 26 Nov. 2003: Corbyn officially condemns attacks on 2 Istanbul synagogues

  • EDM298, 16 Dec. 2003: Jeremy Corbyn signs motion commemorating International Holocaust Day

  • 2004: Jeremy condemned news that anti-Semitic hate crimes had risen for yet another year

  • EDM461, 21 Jan. 2004: Jeremy Corbyn condemned the French government’s moves to ban the Jewish Kippa in French Schools

  • EDM717, 26 Feb. 2004: Jeremy signed a motion praising Simon Wiesenthal for bringing Nazi perpetrators of the Holocaust to justice

  • EDM1613, 8 Sept. 2004: Corbyn co-sponsored a bill expressing fears for the future of the United Synagogue Pension Scheme

  • EDM1699, 11 Oct. 2004: Jeremy Corbyn condemned arbitrary attacks on civilians in Israel and Palestine

  • EDM482, 12 Jan. 2005: Jeremy Corbyn signs a motion commemorating International Holocaust Day

  • EDM343, 16 June 2005: Jeremy condemned the desecration of a Jewish cemetery in east London

  • EDM1343, 11 Jan. 2006: Jeremy Corbyn signs a motion commemorating International Holocaust Day

  • EDM1774, 8 Mar. 2006: Jeremy Corbyn led condemnations of an Iranian Magazine soliciting cartoons about the Holocaust

  • EDM1267, 16 Apr. 2006: Jeremy Corbyn condemned Bryan Ferry for anti-Semitic remarks

  • EDM2414, 26 June 2006: Jeremy Corbyn praised British war veterans for their efforts to combat the Holocaust

  • EDM2705, 10 Oct. 2006: Jeremy signed a motion marking the 70th anniversary of Cable Street

  • EDM271, 14 Nov. 2007: Jeremy co-sponsored a motion lamenting the poverty and social exclusion East London Jews suffered

  • EDM153, 12 May 2008: Corbyn praised the efforts of the Jews in the Warsaw Ghetto during the uprising of 1944

  • EDM2350, 27 Oct 2008: Jeremy Corbyn signs a motion marking the 70th anniversary of the horrors of the holocaust

  • EDM173, 8 Dec. 2008: Jeremy condemned the Press Complaints Commission for refusing to sanction The Times for antisemitism

  • EDM461, 14 Jan. 2009: Jeremy Corbyn condemned a wave of recent anti-Semitic incidents targeted

  • EDM605, 27 Jan. 2009: Corbyn signed John Mann’s motion condemning antisemitism on university campuses

  • EDM917 26 Feb. 2009: Jeremy signs a motion condemning antisemitism on the internet

  • EDM1175 24 Mar. 2009: Corbyn signs a motion praising the heroism of British Jews during Holocaust

  • EDM337, 2 Dec. 2009: Jeremy Condemned Iran’s treatment of Jewish minorities in Iran

  • EDM850 9 Feb. 2010: Jeremy joins in calls for Facebook to do more to fight antisemitism

  • EDM891: 22 Feb 2010: Corbyn co-sponsors a motion calling for Yemen’s Jews to be given refugee status to the UK

  • EDM908 27 Oct. 2010: Corbyn praises work of late Israeli PM in his pursuit of a 2 state solution

  • EDM1360, 27 Jan. 2011: Corbyn co-sponsored a motion praising the ‘never again for anyone initiative’

  • EDM1527, 3 Mar. 2011: Corbyn backed Ian Paisley’s motion condemning the anti-Semitic remarks of Dior’s lead fashion designer

  • EDM2870, 14 Mar. 2012: Jeremy Corbyn condemned the sale of Nazi memorabilia at an auction in Bristol

  • EDM2866, 14 Mar 2012: Jeremy Corbyn co-sponsored a bill condemning the rise of antisemitism in Lithuania

  • EDM2899, 20 Mar. 2012, Jeremy Corbyn condemned a terrorist attack on a Jewish school in Toulouse

  • EDM168, 12 June 2012, Jeremy co-sponsored a motion condemning anti-Semitic attacks during EURO 2012 in Poland

  • EDM 195 13 June 2012: Jeremy attacks BBC for cutting Jewish programmes from Its schedule

  • EDM 1133 1 Mar 2013: Corbyn joins a chorus of calls condemning antisemitism In sport

  • 1 Oct. 2013: Corbyn was one of the few MPs who defended Ralph Miliband from Daily Mail antisemitism

  • EDM 932 9 Jan 2014: Jeremy praises Holocaust Memorial’s work on antisemitism education

  • EDM 165 22 June 2015: Jeremy condemns a Neo-Nazi rally planned for a Jewish area of London

  • Sat 4 July 2015: Jeremy co-planned a counter-fascist demo in defence of Jewish residents at Golders Green. The march was re-routed

  • 18 Nov. 2015, Corbyn used one of his first PMQs to challenge Cameron to do more on antisemiUsm

  • 9 Oct 2016: Corbyn, close to tears, leads commemoration of the Battle of Cable Street

  • 3 Dec. 2016: Corbyn visits Terezin Concentration Camp to commemorate Holocaust victims

  • In 2017-19 Jeremy introduced 20 new measures to combat antisemitism in the Labour Party

Interesting. I'd obviously heard and read an awful lot about Nicholas Winton, but Bill Barazetti was a new one to me. Interesting to see he visited Terezin as well (must resist urge to make Czech spy joke). It wasn't a camp that strictly speaking committed atrocities, but so bad were the conditions there that still some 30,000 people died. Some of the events from that time really were horrific, and I recommend a visit to Lezaky if anyone ventures outside of Prague. Incredibly moving.
 

  • Corbyn organised the Apr. 1977 defence of Jewish populated Wood Green from a Neo-Nazi march

  • EDM3933 7 Nov. 1990: Corbyn signs motion condemning the rise of antisemitism

  • EDM634, 11 Apr. 2000: Jeremy Corbyn signs motion condemning David Irving for being a Holocaust Denier

  • EDM1124, 6 Nov. 2000: Jeremy Corbyn praised the ‘British Schindler’, Bill Barazetti, for his WW2 kindertransport

  • EDM742, 28 Jan. 2002: Jeremy Corbyn signs motion praising football clubs for commemorating Holocaust Day

  • EDM1233 30 Apr. 2002: Corbyn was a primary sponsor on a motion condemning antisemitism

  • 11 May 2002: Jeremy led a clean up of Finsbury Park Synagogue after an anti-Semitic attack

  • EDM1691, 23 July 2002: Corbyn condemned attacks on a synagogue in Swansea

  • EDM123 26 Nov. 2003: Corbyn officially condemns attacks on 2 Istanbul synagogues

  • EDM298, 16 Dec. 2003: Jeremy Corbyn signs motion commemorating International Holocaust Day

  • 2004: Jeremy condemned news that anti-Semitic hate crimes had risen for yet another year

  • EDM461, 21 Jan. 2004: Jeremy Corbyn condemned the French government’s moves to ban the Jewish Kippa in French Schools

  • EDM717, 26 Feb. 2004: Jeremy signed a motion praising Simon Wiesenthal for bringing Nazi perpetrators of the Holocaust to justice

  • EDM1613, 8 Sept. 2004: Corbyn co-sponsored a bill expressing fears for the future of the United Synagogue Pension Scheme

  • EDM1699, 11 Oct. 2004: Jeremy Corbyn condemned arbitrary attacks on civilians in Israel and Palestine

  • EDM482, 12 Jan. 2005: Jeremy Corbyn signs a motion commemorating International Holocaust Day

  • EDM343, 16 June 2005: Jeremy condemned the desecration of a Jewish cemetery in east London

  • EDM1343, 11 Jan. 2006: Jeremy Corbyn signs a motion commemorating International Holocaust Day

  • EDM1774, 8 Mar. 2006: Jeremy Corbyn led condemnations of an Iranian Magazine soliciting cartoons about the Holocaust

  • EDM1267, 16 Apr. 2006: Jeremy Corbyn condemned Bryan Ferry for anti-Semitic remarks

  • EDM2414, 26 June 2006: Jeremy Corbyn praised British war veterans for their efforts to combat the Holocaust

  • EDM2705, 10 Oct. 2006: Jeremy signed a motion marking the 70th anniversary of Cable Street

  • EDM271, 14 Nov. 2007: Jeremy co-sponsored a motion lamenting the poverty and social exclusion East London Jews suffered

  • EDM153, 12 May 2008: Corbyn praised the efforts of the Jews in the Warsaw Ghetto during the uprising of 1944

  • EDM2350, 27 Oct 2008: Jeremy Corbyn signs a motion marking the 70th anniversary of the horrors of the holocaust

  • EDM173, 8 Dec. 2008: Jeremy condemned the Press Complaints Commission for refusing to sanction The Times for antisemitism

  • EDM461, 14 Jan. 2009: Jeremy Corbyn condemned a wave of recent anti-Semitic incidents targeted

  • EDM605, 27 Jan. 2009: Corbyn signed John Mann’s motion condemning antisemitism on university campuses

  • EDM917 26 Feb. 2009: Jeremy signs a motion condemning antisemitism on the internet

  • EDM1175 24 Mar. 2009: Corbyn signs a motion praising the heroism of British Jews during Holocaust

  • EDM337, 2 Dec. 2009: Jeremy Condemned Iran’s treatment of Jewish minorities in Iran

  • EDM850 9 Feb. 2010: Jeremy joins in calls for Facebook to do more to fight antisemitism

  • EDM891: 22 Feb 2010: Corbyn co-sponsors a motion calling for Yemen’s Jews to be given refugee status to the UK

  • EDM908 27 Oct. 2010: Corbyn praises work of late Israeli PM in his pursuit of a 2 state solution

  • EDM1360, 27 Jan. 2011: Corbyn co-sponsored a motion praising the ‘never again for anyone initiative’

  • EDM1527, 3 Mar. 2011: Corbyn backed Ian Paisley’s motion condemning the anti-Semitic remarks of Dior’s lead fashion designer

  • EDM2870, 14 Mar. 2012: Jeremy Corbyn condemned the sale of Nazi memorabilia at an auction in Bristol

  • EDM2866, 14 Mar 2012: Jeremy Corbyn co-sponsored a bill condemning the rise of antisemitism in Lithuania

  • EDM2899, 20 Mar. 2012, Jeremy Corbyn condemned a terrorist attack on a Jewish school in Toulouse

  • EDM168, 12 June 2012, Jeremy co-sponsored a motion condemning anti-Semitic attacks during EURO 2012 in Poland

  • EDM 195 13 June 2012: Jeremy attacks BBC for cutting Jewish programmes from Its schedule

  • EDM 1133 1 Mar 2013: Corbyn joins a chorus of calls condemning antisemitism In sport

  • 1 Oct. 2013: Corbyn was one of the few MPs who defended Ralph Miliband from Daily Mail antisemitism

  • EDM 932 9 Jan 2014: Jeremy praises Holocaust Memorial’s work on antisemitism education

  • EDM 165 22 June 2015: Jeremy condemns a Neo-Nazi rally planned for a Jewish area of London

  • Sat 4 July 2015: Jeremy co-planned a counter-fascist demo in defence of Jewish residents at Golders Green. The march was re-routed

  • 18 Nov. 2015, Corbyn used one of his first PMQs to challenge Cameron to do more on antisemiUsm

  • 9 Oct 2016: Corbyn, close to tears, leads commemoration of the Battle of Cable Street

  • 3 Dec. 2016: Corbyn visits Terezin Concentration Camp to commemorate Holocaust victims

  • In 2017-19 Jeremy introduced 20 new measures to combat antisemitism in the Labour Party

Thank you for putting that up.
 

  • Corbyn organised the Apr. 1977 defence of Jewish populated Wood Green from a Neo-Nazi march

  • EDM3933 7 Nov. 1990: Corbyn signs motion condemning the rise of antisemitism

  • EDM634, 11 Apr. 2000: Jeremy Corbyn signs motion condemning David Irving for being a Holocaust Denier

  • EDM1124, 6 Nov. 2000: Jeremy Corbyn praised the ‘British Schindler’, Bill Barazetti, for his WW2 kindertransport

  • EDM742, 28 Jan. 2002: Jeremy Corbyn signs motion praising football clubs for commemorating Holocaust Day

  • EDM1233 30 Apr. 2002: Corbyn was a primary sponsor on a motion condemning antisemitism

  • 11 May 2002: Jeremy led a clean up of Finsbury Park Synagogue after an anti-Semitic attack

  • EDM1691, 23 July 2002: Corbyn condemned attacks on a synagogue in Swansea

  • EDM123 26 Nov. 2003: Corbyn officially condemns attacks on 2 Istanbul synagogues

  • EDM298, 16 Dec. 2003: Jeremy Corbyn signs motion commemorating International Holocaust Day

  • 2004: Jeremy condemned news that anti-Semitic hate crimes had risen for yet another year

  • EDM461, 21 Jan. 2004: Jeremy Corbyn condemned the French government’s moves to ban the Jewish Kippa in French Schools

  • EDM717, 26 Feb. 2004: Jeremy signed a motion praising Simon Wiesenthal for bringing Nazi perpetrators of the Holocaust to justice

  • EDM1613, 8 Sept. 2004: Corbyn co-sponsored a bill expressing fears for the future of the United Synagogue Pension Scheme

  • EDM1699, 11 Oct. 2004: Jeremy Corbyn condemned arbitrary attacks on civilians in Israel and Palestine

  • EDM482, 12 Jan. 2005: Jeremy Corbyn signs a motion commemorating International Holocaust Day

  • EDM343, 16 June 2005: Jeremy condemned the desecration of a Jewish cemetery in east London

  • EDM1343, 11 Jan. 2006: Jeremy Corbyn signs a motion commemorating International Holocaust Day

  • EDM1774, 8 Mar. 2006: Jeremy Corbyn led condemnations of an Iranian Magazine soliciting cartoons about the Holocaust

  • EDM1267, 16 Apr. 2006: Jeremy Corbyn condemned Bryan Ferry for anti-Semitic remarks

  • EDM2414, 26 June 2006: Jeremy Corbyn praised British war veterans for their efforts to combat the Holocaust

  • EDM2705, 10 Oct. 2006: Jeremy signed a motion marking the 70th anniversary of Cable Street

  • EDM271, 14 Nov. 2007: Jeremy co-sponsored a motion lamenting the poverty and social exclusion East London Jews suffered

  • EDM153, 12 May 2008: Corbyn praised the efforts of the Jews in the Warsaw Ghetto during the uprising of 1944

  • EDM2350, 27 Oct 2008: Jeremy Corbyn signs a motion marking the 70th anniversary of the horrors of the holocaust

  • EDM173, 8 Dec. 2008: Jeremy condemned the Press Complaints Commission for refusing to sanction The Times for antisemitism

  • EDM461, 14 Jan. 2009: Jeremy Corbyn condemned a wave of recent anti-Semitic incidents targeted

  • EDM605, 27 Jan. 2009: Corbyn signed John Mann’s motion condemning antisemitism on university campuses

  • EDM917 26 Feb. 2009: Jeremy signs a motion condemning antisemitism on the internet

  • EDM1175 24 Mar. 2009: Corbyn signs a motion praising the heroism of British Jews during Holocaust

  • EDM337, 2 Dec. 2009: Jeremy Condemned Iran’s treatment of Jewish minorities in Iran

  • EDM850 9 Feb. 2010: Jeremy joins in calls for Facebook to do more to fight antisemitism

  • EDM891: 22 Feb 2010: Corbyn co-sponsors a motion calling for Yemen’s Jews to be given refugee status to the UK

  • EDM908 27 Oct. 2010: Corbyn praises work of late Israeli PM in his pursuit of a 2 state solution

  • EDM1360, 27 Jan. 2011: Corbyn co-sponsored a motion praising the ‘never again for anyone initiative’

  • EDM1527, 3 Mar. 2011: Corbyn backed Ian Paisley’s motion condemning the anti-Semitic remarks of Dior’s lead fashion designer

  • EDM2870, 14 Mar. 2012: Jeremy Corbyn condemned the sale of Nazi memorabilia at an auction in Bristol

  • EDM2866, 14 Mar 2012: Jeremy Corbyn co-sponsored a bill condemning the rise of antisemitism in Lithuania

  • EDM2899, 20 Mar. 2012, Jeremy Corbyn condemned a terrorist attack on a Jewish school in Toulouse

  • EDM168, 12 June 2012, Jeremy co-sponsored a motion condemning anti-Semitic attacks during EURO 2012 in Poland

  • EDM 195 13 June 2012: Jeremy attacks BBC for cutting Jewish programmes from Its schedule

  • EDM 1133 1 Mar 2013: Corbyn joins a chorus of calls condemning antisemitism In sport

  • 1 Oct. 2013: Corbyn was one of the few MPs who defended Ralph Miliband from Daily Mail antisemitism

  • EDM 932 9 Jan 2014: Jeremy praises Holocaust Memorial’s work on antisemitism education

  • EDM 165 22 June 2015: Jeremy condemns a Neo-Nazi rally planned for a Jewish area of London

  • Sat 4 July 2015: Jeremy co-planned a counter-fascist demo in defence of Jewish residents at Golders Green. The march was re-routed

  • 18 Nov. 2015, Corbyn used one of his first PMQs to challenge Cameron to do more on antisemiUsm

  • 9 Oct 2016: Corbyn, close to tears, leads commemoration of the Battle of Cable Street

  • 3 Dec. 2016: Corbyn visits Terezin Concentration Camp to commemorate Holocaust victims

  • In 2017-19 Jeremy introduced 20 new measures to combat antisemitism in the Labour Party

Fantastic, meanwhile now that he is actually in power can we see the placards of him denouncing anti semitism......thanks...
 
Indeed David. I’m all for a let’s have a go and see what the populace thinks about Corbyn or Boris, but I fear you will be disappointed......
I dont. Johnson is loathed in the country. Convincing tens of thousands of Tory backwoodsmen does not translate to him being trusted by the Biritish people.

The only hope Johnson has is if the LP centre 'left' and right wing decide to completely stab Corbyn in the back to reimpose their neo-liberal ideology on Labour.

Regardless of that: Jhnson is toxic. He has massive form as being a racist and a liar.
 
Fantastic, meanwhile now that he is actually in power can we see the placards of him denouncing anti semitism......thanks...

website

No Place For Antisemitism

Antisemitism has no place in our Party. Hatred towards Jewish people has no place in our society.
This page aims to provide Labour members and supporters with some basic tools to understand antisemitism so that we can defeat it.
A message from Jeremy Corbyn

Video first published August 2018


Understanding Antisemitism to Defeat it
Antisemitism is a poison that must be challenged wherever it raises its head. Hatred towards Jewish people has no place in our society.
Our short leaflet aims to provide Labour members and supporters with some basic tools to understand antisemitism so we can defeat it. To confront antisemitism in wider society, we must face up to the unsettling truth that a small number of Labour members hold antisemitic views and a much larger number don’t recognise antisemitic stereotypes and conspiracy theories.
The evidence is clear enough. The worst cases of antisemitism in our party have included Holocaust denial, crude Jewish-banker stereotypes, conspiracy theories blaming Israel for 9/11 or every war on the Rothschild family, and even one member who appeared to believe that Hitler had been misunderstood.
Antisemitism: a brief history
Antisemitism is an ancient and very particular form of racism. For most of their recorded history, Jewish people have been in the minority wherever they have lived and an easy target for scapegoating by the powerful.
The Middle Ages in Europe witnessed large-scale persecution of Jews including expulsions, forced conversions and killings. In the Crusades, hundreds of thousands of Jews were either killed in or expelled from Germany, England, France and Austria. All Jews were expelled from England in 1290.
In the 19th century, the scientific and industrial revolutions bred new manifestations of antisemitism resulting in pogroms and discrimination across Europe and the largest wave of Jewish migration to the UK.
Hatred of Jews reached its peak with the Nazi Holocaust. Between 1941 and 1945, through mass shootings by death squads, the starvation and squalor of concentration camps, and the gas chambers, the Nazis systematically murdered six million Jews, two-thirds of the Jewish population of Europe. The Holocaust’s unique horror must never be minimised; Holocaust denial and revisionism are profoundly antisemitic.
Antisemitic conspiracy theories
There has been a rise in conspiracy theories which see capitalism and imperialism as the product of plots by a small shadowy elite rather than a political, economic, legal and social system. These views do no service to the struggle for a just society. They are just one step away from myths about Jewish bankers and a secret Jewish plot for world domination, which reproduce the anti-Jewish tropes that we have seen throughout history.
These anti-Jewish narratives are often based on the idea of powerful Jews controlling the world. The 1903 Protocols of the Elders of Zion, the entirely fabricated minutes of a fictitious meeting of a secret Jewish government planning world domination through control of the media and finance, helped spread murderous Jew-hate. Contemporary theories about George Soros’ control of world affairs or a Jewish plot to facilitate “white genocide” helped fuel recent antisemitic attacks across the world.
Today, some conspiracy theories substitute Israel or Zionists for Jews, presenting Israel as controlling the world’s media and finances. Others contain further antisemitic claims, such as Israeli responsibility for 9/11 or control of ISIS. These theories ascribe to Israel influence on world events far beyond any objective analysis. Likewise blaming Israel’s faults on its Jewish identity, or holding all Jews in the UK and elsewhere responsible for what Israel does is antisemitic.
Antisemitic conspiracy theories don’t just do harm to Jewish people, they also divert attention away from the real causes of war, poverty and injustice.
Zionism, anti-Zionism and antisemitism
In response to 19th Century European antisemitism, some Jews became advocates for Zionism, Jewish national self-determination in a Jewish state. Since the State of Israel was founded in 1948, following the horrors of the Holocaust, Zionism means maintaining that state. Jewish people have the same right to self-determination as any other people. Many Jewish Israelis are the descendants of refugees fleeing the Holocaust or from across the Middle East who faced discrimination after the founding of the State of Israel. Most British Jews feel connected to some extent to Israel and many have friends and family there.
There are many forms of Zionism both in Israel and around the world and for many Jews, Zionism represents national liberation. The concepts of Israel, Zion and Jerusalem run deeply in Jewish religion, identity and culture, and for many are symbolic of a homeland, refuge, or place of safety. The sensitivities around these concepts should be considered before using them.
That does not mean limiting legitimate criticism of the Israeli state or its policies or diluting support for the Palestinian people’s struggle for justice, their own state, and the rights of refugees and their descendants. The impact that the creation of Israel had and still has on the Palestinian people means the struggle for justice for them and an end to their dispossession is a noble one; Labour supports Palestinian statehood and a two-state solution to the conflict.
But opposition to the Israeli government must never use antisemitic ideas, such as attributing its injustices to Jewish identity, demanding that Jews in Britain or elsewhere answer for its conduct, or comparing Israel to the Nazis. Many Jews view calls for Israel to cease to exist as calls for expulsion or genocide. Arguing for one state with rights for all Israelis and Palestinians is not antisemitic, but calling for the removal of Jews from the region is. Anti-Zionism is not in itself antisemitic and some Jews are not Zionists. Labour is a political home for Zionists and anti-Zionists. Neither Zionism nor anti-Zionism is in itself racism.
Learning about antisemitism to fight antisemitism
Labour exists to promote the social liberation of all people. That’s why we are launching a programme to educate our members and empower them to confront oppression, wherever it arises. Our first materials will be on antisemitism, recognising that anti-Jewish bigotry has reared its head within our movement.
Other helpful links and resources
Below are some helpful links and resources so that together, we can stand in solidarity with our Jewish siblings and ensure there is no place for antisemitism in our society.
 
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