As the most left-wing candidate you should get my vote. But you won't. And here's why.
Congratulations!
By securing a place on the ballot to become the next Labour leader you have put a spring in the step of many party members and trade unionists who feel that you embody their values better than any other candidate. (You embody only some of mine, trampling on some others, but I will get to that.)
You represent a clear alternative to the suffocating consensus that says there is no alternative to neoliberalism: marketisation, deregulation, privatisation, financialisation, an assault on the bargaining power of labor, regressive tax regimes, and cuts to welfare.
You will not tell us to be ‘intensely relaxed’ about people getting ‘filthy rich’ and you will not sneer at the trade union movement.
You are acutely aware that the transformation of European social democracy into a political force pursuing only a slightly kinder and a slightly gentler neoliberalism has caused the erosion of the emotional connection between the party and the working-class.
And you know that neoliberalism has eroded local democracy and the public realm, pushing aside actors other than those at the center, and then micro-managing Britain through a grim and relentless bureaucratising cult of quasi-government bodies.
On that basis you will secure the votes of many party members and trade unionists.
But you won’t get my vote.
You won’t get it because Labour’s best traditions also include anti-fascism and internationalism while your support – to me, inexplicable and shameful – for the fascistic and antisemitic forces of Hezbollah and Hamas flies in the face of those traditions. In particular, your full-throated cheer-leading for the vicious antisemitic Islamist Raed Salah is a deal-breaker.
Why did you lend your support to Raed Salah? No, he is not a ‘critic of Israel’, but a straight-up Jew hater.
You said in 2012, ‘Salah is far from a dangerous man’, even though the left-wing, anti-Netanyahu Israeli newspaper of record, Ha’aretz, reported that Salah was first charged with inciting anti-Jewish racism and violence in January 2008.
You said ‘Salah is a very honoured citizen’, even though Salah was found guilty of spreading the blood libel – the classic antisemitic slander that Jews use the blood of gentile children to make their bread. He did so during a speech on 16 February 2007 in the East Jerusalem neighbourhood of Wadi Joz.
I mean, just listen to Salah: ‘We have never allowed ourselves to knead [the dough for] the bread that breaks the fast in the holy month of Ramadan with children’s blood’, he said. ‘Whoever wants a more thorough explanation, let him ask what used to happen to some children in Europe, whose blood was mixed in with the dough of the holy bread.’ (The UK Appeal Court decided that ‘We do not find this comment could be taken to be anything other than a reference to the blood libel against Jews.’ It also decided that this would ‘offend and distress Israeli Jews and the wider Jewish community.’)
You said: ‘Salah represents his people extremely well’, even though after the 9/11 terrorist attacks Salah wrote this in the October 5, 2001 issue of the weekly Sawt al-Haq w’al-Huriyya (Voice of Justice and Freedom): ‘A suitable way was found to warn the 4,000 Jews who work every day at the Twin Towers to be absent from their work on September 11, 2001, and this is really what happened! Were 4,000 Jewish clerks absent [from their jobs] by chance, or was there another reason? At the same time, no such warning reached the 2,000 Muslims who worked every day in the Twin Towers, and therefore there were hundreds of Muslim victims.’
You said ‘Salah’s is a voice that must be heard’ even though he has called homosexuality a ‘great crime’ and recently [preached that ‘Jerusalem will soon become the capital of the global caliphate’ which will ‘spread justice throughout the land after it was filled with injustice by America, the Zionist enterprise, the Batiniyya, reactionism, Paganism and the Crusaders.’ i.e. everyone who does not follow his brand of Sunni Islam.
You said ‘I look forward to giving you tea on the terrace because you deserve it!’, even though the Islamic Movement [the northern branch of which Salah heads] has eulogised Osama bin Laden and Salah has incited Muslims against Jews by writing incendiary lies such as this: ‘The unique mover wanted to carry out the bombings in Washington and New York in order to provide the Israeli establishment with a way out of its entanglements.’ Who do you think he meant by ‘the unique mover’?
Why is that kind of conspiratorial antisemitism, dripping with threat and menace, worthy of tea on the terrace?
And it isn’t just a problem with Salah, is it? You said it was ‘my pleasure and my honour’ to host ‘our friends from Hezbollah and our friends from Hamas’ in the Commons.
Really?
Why do you not care that the Hamas Charter states that ‘Islam will obliterate Israel’ and enjoins all good Muslims to kill Jews, whom it blames for all the wars and revolutions in classic antisemitic fashion?
Why don’t you challenge your ‘friends in Hamas’ about the inclusion in their Charter of this canonical Hadith: ‘The Day of Judgment will not come about until Muslims fight the Jews (killing the Jews), when the Jew will hide behind stones and trees. The stones and trees will say O Muslims, O Abdullah, there is a Jew behind me, come and kill him.’
And why are Hezbollah your friends? They are an antisemitic Islamist goose-stepping ‘Party of God’ who persecute (and assassinate) liberals and democrats in Lebanon whenever they can. The Hezbollah leader Sheikh Hassan Nasrallah said ‘If Jews all gather in Israel, it will save us the trouble of going after them worldwide.’ (NY Times, May 23, 2004, p. 15, section 2, column 1.) Your ‘friends’ were enthusiastically slaughtering Syrian civilians on behalf of the Assad regime long before ISIS or Jabhat Al-Nusra joined the fray.
Yes, you will say I am part of the Israel lobby and people should pay no heed. Yes, I work at the Britain Israel Communications and Research Centre. But here’s the thing. I have the same views now about the Israel-Palestine conflict as I did when I was a member of the Socialist Organiser Editorial Board and you were with Labour Briefing back in the 1980s. (I think our two organisations may have even ‘fused’ at some point, though those days are a bit hazy now.)
My views have not changed since I was a member of the editorial board of Historical Materialism. They are the same views I had when we debated each other at Birmingham University some years ago: I believe in two states for two people, a secure Israel and a viable Palestine, a democratic solution to an unresolved national question based on mutual recognition and support for the right to national self-determination of both peoples.
I edit a journal, Fathom, which publishes many voices critical of the current Israeli government, from the Israeli left, from Israel’s Arab citizens, and from Palestinians.
I just do not understand how you can support so unthinkingly those political forces which oppose to their dying breath everything – literally, everything – the labour movement has ever stood for: trade union rights, freedom of speech and organisation, women’s equality, gay and lesbian rights, anti-racism, the enlightenment, and reason.
But as long as you do support those forces you will not get my vote. As long as you do, I will just have to remain politically homeless. Which is a pity, because there you are on the TV screen, talking with élan like a proper social democrat about full employment.
I want to cheer you on. Can you respond in such a way that I can?
Alan Johnson is the editor of Fathom – For a deeper understanding of Israel and the region, and works for the Britain Israel Communications and Research Centre (BICOM)
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497 Responses to “An open letter to Jeremy Corbyn”
Declan
I agree with lots of aspects of the article and im certainly no supporter of Hamas or Hezbollah. However, the same article could be wrote about the overwhelming support our government has given to the Israeli regime, whilst they continue to build illegal settlements in the West Bank and bomb indiscrimanetely in Gaza killing thousands of innocents!! Not to mention the refusal to let goods, health equipment and other necessaries leading to a huge humanitarian crisis and Gazas inhabitants feeling like they live in an open prison! Perhaps if I was a 22 year old living in Gaza today I would also join Hamas. And that’s the scary thing, the people I Palestine don’t see a way out of the situation and that creates dangerous situations where they are willing to go to great lenghs to be heard. Unless the west, including our foreign policy, changes to give a voice to the people of Palestine the situation in the Middle East will e as volatile as ever! Like I said at the beginning I am no supporter of Hamas but neither do I support the acts of terror from the Israeli regime. Until the west recognises that both sides are equally culpable and it’s no longer one rule for Israel and another for Hamas, the situation will never improve.
Nortal
The truth is that, in the affluent West, dust-filled concepts such as ‘working class’, ‘class struggle’, ‘unionised labour’, etc. have lost all attraction — except among the semi-anarchist and anarchist fringe and some old, Soviet-ear leftists. There is nothing ‘progressive’ in rehashing those anachronistic Marxist concepts, long discredited by decades of dictatorial ‘communism’. That is why old-style Marxoid leftists like Corbyn struggle to even get sponsored to run — let alone having any hope of winning the race in any social-democrat party. And that is also why, in abject desperation, self-described ‘progressives’ like Corbyn and Galloway increasingly turn to Islamists as last-resort ‘allies’. No matter that, as Prof. Johnson says, those Islamists stand for the exact opposite of progress. Thus, it is proven once again that ideological views move not in a straight line, but in a circle: just like the communists were in practice very close to the fascists, thus ‘modern progressives’ are now in fact close to Islamist obscurantism. But, like all moves dictated by desperation, this too will have the opposite effect: this unholy alliance — the ultimate betrayal of progress by fake ‘progressive’ politicians — will soon result in the their final demise into history’s rubbish bin.
PickledOnion
I have never understood why the left have embraced Islam. It’s quite illogical at first glance. Then again they may have come to the conclusion that if Islam is able to gain power they here will be able to ride its coat tails and join them in a socialist / Islamic utopia.
They are of course making a fatal error as Islam does not tolerate the godless socialist society. It doesn’t tolerate any society apart from its own. So the likes of Corbyn, Livingstone and Galloway (even if he a fake Muslim) will be the first to lose their heads in the post Western Islamic society.
Turkeys voting for Christmas.
Jason Iblis
Now that we’re celebrating the Magna Carta of 1215 and all its freedoms,how do you Mr Curbin explain the expulsion of the English Jews 75 years later in 1290?
Their descendants now live in our Promised Land!
The rednecks vote for a Jew as their future PM? Ha Ha Ha!
Jen The Blue
Just prefer curry sauce.