Delight in Zion
I recently poured out my feelings about the horrific murder of George Floyd in the US.
It amazes me that some people are still trying to excuse what happened.
Let’s please stop it.
Whichever way you look at it, this was an act of cold-blooded murder perpetrated by a white police officer and his three colleagues, caught on camera for all to see. Justice must now be served.
The riots and deaths of both black and white people that have followed the George Floyd atrocity are just as disturbing and wicked. But this doesn’t take away from the reality of George Floyd’s murder, carried out by white policemen who abused their power to take the life of a black man.
As a Jewish believer in Yeshua/Jesus, ministering in Israel with a wonderful congregation of Jews, Arabs and others together, I have listened to some of my black brothers and sisters in the US, UK, Israel and around the world agonising over this racist murder.
In my previous blog, I described the collective agony of black people as a boiling pot that has been tipped over. The unbearable pain. The last words of George Floyd, ‘I cannot breathe,’ have echoed around the globe and left anyone with a heart for truth and justice feeling breathless.
In the quest to put a stop to racial discrimination, it is right for all of us to proclaim: ‘Black Lives Matter.’
However, as deeply and passionately as I support the heart cry for justice for the black community, I have been disturbed to discover the Jew-hatred that many in the Black Lives Matter movement hold.
For me, it is outrageous and appalling to champion the rights of one race (the black community) while spewing hatred of another race (the Jewish people and the nation of Israel).
I have been fighting anti-Semitism all of my adult life, having experienced it during my childhood in the UK, and as an adult, too.
Every time I hear of a racially driven attack or murder of a Jewish person, my heart fills with pain. It’s a pain that Jewish people all over the world share. An ache that penetrates to the soul.
When the leader of Iran declares, ‘We will wipe Israel off the map,’ he knows that his words will touch a deep wound in Jewish hearts.
As COVID-19 spread around the globe, so did the heinous attempt to blame Israel
and the Jewish people for this modern-day plague. Anti-Semitic conspiracy theories claimed that the Jews were manipulating global events to extend their power, and that they were profiting from the virus.
Now theories are abounding that blame Israel and the Jews for racial violence in the US. An article
first published by Amnesty International in 2016 made atrocious claims about the Israeli-US police training program. One false claim was that US police learnt brutal and abusive tactics in Israel, which they used to carry out human rights abuses in the US. Now these baseless accusations are being repeated by Black Lives Matter activists
, suggesting that Israel is to blame for the murder of George Floyd.
A fact that many of these activists don’t realize is that the National Organization of Black Law Enforcement Executives in the US spoke out
in favour of the training program (GILEE) in 2019. These mainly African American police chiefs wanted to put it on the record that they were fully supportive of US police benefiting from the vast experience of one of the most skilled police forces in the world.
Black Lives Matter activists are also drawing comparisons that don’t exist
between the black community’s struggle for justice and Israel’s treatment of the Palestinians. They claim that Israel is guilty of genocide and support the boycott of Israel (BDS).
(Many western governments have rightly banned BDS and correctly identified it as anti-Semitic).
What saddens me most is that Jewish people understand the black community’s pain possibly like no other group. When I first came to faith as a young Jewish man, I immediately felt a sense of belonging among the black Christian community. So many of their experiences were my experiences and their struggles my struggles.
Most Jewish people around the world are appalled at George Floyd’s murder and are standing in solidarity with the black community.
I appeal to all my black brothers and sisters who are rightly proclaiming ‘Black Lives Matter.’ Please don’t align yourself with a political organization that spews out anti-Semitic hatred and lies. If you also happen to be a believer in Jesus/Yeshua, you may want to explore the other values held by the BLM movement that are in stark conflict with biblical faith.
Dr Martin Luther King Junior spoke these famous words in August 1963 that still resonate today:
‘And when this happens, when we let freedom ring, when we let it ring from every tenement and every hamlet, from every state and every city, we will be able to speed up that day when all of God's children, black men and white men, Jews and Gentiles, Protestants and Catholics, will be able to join hands and sing in the words of the old spiritual, "Free at last, free at last. Thank God Almighty, we are free at last."'
Let those of us who stand for truth and righteousness repudiate racism in all its forms.
Let freedom ring!