Delight in Zion
During my recent trip to Malaysia, I had the privilege of visiting the site where the only synagogue that has ever existed in Malaysia once stood, on the beautiful island of Penang.
The history of the Jewish people has included a succession of painful demands to leave their diaspora homes. The dispersion of the Jewish people was not just one eviction from their biblical home of Israel, but dispersion upon dispersion, constantly having to flee hate-filled antisemitic nations.
The expulsions of the Jews from Spain and Portugal during the Spanish Inquisition of the 15th century.
The Jewish flight from pogroms in Russia and Poland in the 1880s.
The Middle Ages crusades that slaughtered Jews and Muslims across Europe.
The expulsion of Jews from the land of my birth, the UK, in the 13th century.
And, of course, the Holocaust during World War II that claimed more than 6 million Jewish lives.
In 1957, the Jews of Penang were told they would have to leave the newly independent Islamic nation of Malaysia.
Today the building that once served the small Jewish community of Penang is a small coffee and breakfast bar. As I pondered the plight of that 1950s community of Jews in Penang facing the prospect of eviction, I remembered my own childhood experience on a London bus one day as I travelled home from school.
I was wearing my Jewish school uniform, which had a menorah as the school badge, and I had a kippa clipped to my hair. As I paid my fare to the driver, he loudly declared: ‘Move along Jew boy!’ That was sadly not an unusual experience for Jewish children in England.
‘Move along Jew boy.’ That is what the Jews of Malaysia heard in the 1950s in Penang. It is what over 850,000 Jewish people heard in the Arab lands they had called home for centuries until Israel’s independence in 1948, when they had to flee for their lives, and most settled in Israel.
No wonder my people are sometimes called ‘wandering Jews.’ These wanderings have been the inevitable result of centuries of slaughter, hatred and humiliating persecution.
Only when I returned to live in my ancestral home of Israel did I feel that I was now residing in the one nation I could truly call home.
Israel, the only democracy in the Middle East, is the only real home for the Jewish people. I am happy to share my home with the nearly 2 million Arab Israelis, the wonderful Druze communities, and others who call Israel their home too. But make no mistake. Israel is home for all Jewish people.
The UK is approaching a general election on 12th December. In my living memory, there has never been an election where antisemitism has been so high on the agenda. The Chief Rabbi of the UK, Ephraim Mirvis, has been compelled to speak out about the virulent antisemitism that has been so evident in the British Labour Party under the leadership of Jeremy Corbyn.
Corbyn has promised to recognise a Palestinian state in the first week of his premiership if elected. Those of us on the ground in Israel know this will only serve to inspire the Islamic terrorists among the Palestinian people and provoke more violence towards Israel.
The enemies of Israel will see that they do not have to recognise Israel’s right to exist so long as they have political support to continue their murderous ways. Corbyn is offering Hamas and Hezbollah, who he previously called his friends, a carte blanche to continue their terrorism.
Corbyn hates Israel. He does not think Israel should exist, and he has called Israel ‘a racist endeavour.’
I watched the interview conducted by the journalist Andrew Neil with Corbyn, where Corbyn was repeatedly given the chance to apologise for Labour’s antisemitism, particularly in the light of the Chief Rabbi’s remarks.
Corbyn did not apologise, since he does not view his hatred of Israel as antisemitic. More recently, he has issued a grudging apology, but it is clear that his views remain unchanged.
If Corbyn became Prime Minister, the underlying message to the UK Jewish community would be the same one I heard spoken by a London bus driver all those years ago: ‘Move along Jew boy.’
Antisemitism is spreading like wildfire across Europe, the UK, the US, and throughout the world.
Corbyn, and all those who agree with his hatred of Israel are like the ancient and historic haters of Israel and the Jewish people.
Psalm 83:4: ‘They have said, “Come, and let us cut them off from being a nation, that the name of Israel may be remembered no more.”’
My deep heartfelt prayer for the British people is that they would reject Corbyn and the Labour party in the forthcoming election.
The UK Chief Rabbi was absolutely right when he said that ‘the soul of our nation is at stake.’
Psalm 83:16: ‘Fill their faces with shame, that they may seek Your name, O Lord’.
May the scourge of anti-Israel prejudice and antisemitism be crushed in the UK.