British Labour Party rocked by Nazi row
By Charles Gardner, Special to ASSIST News Service (Writer’s Opinion)
DONCASTER, UK (ANS – May 1, 2016)
-- I was struck with a mysterious sense of déjà vu when, having spent
much of the afternoon researching the life and times of Theodor Herzl,
inspiration for the Jewish nation, I heard on the news that a red-hot
political row had broken out in the UK over anti-Semitism.
I
had just been witnessing movie scenes1 of the shocking racist incidents
that probably drove Herzl into an early grave as he vowed to do
something about it.
Yet
now, some 120 years after his campaign to establish a Jewish national
home got off the ground, anti-Semitism is still rife in Europe’s
corridors of power.
The
Labour Party, Britain’s official opposition which has traditionally had
the support of most Jews, is reeling from the shockwaves of anti-Jewish
feeling expressed by some of its leading figures.
First
we heard of the resignation of an Oxford University Labour group leader
sickened by anti-Semitism in its ranks, then we learnt of Bradford West
MP, Naz Shah, a young Labour councilor who was forced to resign after
it emerged she had tweeted that Hitler was “the greatest man in
history.”
And
now former London Mayor Ken Livingstone, who has been dubbed “Red Ken”
by some of the British media, has taken to the airwaves to defend a
Labour MP suspended on similar grounds.
After
claiming Hitler was a Zionist who, in 1932, believed Jews should be
moved to Israel, Mr. Livingstone invoked a tirade of invective not only
from opponents, but from many within his own party including a
Nottinghamshire MP, John Mann, who confronted him in the street and
called him a “disgusting, lying racist” and “Nazi apologist”.2
Around
30 Labour MPs, including several Shadow Cabinet members, demanded Mr
Livingstone be expelled from the party (he has been suspended) and there
was outrage over the decision by Mr Corbyn to issue a public telling
off to Mr. Mann. Party chief whip Rosie Winterton (my own MP, as it
happens) is said to have refused to suspend Mr. Mann.
Labour
peer Lord Dubs – who escaped the Nazis as a child through Britain’s
Kindertransport scheme – is “enormously troubled” by the row. “What we
need is firm leadership; the leadership has been a bit slow in
responding (to anti-Semitism),” he told a British TV news program.
And
Jewish Labour donor David Abrahams, who has given £650,000 to the
party, called for Mr. Corbyn to resign, saying a new leader was needed
to cut out the “cancer” of anti-Semitism.3
As
for Mr. Livingstone’s claim, historian Andrew Roberts says it’s a
“grotesque mangling of the historical record”, adding: “The idea that
Hitler ever wanted a fully-functioning successful Jewish state in
Palestine …is ludicrous.”4
Mr. Corbyn, for his part, who has referred to terror groups Hamas and Hezbollah as “friends”, denies the party is in crisis.
The
chilling aspect of all this is that it is not something taking place in
a dark corner. It’s in the public square, at the very centre of British
politics. And I have a hunch what lies behind it.
The
root cause, I believe, is the growing godlessness in the nation, and
especially in the Labour Party. What a travesty for a political movement
launched by devout Christians like Keir Hardie determined to let their
faith make a difference to society by campaigning for a fairer share of
wealth, for example. But what motivates them now?
People
who are godless hit out at those who are special to God. That’s what
happened in Hitler’s case; it led to mass murder and mayhem, but ended
in disaster and defeat for the dictator and his people.
Steven
Jaffe, a member of the UK’s Jewish Board of Deputies, made this point
earlier in the year when he said that the Holocaust had been spawned by
godlessness and the rejection of faith.
He
said the exodus from Egypt was immediately followed by the battle with
Amalek, who had no reason to attack Israel. There was no territorial
dispute or history of conflict, for example. And they attacked the sick
and the elderly – those who were most vulnerable. (Deuteronomy 25.17-18)
“The
conflict with Amalek is not over,” he said. Amalek denied God and his
power in the same way the Nazis did, and the latter mirrored their lack
of mercy.
The
poisonous view that God does not exist naturally leads to godless
behavior and thought. Pledges of never letting another Holocaust occur
are not enough, in my opinion; without a recovery of faith in the God of
Israel, there can be no guarantee that it won’t happen again.
The
only safe place to be – in the long term – is in God’s hands, doing his
work. I challenge the Labour Party to return to its Judeo-Christian
roots.
1It is no dream (from the Moriah Films collection of the Simon Wiesenthal Centre)
2Daily Mail April 29 2016
3Daily Mail April 29 2016
4Ibid
Photo
captions: 1) Shocking sign in London. 2) Theodor Herzl, inspiration for
the Jewish nation. 3) Adolf Hitler during the 1936 Berlin Olympics. 4)
Ken Livingstone. 4) Charles and Linda Gardner.
About
the writer: Charles Gardner is a veteran Cape Town-born British
journalist working on plans to launch a new UK national newspaper
reporting and interpreting the news from a biblical perspective. With
his South African forebears having had close links with the legendary
devotional writer Andrew Murray, Charles is similarly determined to make
an impact for Christ with his pen and has worked in the newspaper
industry for more than 41 years. Part-Jewish, he is married to Linda,
who takes the Christian message around many schools in the Yorkshire
town of Doncaster. Charles has four children and eight grandchildren.
Charles can be reached by phone on +44 (0) 1302 832987, or by e-mail at chazgardner@btinternet.com . He is the author of Peace in Jerusalem, available from http://olivepresspublisher.com.
** You may republish this or any of our ANS stories with attribution to the ASSIST News Service (www.assistnews.net).
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