FRESH AIR

Antisemitism on the streets of Europe

June 15, 2020 | Naomi Levin

Churchill Was A Racist

In recent days, there have been multiple incidents in Europe that deserve our attention.  In France, video emerged of anti-racist demonstrators chanting “dirty Jews”, while monuments to recall those who helped defeat the Nazis were defaced. In the UK, an ultra-Orthodox rabbi was stabbed in the streets.

On their own, these incidents may appear isolated or as simply the result of a few rogue actors, but the pattern is one of spreading hatred in seemingly enlightened European countries, often in the name of anti-racism.

In Paris, a video was posted showing anti-racism demonstrators shouting “dirty Jews” at a group of counter-protesters, who were named in some reports as white supremacists.

A statement by the French Jewish representative organisation, Le CRIF, said demonstrators cannot claim to be anti-racist if they tolerate antisemitism within their ranks. French politicians from across the political spectrum also criticised the chant, calling for demonstration organisers to condemn it publicly.

A tweet by French police said they had reported the “antisemitic remarks” to the French Justice Department, but there were no reports of any sanctions for those involved.

Israeli media showed footage of a large banner saying “Israel, a laboratory of police violence” being held up at the same Paris anti-racism rally.

This banner draws on a conspiracy theory that is growing in popularity and seems to have originated in the United States. According to those spreading this falsehood, Israelis have trained police officers around the world in brutal methods of law enforcement, including the type of chokehold that killed George Floyd.

While it is no secret that Israeli law enforcement sometimes shares expertise with colleagues from around the world, as so many do, the idea that Israeli police teach lessons on brutality is entirely without basis, not to mention absurd.

Speaking about this particular conspiracy theory ahead of the Paris rally, American Jewish Committee executive director David Harris told an AIJAC Live Online event that this idea “is patently absurd but the fact that it is patently absurd does not prevent this type of conspiracy theory from spreading like wildfire.”

“In the current highly inflammable, highly polarised American environment today, there are too many people on whatever side of the equation, who are too quick to believe just about anything,” Harris said.

The important anti-racism movement has also been hijacked by individuals who have defaced, and sought to destroy, monuments to of Winston Churchill, whose leadership of the Allies helped defeat Nazi leader Adolf Hitler. Jewish people the world over, including Australia’s Treasurer Josh Frydenberg, have watched on in shock.

In recent days, a monument of Churchill in central London was spray-painted with the words “Churchill was a racist”. In response, London Mayor Sadiq Khan ordered the boarding up of the statue of Churchill, as well as others, including anti-apartheid hero Nelson Mandela and anti-colonialist and non-violence advocate Mahatma Gandhi, to protect them from damage in further protests.

It has been widely documented that Churchill, like many leaders of his time, did indeed make comments about the supposed racial inferiority of certain peoples. Today, all thinking people repudiate comments of the sort made by Churchill about the superiority of white races over others. However, Churchill is still remembered as leading the charge to defeat one of the most racist endeavours in modern history, the Nazis.

Frydenberg, whose family was persecuted by the Nazis, called the attacks on the Churchill statue “nuts”.

He posted on Twitter: “Don’t these people get it? He saved their families and the world from Nazi tyranny! As Churchill once said ‘the farther backward you can look, the farther forward you are likely to see’.”

Frydenberg has previously called Churchill “one of the greatest figures of all time” and “an early and outspoken critic of Hitler’s rise”, who later went on to lead “efforts to call out communism for the enemy it was.”

The alleged attacker is arrested after witnesses restrained him on a London street.

Finally, in an incident unrelated to the Black Lives Matter protest movement, on Friday, on a north London street, an ultra-Orthodox man, Rabbi Alter Yaakov Schlesinger was stabbed in the head, back and neck. The alleged stabber was held down by witnesses until police arrived.

The UK Jewish Board of Deputies thanked those who restrained the alleged attacker and wished the victim a speedy recovery, but did not call the attack antisemitic. Numerous media reports noted that Rabbi Schlesinger was wearing traditional Hasidic garb and was in a queue, with other members of the public, to enter a bank when he was attacked.

While anti-racism demonstrators continue to call for fair and just treatment for all, their message rings hollow when their cause is hijacked by antisemites, and organisers fail to speak out.

RELATED ARTICLES

Image: Shutterstock

Media Matters: The ABC’s blind spot

Aug 17, 2025 | Fresh AIR
Fighters and military vehicles belonging to Syrian government forces intervene in the city of Sweida to enforce a ceasefire between Druze factions and Bedouin tribes. Syria, July 20, 2025 (Image: Shutterstock)

Druze crisis tested Israel’s Syria strategy

Jul 31, 2025 | Featured, Fresh AIR
Image: Shutterstock

Media Matters: Smoke and Ire over IHRA

Jul 30, 2025 | Featured, Fresh AIR
President Bill Clinton walks Prime Minister Ehud Barak of Israel and Yasser Arafat of the Palestinian Authority at Camp David, Maryland, July 2000 (Image: Wikipedia)

The silver anniversary of the silver bullet

Jul 29, 2025 | Featured, Fresh AIR
A protest in response to the death in detention of Mahsa Amini by Iran's morality police in Tehran (Image: Tolga Ildun/ Shutterstock)

Diaspora Iranians hope for more attention to the plight of the Iranian people

Jul 24, 2025 | Featured, Fresh AIR
Image: Shutterstock

An AIJAC letter the Sydney Morning Herald refused to publish

Jul 14, 2025 | Featured, Fresh AIR
D11a774c 2a47 C987 F4ce 2d642e6d9c8d

Bibi in DC, the Houthi threat and the politicised ICJ opinion

Jul 26, 2024 | Update
Image: Shutterstock

Nine months after Oct. 7: Where Israel stands now

Jul 10, 2024 | Update
Palestinian Red Crescent workers from Al-Najjar Hospital in the city of Rafah, south of the Gaza Strip (Image: Shutterstock)

Hamas’ impossible casualty figures

Mar 28, 2024 | Update
455daec3 C2a8 8752 C215 B7bd062c6bbc

After the Israel-Hamas ceasefire for hostages deal

Nov 29, 2023 | Update
Screenshot of Hamas bodycam footage as terrorists approach an Israeli vehicle during the terror organisation's October 7, 2023 attack in southern Israel, released by the IDF and GPO (Screenshot)

Horror on Video / International Law and the Hamas War

Oct 31, 2023 | Update
Sderot, Israel. 7th Oct, 2023. Bodies of dead Israelis lie on the ground following the attacks of Hamas (Image: Ilia Yefimovich/dpa/Alamy Live News)

Israel’s Sept. 11, only worse

Oct 11, 2023 | Update
Screenshot

Protests show social cohesion being “ripped apart”: Joel Burnie on Sky News

Sep 1, 2025 | Video
Screenshot 2025 08 29 At 7.49.54 am

IRGC has ‘dramatically increased’ number of global operations: Bren Carlill on Sky News

Aug 29, 2025 | Featured, Video
Screenshot

Australia-Israel relationship “at its lowest ebb”: Joel Burnie on Sky News

Aug 21, 2025 | Featured, Video
Screenshot

“Disappointed but not shocked” by Tony Burke’s comments: Jamie Hyams on Sky News

Aug 20, 2025 | Featured, Video
Screenshot

Australia-US relationship at ‘record low’ following ‘concerning’ Palestine move: Joel Burnie on Sky News

Aug 16, 2025 | Featured, Video
Screenshot 2025 08 13 At 11.01.48 am

Australia recognising Palestine more about ‘punishing Israel’ – Joel Burnie on Sky News

Aug 13, 2025 | Featured, Video

RECENT POSTS

Screenshot

Protests show social cohesion being “ripped apart”: Joel Burnie on Sky News

Image: Screenshot/ ABC News

Australia taking a decisive step toward protecting its Jewish and Iranian communities

Screenshot 2025 08 29 At 7.49.54 am

IRGC has ‘dramatically increased’ number of global operations: Bren Carlill on Sky News

Image: Khamenei.ir

AIJAC welcomes steps against Iran and IRGC following revelation of their role in antisemitic attacks in Australia

More than 1,000 truckloads of aid waiting to be picked up inside Gaza at the Kerem Shalom crossing on June 18, 2024 (Source: COGAT)

Fact Sheet: Aid into Gaza

SORT BY TOPICS