Adam Levick/Co-editor of CAMERA UK

Adam Levick lives in Israel and is co-editor of CAMERA UK. He previously worked as a researcher at NGO Monitor and, prior to that, at the Civil Rights Division of the Anti-Defamation League. He's had op-eds published in numerous Jewish and non-Jewish publications, published longer papers at the Jerusalem Centre for Public Affairs on “Antisemitism in Progressive Blogs” and “Antisemitic Cartoons in Progressive Blogs”, and was previously a member of the Online Antisemitism Working Group for the Global Forum to Combat Antisemitism. He frequently gives presentations about media bias and antisemitism, including one last September at the inaugural conference of the London Centre for the Study of Contemporary Antisemitism.

Right-wing Jews are not 'weaponizing anti-Semitism'

The lead drafter of the IHRA Working Definition of Anti-Semitism attributes its inclusion in Trump's executive order on anti-Semitism to "right-wing Jewish groups," but fails to explain support for the measure from the AJC and ADL, among others.

Kenneth Stern, who helped write what is now known as the International Holocaust Remembrance Alliance (IHRA) Working Definition of Antisemitism, naturally has every right to oppose President Donald Trump's executive order last week requiring universities to consider IHRA when assessing if, per Title VI of the 1964 Civil Rights Act, Jewish students' rights have been violated.

However, Stern, who was the anti-Semitism expert for the American Jewish Committee for 25 years, does not have the right to dishonestly frame support for Trump's order as exclusively coming from the Jewish "Right," as he did in a Guardian op-ed published on Dec. 13 titled, "I drafted the definition of anti-Semitism. Right-wing Jews are weaponizing it."

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"Starting in 2010," Stern writes, "right-wing Jewish groups took the 'working definition', which had some examples about Israel (such as holding Jews collectively responsible for the actions of Israel, and denying Jews the right to self-determination), and decided to weaponize it with title VI cases."

He goes on to state that "As proponents of the executive order like the Zionist Organization of America make clear, they see the application of the definition as 'cover[ing] many of the anti-Jewish outrages … frequently led by … Students for Justice in Palestine, including … calls for "intifada" [and] demonizing Israel.' As much as I disagree with SJP, it has the right to make 'calls.' That's called free speech."

Anti-Zionists, wrote Stern, have the right to free expression, especially on campus.

"I'm a Zionist. But on a college campus, where the purpose is to explore ideas, anti-Zionists have a right to free expression."

Stern's message is clear: The ones "weaponizing anti-Semitism" are right-wing Jews, such as Kushner, and right-wing Jewish groups, like ZOA.

However, he fails to mention that Trump's executive order was enthusiastically embraced by the American Jewish Committee (AJC), one of the oldest Jewish advocacy groups in the country, and an organization that nobody with any knowledge of the US Jewish communal landscape would describe as "right-wing" – and where, as we noted, Stern himself worked from 1989 to 2014.

In response to Trump's executive order, the AJC issued a press release, in which AJC CEO David Harris stated that the "American Jewish Committee (AJC) welcomes President Trump's Executive Order to strengthen efforts to combat anti-Semitism on college and university campuses. We trust that a careful application of this directive will enable university administrators to avoid running afoul of free speech protections as they seek to root out anti-Semitism on their campuses."

The situation of Jewish students at America's universities, writes Harris, is "most worrisome." Citing a recent AJC survey on anti-Semitism in the US, Harris notes that "nearly half of those between the ages of 18 and 29 have been victims of anti-Semitic acts over the past five years, compared to just over a third of American Jews overall. More than a third of Jewish young people said they either had experienced anti-Semitism on an American college campus themselves or know someone who has."

With regard to the issue of free speech, Harris states explicitly that the AJC does not view Trump's order as designed to suppress criticism of Israel:

"AJC does not consider the [executive order], or longstanding Department of Education guidance, to be designed to suppress rational criticism of Israel or its policies, and we will speak out against any attempt to do so. AJC also recognizes that there will be hard cases where it will be necessary to decide whether the speech in question is constitutionally protected or not.

"To date, though, responses to anti-Semitism on many campuses have often fallen short, leaving Jewish students vulnerable. Existing federal policy has not been fully enforced and today's order merely gives Jews what other groups have long enjoyed – the right not to be subject to a hostile environment on campus. There is nothing inconsistent with protecting freedom of expression and providing Jews the same protections accorded other minorities."

Another US Jewish group which can't possibly be described as "right-wing" – and that in fact is frequently quite outspoken in its opposition to Donald Trump – and that supported the executive order is the Anti-Defamation League (ADL), the largest and arguably most influential Jewish group in the country.

Here's the passage of ADL's press release which specifically refers to IHRA:

"Today's announcement that the US will adopt the International Holocaust Remembrance Alliance (IHRA) working definition of anti-Semitism is an important step acknowledging the growing concern about anti-Semitism on American college campuses."

Support for the order also came from the American Jewish Congress and the Conference of Presidents of Major American Jewish Organizations (the umbrella group comprising 51 US Jewish organizations).

Moreover, if anything is routinely "weaponized" it's the term "right-wing," which is often cynically used – by The Guardian, among others – to discredit arguments about Jews and Israel that aren't approved of by the Left. As even Nicholas Watt, The Guardian's former chief political correspondent, once acknowledged: "Quite often on the Left, the term right-wing is just used to mean 'bad.'"

Reprinted with permission from JNS.org.

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