Jonathan Freedland
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September 30, 2009

Enough of these media hyenas

Politicians should expect press scrutiny and tough questions. But this sledging of Gordon Brown is ugly and undemocratic

Published on the Guardian website


Posted at 09:04 AM


The NHS is a collective endeavour

Some like to describe the NHS as a government-run insurance scheme. But that hardly captures the essence of a public service

Published in the Guardian's A new public services section


Posted at 08:59 AM


September 29, 2009

The age of New Labour is over. The only question is what will survive

Gordon Brown yesterday ditched many of the old doctrines. But the party still can't decide what worked and what failed

Published in the Guardian


Posted at 08:48 AM


September 23, 2009

Obama may have lost some face in the Middle East, but don't write him off yet

The Bibi-Abbas photo-op said it all. If the US president is to turn things around, he'll need to press the reset button

Published in the Guardian


Posted at 11:48 AM


September 18, 2009

We were once the 'maniacs'

Published in the Jewish Chronicle

Terror suspects, caught by police surveillance, boast of the blood-curdling havoc they hope to wreak. “The corpse of an enemy smells nice”, they hiss. In messages addressed to the British public, they say the deaths they plan are “retribution you have so justly earned.” After all, insist the killers, “For many years we have suffered humiliation.”

These angry, dangerous young men are part of an international network, linked to some of the most unstable countries in the world. Police struggle to keep tabs on them because they are embedded in a close-knit immigrant community, deeply religious and closed to outsiders. They are ideologically committed and seem to revel in death and destruction. What on earth can be done to stop these maniacs?

That question is pressing in September 2009, following not only the eighth anniversary of 9/11 but the conviction of the men behind the 2006 plot to blow passenger jets out of the sky. Surely we are living through an unprecedented age of terror, facing an enemy unlike any seen before.

Not so fast. All of the quotations above — though uncannily contemporary — did not come from today’s Islamist militants. Those words are, instead, lifted straight from the mouths of an earlier generation of extremists: anarchists who plotted violent mayhem on the streets of London at the turn of the last century. Many, if not most, were Jews.

The point is strikingly dramatised in a film due to air on Channel 4 next month. Joseph Bullman’s The Enemy Within has present-day Muslim activists (not actors) speaking the words of those Jewish anarchist forebears, whether drawn from a speech delivered in the dock during an 1892 trial or from pamphlets of the time.

The look is wholly current. The Muslim men are shown through the wobbling zoom lens of what the viewer presumes is a hand-held surveillance camera; occasionally the visual grammar is that of a present-day “martyrdom” video. And yet the words are more than a century old.

The point is clear: we have been here before. Then, as now, Britain’s police, intelligence agencies and press convinced themselves they faced a mortal peril that would destroy the nation. But the threat passed. The implicit message: this too will pass.

For a Jewish viewer, though, the impact goes deeper. The Enemy Within is a reminder that we were once the Muslims of Britain — deemed alien, our loyalties suspected, tainted by association with a few violent fanatics.

In one of the most powerful sequences of the film, 21st-century talk-radio motormouths Nick Ferrari, Garry Bushell and Vanessa Feltz denounce “the despicable crew of aliens who eat our bread and have the audacity to preach the overthrow of a society that protects them with its laws.” It could be any of today’s tabloid ranters taking yet another swipe at Britain’s Muslims. But that sentence was lifted from an 1891 Evening News editorial: Jews as Anarchists. The Daily Express and Daily Mail were not to be outdone, the Mail speaking of the “scum of Europe” turning the East End into a “great foreign city,” concluding “It’s time to exclude [them]; we don’t want them here.”

That forced Anglo-Jewry on to the defensive. In 1901, the Jewish Chronicle felt it had to insist that, “Ours is a religion of love and peace, not hatred and war,” a statement which no doubt brought the same snorts of derision that greet similar Muslim protestations of innocence today.

Yet Jews, once deemed an alien menace, are now successfully woven into Britain’s national life. The film does not spell it out, but the hint is obvious: the same could happen with Muslims.

It might be wise for us remember this chapter in our history. Next time we’re tempted to join the chorus demonising Muslims, we should recall that not so long ago it was us being demonised. Jews and Muslims have more in common with each other than we might like to admit.


Posted at 06:39 PM


Maybe Israel just needs to acknowledge Palestinian pain

Published in Haaretz


Posted at 08:03 AM


September 17, 2009

Obama guilty of naivety, says former Israeli diplomat

Dan Gillerman says US president's recent actions reveal his 'inexperience in foreign policy'

Published on the Guardian website


Posted at 07:52 AM


September 16, 2009

If Obama can't defeat the Republican headbangers, our planet is doomed

One year on, the world still looks to the US and holds its breath. The fate of a global climate treaty rests in American hands

Published in the Guardian


Posted at 03:01 PM


September 11, 2009

Benny Morris: 'Palestinian Arabs have no respect for democratic values'

Israeli historian Benny Morris speaks to Jonathan Freedland about his new book, One State, Two States, and discusses why his analysis of the Israeli-Palestinian conflict may leave liberals squirming

To view click here


Posted at 09:18 AM


September 09, 2009

In the great argument of 2010, the Tories are wrong and deserve to lose

Talk of an age of austerity has offered Cameron the pretext to retreat to his party's comfort zone of slash and burn

Published in the Guardian


Posted at 08:03 AM


September 04, 2009

BBC support shows we still love Auntie

The Guardian/ICM poll shows the BBC is admired and trusted, although there is work to be done on the licence fee question

Published in the Guardian


Posted at 01:21 PM


September 02, 2009

Don't let Murdoch smash this jewel. The BBC must act to save itself

Rupert's son is bent on continuing the war his father started. But he'll find Auntie matches the NHS in public affections

Published in the Guardian


Posted at 12:21 PM