Oct 6, 2025 09:34 PM
(This post was last modified: Oct 6, 2025 09:53 PM by C C.)
RELATED (scivillage): Tommy Robinson leads massive London rally ..... Is Tommy Robinson just a populist, period, instead of far-right?
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Israel’s embrace of Tommy Robinson deepens rift with British Jewry
https://www.middleeastmonitor.com/202510...tish-jewry
EXCERPTS: Israel has “made the crisis for Britain’s Jews even worse,” said journalist Melanie Phillips, reacting to the Israeli government’s decision to invite far-right activist Tommy Robinson to visit the country. The move has triggered a bitter row between Israel and Jewish community leaders in the UK who view Robinson as a far-right agitator.
Phillips, a long-time defender of Israel, said the invitation by Diaspora Affairs Minister Amichai Chikli amounted to “a very stupid and dangerous mistake,” accusing Israel’s government of “handing an unexpected weapon to the enemies of Israel and the Jewish people in Britain.”
Her remarks came after Chikli announced that Robinson, whose real name is Stephen Yaxley-Lennon, would be hosted in Israel this month “as a courageous leader on the front line against radical Islam.” The minister said Robinson’s visit was intended to “strengthen bonds with allies who refuse to be silent.”
Robinson confirmed that the Israeli government would pay for his flight and accommodation, and said he planned to meet Knesset members, visit “Judea and Samaria” — the term used by right-wing Israeli politicians for the occupied West Bank — and tour Yad Vashem, Israel’s Holocaust memorial.
The decision has been condemned by leading Jewish bodies in Britain, who described Robinson as a dangerous extremist and said the invitation showed contempt for the Jewish community’s views.
In a joint statement, the Board of Deputies of British Jews and the Jewish Leadership Council (JLC) called Robinson “a thug who represents the very worst of Britain.”
“In our darkest hour, [Minister Chikli] has ignored the views of the vast majority of British Jews, who utterly and consistently reject Robinson and everything he stands for,” the organisations said.
[...] Robinson, a former leader of the far-right group known as the English Defence League, has attempted to reinvent himself as a pro-Israel activist. Yet he has reportedly published anti-Semitic material, including a 2022 essay titled “The Jewish Question,” which repeated conspiracy theories about Jewish control of the media and finance.
Nevertheless, Robinson has been promoted and financially supported by pro-Israel advocacy networks in the US and Europe that frame him as a defender of Israel and a “truth-teller” on Islamist extremism.
Historians have long noted the paradoxical relationship between anti-Semites and Zionism. In the 1930s, for example, Zionist groups agreed a pact with Nazis known as the Haavara (Transfer) Agreement. It allowed some German Jews to emigrate to Palestine by transferring part of their assets through a German-Zionist trade arrangement — a deal negotiated under the Nazi regime.
Though intended as a means of rescue, it has since become emblematic of the uneasy relationship between Zionism and fascism. Today, scholars and community leaders warn that similar paradoxes are re-emerging as segments of Europe’s far right adopt pro-Israel rhetoric while continuing to promote anti-Jewish or xenophobic ideas at home... (MORE - missing details)
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Israel’s embrace of Tommy Robinson deepens rift with British Jewry
https://www.middleeastmonitor.com/202510...tish-jewry
EXCERPTS: Israel has “made the crisis for Britain’s Jews even worse,” said journalist Melanie Phillips, reacting to the Israeli government’s decision to invite far-right activist Tommy Robinson to visit the country. The move has triggered a bitter row between Israel and Jewish community leaders in the UK who view Robinson as a far-right agitator.
Phillips, a long-time defender of Israel, said the invitation by Diaspora Affairs Minister Amichai Chikli amounted to “a very stupid and dangerous mistake,” accusing Israel’s government of “handing an unexpected weapon to the enemies of Israel and the Jewish people in Britain.”
Her remarks came after Chikli announced that Robinson, whose real name is Stephen Yaxley-Lennon, would be hosted in Israel this month “as a courageous leader on the front line against radical Islam.” The minister said Robinson’s visit was intended to “strengthen bonds with allies who refuse to be silent.”
Robinson confirmed that the Israeli government would pay for his flight and accommodation, and said he planned to meet Knesset members, visit “Judea and Samaria” — the term used by right-wing Israeli politicians for the occupied West Bank — and tour Yad Vashem, Israel’s Holocaust memorial.
The decision has been condemned by leading Jewish bodies in Britain, who described Robinson as a dangerous extremist and said the invitation showed contempt for the Jewish community’s views.
In a joint statement, the Board of Deputies of British Jews and the Jewish Leadership Council (JLC) called Robinson “a thug who represents the very worst of Britain.”
“In our darkest hour, [Minister Chikli] has ignored the views of the vast majority of British Jews, who utterly and consistently reject Robinson and everything he stands for,” the organisations said.
[...] Robinson, a former leader of the far-right group known as the English Defence League, has attempted to reinvent himself as a pro-Israel activist. Yet he has reportedly published anti-Semitic material, including a 2022 essay titled “The Jewish Question,” which repeated conspiracy theories about Jewish control of the media and finance.
Nevertheless, Robinson has been promoted and financially supported by pro-Israel advocacy networks in the US and Europe that frame him as a defender of Israel and a “truth-teller” on Islamist extremism.
Historians have long noted the paradoxical relationship between anti-Semites and Zionism. In the 1930s, for example, Zionist groups agreed a pact with Nazis known as the Haavara (Transfer) Agreement. It allowed some German Jews to emigrate to Palestine by transferring part of their assets through a German-Zionist trade arrangement — a deal negotiated under the Nazi regime.
Though intended as a means of rescue, it has since become emblematic of the uneasy relationship between Zionism and fascism. Today, scholars and community leaders warn that similar paradoxes are re-emerging as segments of Europe’s far right adopt pro-Israel rhetoric while continuing to promote anti-Jewish or xenophobic ideas at home... (MORE - missing details)
