Billy Bragg clarifies position on Labour antisemitism during JW3 discussion
Singer and political activist spoke with the dean of the LSJS Rabbi Raphael Zarum, recognising he'd drawn anger from the community with comments about Jeremy Corbyn
Jenni Frazer is a freelance journalist
The singer and political activist Billy Bragg has sought to put in context his position on the Jewish community and the Labour Party.
In a JW3 discussion on freedom with the dean of the London School of Jewish Studies, Rabbi Raphael Zarum, Bragg acknowledged that during the Corbyn era, he had drawn fire from the Jewish community for his support for the former Labour leader.
He caused anger in July 2018, after saying British Jews had “work to do” to rebuild trust, after a joint front page editorial run by Jewish News, The Jewish Chronicle and the Jewish Telegraph, saying, standing against Labour antisemitism.
Bragg took issue with the claim in the editorial that Corbyn would pose an “existential threat” to Jews, saying on Twitter, it did “not help to achieve” trust, between Labour and the community, and that “it’s pouring petrol on the fire.”
When asked if British Jews had “work to do”, he added: “‘If they want to build trust, I do yeah. Instead they make things difficult by coming out with accusations that are out of all proportion.
Speaking at JW3 this week, he said, his concern was more to do with “what was going on in the Labour Party” than with Corbyn himself, whom he had worked with “for many years, and whom I trust. I tried to engage with those elements of the Labour Party who, in their defence of Corbyn, were clearly stirring up division with the Jewish community”.
The singer continued: “I engaged with some comrades who I had worked with during the miners’ strike. But Chris Williamson, [the former Labour MP] spoke to me after I criticised him, about how disappointed he was that someone who had had such solidarity in anti-racism [would criticise him]. I believe that they thought they couldn’t be antisemitic because they were left-wing, that morally they were in a situation where they could comment on the issue, but without taking on board the sensitivities of the Jewish community. I don’t think that’s right. I said, it doesn’t matter if you haven’t made absolutely antisemitic statements: the fact that you are stirring this up, that you’re pushing this line… the terrible thing was that they imagined this was a way of defending Corbyn. In fact it was making the entire situation worse”.
He described “the great curse of social media” as “intention is always trumped by perception. In my case that’s what happened to me. I was trying to make a case for the Jewish community and the Labour Party working together. Some people believed it implied that I was saying that the Jewish community had to tone down their criticism. That wasn’t my intention. I apologised then, and I apologise now.”
Bragg, described as “a public intellectual” by Rabbi Zarum, laid out his personal philosophy. “The idea of freedom has been tarnished by what I would call ‘licence’”, he said. “People believe that being free gives them the right to say whatever they want to say, to whoever they want to say it to — with no comeback.That, to me, is not a definition of freedom. That’s a definition of Donald Trump’s Twitter feed”.
To agreement with Rabbi Zarum, the singer’s central theme, which he returned to repeatedly during the hour-long web event, was that of “accountability”. He rejected the term of “responsibility” for actions, arguing that people face the consequences of what they said and wrote, particularly on social media. “You have the right to express your opinion — well, then so does everybody else”, he said. “Freedom has to be reciprocal.”
Bragg told Rabbi Zarum that he “cringed” every time he walked past the statue of George Orwell outside the BBC in London, with its accompanying quote: “If liberty means anything at all, it means the right to tell people what they do not want to hear”. Though he was a great Orwell admirer, Bragg said, he believed the logical extension of that phrase was “allowing people to deny the Holocaust — I don’t think that’s a definition of liberty at all, I think that’s a definition of licence”.
Outside politics, Rabbi Zarum said that he had been greatly surprised by Billy Bragg’s pointing to the second most searched area on the internet — genealogy. The singer is an enthusiastic researcher of his and his partner’s family histories, and spoke of the importance of retaining “a sense of belonging” in whatever was one’s chosen tribe.
His overall passion, however, remains music and the powerful sense of “communion” that is brought by people singing together — a belief echoed by Rabbi Zarum, who said being unable to sing in synagogue during the pandemic had left him with a feeling he was unable to pray properly.
Seeking the last word, Billy Bragg observed: “No-one is going to ask you to tour America reading out your Tweets. It’s still worth learning to play an instrument and getting out on the road”. But he groaned with laughter when the JW3 host for the evening, Mekella Broomberg, noted: “I actually have a friend who has toured reading out her Tweets. They are really good Tweets”. Head in hands, the singer joked: “It’s the end of days!”
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