EJP

European Jews to set out their ‘red lines’ ahead of 2019 European elections

Ahead of the European elections in May 2019, the European Jewish Association (EJA) is launching a wide ranging consultation of European Jewry in order to get agreement among European Jews around a series of ’’red lines.’’ Picture: The European Parliament in Brussels.

BRUSSELS—Ahead of the European elections in May 2019, the European Jewish Association (EJA), a Brussels-based group representing Jewish communities across the continent, is launching a wide ranging consultation of European Jewry in order to get agreement among European Jews around a series of  ’’red lines.’’

The draft red lines – which include the exclusion from government of parties that espouse anti-Semitism as set out in the International Holocaust Remembrance Alliance (IHRA) definition, call on all political parties to pass binding resolutions rejecting the anti-Israel BDS (Boycott, Divestment, Sanctions) as fundamentally anti-Semitic and to support freedom of religion,  will be debated and voted on at the EJA’s flagship annual conference on 6-7 November in Brussels.

Once approved, an official resolution, encompassing the views of Jewry across the Continent, will be forwarded to all political leaders and parties standing in the European elections, and are expected to be signed up to and included in party literature and manifestos.

‘’For Jews across Europe the stakes in the forthcoming European elections have rarely been higher,’’ said EJA Chairman and Founder Rabbi Menachem Margolin, as a launched the consultation of European Jewry.

He added: ‘’We need to put down a clear marker of what we, who have formed part of Europe’s cultural fabric for almost two thousand years, and who have suffered first hand from Europe’s worst excesses too, expect from those in power at this critical time.”

The draft red lines are:

For Rabbi Margolin, the stakes for Jews, who are already living in a febrile  environment, ‘’the stakes for Jews are higher than I can ever remember.’’

“With the stock of ‘big tent’ political parties at an all-time low, and the rise in support for fringe parties of right and left, we are looking at a dramatically different political landscape post-election in which we all have to operate and live in. It will be one where the language of division and populist rhetoric will be in the ascendancy as never before,’’ he said.

He concluded:  “This polarisation and its potential dangers affect all of us, whether you are affiliated to the EJA or not, and should supersede any inter or intra-organisational tensions or differences.  It is in this spirit that we are reaching out to Jews of all backgrounds and persuasions for their opinions. These ‘red lines’ when passed will represent not our line in the sand, but our line in the concrete, and serve as a wake-up call to politicians that the very future of Jewish Europe is on the line here. ‘’

The two-day EJA conference, which will take place in the European Parliament and in conference facilities, will be attended by EU officials, parliamentarians, ambassadors, Jewish leaders  and special interest groups.

 

 

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