The IHRA definition is just that
Thursday, 26th July 2018
• THE International Holocaust Remembrance Alliance (IHRA) adopted the working definition of anti-Semitism is based on a definition first published by the European Monitoring Centre on Racism and Xenophobia in 2005.
The Labour Party’s code of conduct on anti-Semitism uses this identical definition in full.
When Dame Margaret Hodge states that “Labour’s national executive committee agreed its own definition of anti-Semitism”, this is factually incorrect (Guardian July 19).
The same is true of the letter from 68 rabbis who wrote that: “It is not the Labour Party’s place to rewrite a definition of anti-Semitism” (Guardian July 17).
Labour MPs and peers plan to incorporate the full internationally accepted definition of anti-Semitism into their own official rule books (Observer July 22).
The IHRA states as a guide in its work it provides examples that may serve as illustrations. What then follows can hardly be included in the “definition”.
In the IHRA’s document the definition is in a box, and bold, clearly separate from the illustrations.
The letter in the New Journal (Labour should act ‘sharpish’ and adopt the full IHRA definition of anti-Semitism, July 12) also allows misquotes since a definition does not include examples.
When critical inaccurate statements are made, an immediate robust correction is essential.
ISKY GORDON
Lawford Road, NW5