
Anti-Zionist Jewish groups have rejected so-called Special Envoy to Combat Antisemitism Jillian Segalās recommendations to the Australian government, describing her report released on July 10 as an attempt to silence dissent, especially about Israelās genocide in Gaza.
(JFPWA) described Segalās appointment to the role as āinappropriate given her history as a pro-Israel lobbyistā.
āHer report ignores the voices of anti-Zionist Jews, and the plan within the report is a dangerous and authoritarian proposal firmly grounded in the widely rejected International Holocaust Remembrance Alliance (IHRA) definition of anti-Semitism,ā JFPWA said.
(JAOā48) said Segal is a āspecial envoy to protect Israelās interests rather than to combat anti-Semitismā. It said her view that āIsrael is the homeland for the Jewish peopleā conflates Judaism with Zionism and wrongly implies that āall Jews ⦠agree with Israelās supremacist expansionismā.
(JCA) said Segalās report and recommendations are āriddled with misinformationā. Her claims about nefarious funding sources for protests and universities āverge on conspiracy theoryā.
It said it is āespecially concerned about the planās strong endorsement of the widely discredited IHRA definition of antisemitism, which has been used to silence legitimate criticism of Israel and Zionismā.
The JCA criticised the planās emphasis on surveillance, censorship and punitive control over the funding of cultural and educational institutions, measures it said are āstraight out of [Donald] Trumpās authoritarian playbookā.
It said the recommendations on visa powers and judicial inquiries into student activity ārisk censoring criticism of Israelā and ādeepening racismā.
JFPWA said even Kenneth Stern, who drafted the original IHRA definition, warned against it being weaponised āin a way never intendedā.
āThe IHRA definition conflates criticism of Israel with the hatred of Jews and, from that assumption, flows the proposals to withdraw the funding of arts bodies and universities that do not comply with it,ā JFPWA said.
It said Segal wants to āshape and govern media narrativesā and give police special powers to respond to ānewly defined antisemitic incidentsā.
āIf implemented, the result would be censorship and surveillance of public institutions and the repression of expressions of solidarity with the Palestinian people.ā
It said that āthis has frightening parallels with Trumpās attempt to silence pro-Palestine sentiment in the USā.
JAOā48 said āSegal seeks to silence the millions of Australians, Jews and non-Jews, who expose and criticise Israelās unlawful occupation and the IDFās [Israel Defense Forces] barbarity, on the ground that this criticism is antisemitic.ā
While Israel builds a concentration camp in Rafah to imprison starving and traumatised Palestinians, āSegal wants to curtail our freedom of press and debate and to withdraw funds from public institutions found to be critical of Israelā.
JFPWA said Australia āalready has laws against hate speech and harassmentā and every manifestation of racism, including Islamophobia and racism against First Nations communities, must be fought.
āWhy is the Jewish community being exceptionalised in this way?ā it said. āIndeed, if enacted, these proposals could even create and fuel anti-Semitism.
āWe demand our right to criticise and protest the actions of the Israeli state and will defy any attempt to silence us.ā
The JCA is calling on Labor to engage with a ābroad spectrum of Jewish voices, including those critical of Israel, who have not been consulted in the development of this planā and to āreject authoritarian proposals that erode civil liberties under the false guise of Jewish safetyā.
JCA executive officer Max Kaiser said: āAntisemitism is real and must be taken seriously. But it does not exist in a vacuum. Any response that treats antisemitism as exceptional, while ignoring Islamophobia, anti-Palestinian racism, and other forms of hate, is doomed to fail.ā