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Jeremy Corbyn sings with attendees after his speech on the last day of the Labour party conference in Brighton on 27 September 2017
Jeremy Corbyn at the Labour conference in Brighton this week. ‘Our mission is to contribute to making the Labour party an open, democratic and inclusive party,’ writes Jenny Manson of Jewish Voice for Labour. Photograph: Xinhua/Barcroft Images
Jeremy Corbyn at the Labour conference in Brighton this week. ‘Our mission is to contribute to making the Labour party an open, democratic and inclusive party,’ writes Jenny Manson of Jewish Voice for Labour. Photograph: Xinhua/Barcroft Images

Jewish Voice for Labour is not an anti-Zionist group

This article is more than 6 years old
Jenny Manson, chair of Jewish Voice for Labour, writes that the group’s objective is simply to uphold the right of supporters of justice for Palestinians to engage in solidarity activities; Raphael Levy questions the apparent contradictions in Labour’s attempts to tackle antisemitism within the party

John Crace, whose contributions are always good value, has got it wrong (Sketch, 27 September). I chaired the meeting of Jewish Voice for Labour he mentions in passing. What he discusses in his sketch is in dispute but, in any event, it happened at an entirely separate meeting – not ours. JVL is not, as he claims, an anti-Zionist group, nor was the Holocaust mentioned, let alone questioned at our hugely popular launch on Monday evening at the Labour party conference, attended by close on 300 people.

Our mission is to contribute to making the Labour party an open, democratic and inclusive party, encouraging all ethnic groups and cultures to join and participate freely. The sole ideological commitments members make is to broadly support what is contained in our statement of principles. These include a commitment “to strengthen the party in its opposition to all forms of racism, including antisemitism”. Describing JVL as “anti-Zionist” fundamentally misrepresents us. Our statement of principles makes no mention at all of Zionism. Rather our objective is simply to uphold the right of supporters of justice for Palestinians to engage in solidarity activities. I gave an assurance from the chair that, in accordance with our statement of principles, you need hold no position on Zionism – for, against or anything else – to join and work with us.
Jenny Manson
Chair, Jewish Voice for Labour

Jeremy Corbyn backs a rule change aimed at making it easier to tackle antisemitism in the Labour party and on the same day we find out a) being offensive to Jews is not antisemitic; b) the Holocaust may not have actually happened, or at least, we should discuss it; and c) antisemitism is, in fact, just mood music. Good thing none of those people are Corbyn’s allies or anything…
Raphael Levy
Radlett, Hertfordshire

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