MEMBERS OF THE INTERNATIONAL JEWISH COLLECTIVE FOR JUSTICE IN PALESTINE PARTICIPATE IN THE JEWISH BLOC OF THE “NATIONAL DEMONSTRATION FOR GAZA: END THE GENOCIDE, STOP ARMING ISRAEL” IN LONDON, ON JUNE 8, 2024.

Four years ago, a dozen or so Jewish justice groups began to meet monthly, online. We called ourselves the International Jewish Collective for Justice in Palestine (IJCJP). We learned about the others’ contexts, shared experiences, and ideas about resisting the IHRA Working Definition of Antisemitism. While we each work integrally with Palestinian partners on Palestine issues, we had been reacting to the IHRA definition in isolation. We learned the hard way: the definition rolled over us all. 

The IHRA definition is now the backdrop for the genocide which is being done in our names. Its power is pervasive. The IHRA definition has hemmed in the space of speech and protest, rendered statements of Palestinian identity and rights suspect, foreclosed on millenia of Jewish pluralism, and elevated political difference to the absolute wrong of racism. It diverts from urgent, lifesaving speech: permanent ceasefire now, sufficient humanitarian provision now, peace with justice forever. Every message must now be filtered (or rammed) through a language that places Zionist-Jewish discomfort before Palestinian survival. 

Last weekend, the IJCJP held its first in-person congress in London. We know that our local work is both essential and insufficient, and we met to act strategically. How do the local and the national differ from the international? The member groups of the IJCJP reflect Jewish communities, and we have models of deep organization-building experience, methods that harness the wisdom of small communities, and fluid, decolonizing chat-based groups. We have begun to formulate a real, transnational organizational culture, led with a light touch among autonomous members. We are now 16 countries strong, from six continents, launching a new phase of our work as partners of Palestinians in pursuit of justice. 

We met each other for the first time, marveling at it and yet feeling desperate. We who work closely with Palestinians and we who know Palestine now live through our messages. Our friends and colleagues are surviving minute by minute. Our imaginations falter at the world we are being shown in Gaza but we do not have the luxury of helplessness. Inspirationally, we began our gathering by feeling the power of being among 200,000 people marching through the streets of London – we, within the Jewish Bloc, within a sea of purpose. Palestine will be free.

We as pro-Jewish anti-Zionist allies work in an intentional space. We support and focus on the Palestinians who seek their own liberation. That means more than deflecting disingenuous charges of antisemitism. It means disavowing the exceptionalism that diverts conversation from Palestine toward Zionist-Jewish discomfort. It means reckoning with wider systems of oppression and our implicated status within them because we are part of the change that we seek. It means being there, turning up, earning trust, and being the walking proof that we Jews are not threatened by others’ equal claims in this world. On the contrary, we are all threatened by a world in which genocidal violence is met with silence and complicity.

We also have work to do in our own communities. Israel has spent decades trying to place a flag at the center of Jewish identity. Our good name and our thousands of years of rich, pluralist identity need restoration. We need to build Jewish community that does not replicate the harms we are witnessing in Palestine, and the door has been flung open to do that.

The Jewish institutions that defend one genocide in the name of another are driving a wedge between themselves and every Jew who knows that the slaughter must end. Younger Jews who have been shown only Israel need ways to explore the expansive Jewish space that opens up beyond the Zionist fence.

The IJCJP will add one more dimension to the growing presence of Jewishness beyond Zionism. The rabbis who brought Jewish prayer into the rotunda of Congress and brought Pesach food to the walls of Gaza are already everyone’s rabbis. The students who joined encampments and teach-ins are already everyone’s pride. The thousands of Jews who march and protest in the sea of protestors are already proving to neighbors that Israel does not speak for us. We speak for justice. 

We are taking back the power of definition. We are breathing life into a 21st century Jewishness.

IJCJP member organizations

Mission Statement of the IJCJP

We are Jews from diverse countries, part of local, national, international networks and organizations. We are connected by our involvement in the struggle for Palestinian rights, and by our determination to work for justice. We oppose Zionism and all forms of racism. We came together to share our experiences of the International Holocaust Remembrance Alliance (IHRA) Working Definition of Antisemitism. Although it claims to protect Jews, the IHRA Working Definition is in fact being used to shield Israel from valid political challenge, silence Palestinians, and suppress any mention of Palestinian rights. The IHRA’s weaponization of antisemitism sets a dangerous precedent for limiting speech on many issues. We take this as our immediate priority, but it is only a starting point for our collective commitment to build a more just world.