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Jewish Org Slams Glastonbury’s “Bland Response” To Bob Vylan


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Though Glastonbury and the BBC have condemned Bob Vylan‘s onstage feedback on the England music competition, at the very least one Jewish human rights group will not be glad with the response.

Jim Berk, CEO of the Simon Wiesenthal Heart, referred to as out each the competition and the community for offering a platform for the “disgraceful” efficiency, by which Vylan led the group in chants of “demise to the IDF” and “free Palestine.”

“It was sickening, harmful and chillingly paying homage to a modern-day Nazi rally,” stated Berk, including: “It was public incitement, not efficiency. The specific requires violence in opposition to Jews, broadcast reside by the BBC with out interruption, actually gave hate a stage, a microphone, and the stamp of legitimacy of one in all Britain’s most revered public establishments.”

Berk continued, “And Glastonbury’s bland response? Saying the chants merely ‘crossed a line’ and providing imprecise ‘reminders’ to artists will not be accountability—it’s cowardice. When confronted with specific requires violence in opposition to Jews, something wanting absolute condemnation and corrective motion is complicity.”

Referencing Hamas’ October 2023 invasion of Israel’s Nova music competition, the place 378 have been killed and 251 hostages have been taken, Berk referred to as the chants “deeply re-traumatizing and terrifying.”

“It is a second of reckoning. Competition organizers, media shops, and artists should select: will they be platforms for peace, or enablers of hate? As a result of silence will not be neutrality, it’s a inexperienced gentle for bigotry,” added Berk. “Festivals have to be ready to halt performances that invoke hate; broadcasters should air festivals on deferred reside and use their kill change to take hate speech instantly off the air. By no means once more will not be a slogan: It’s a accountability. And it’s being betrayed on the world’s greatest phases.”

Following the efficiency, the BBC has decried the “deeply offensive” set, which a spokesperson stated they’ve “no plans to make the efficiency out there on demand.”

A Glastonbury rep has stated that officers are “appalled” by the chants, which “very a lot crossed a line and we’re urgently reminding everybody concerned within the manufacturing of the Competition that there isn’t a place at Glastonbury for antisemitism, hate speech or incitement to violence.”