Chelsea FC players Charly Musonda, Eden Hazard, and Ross Barkley participate in the team's initiative against antisemitism, January 2018. (photo credit: CHELSEA FOOTBALL CLUB)
A week ahead of International Holocaust Remembrance Day, initiatives to tackle antisemitism in the UK are being unveiled in a variety of fields, from football pitches to university campuses to the parliament.
Chelsea Football Club announced Tuesday that it will launch a new campaign to raise awareness among players, staff, fans and the wider community about antisemitism in football.
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The club will officially kick off the initiative on January 31 at its Premier League game against Bournemouth, with an apparently high profile activity that has yet to be announced.
The initiative will be run as part of the Chelsea Foundation’s Building Bridges campaign, which strives to promote equality and celebrate diversity.
"Everybody at Chelsea is proud to be part of a diverse club," Chelsea FC said in a statement. "Our players, staff, fans and visitors to the club come from a wide range of backgrounds, including the Jewish community, and we want to ensure everyone feels safe, valued and included."
The club with work together with the Holocaust Educational Trust, the Jewish Museum, the Community Security Trust, Kick It Out, the World Jewish Congress and the Anne Frank House on the campaign.
The campaign will include a focus on Jewish faith and culture in equality and diversity workshops run in primary schools and an education program for supporters banned for antisemitic behavior to help them to understand the impact of their actions. Participation in the course could result in a reduction in the length of their ban.
Chelsea fans have frequently been been accused of employing antisemitic songs, chants and gestures.
The campaign's steering committee, led by Chelsea Chairman Bruce Buck, includes prominent Jewish leaders such as President of the World Jewish Congress Ronald Lauder, Vice-chair of the Conference of Presidents of Major American Jewish Organizations Malcolm Hoenlein and National Director and CEO of the Anti-Defamation League Jonathan Greenblatt.
Activities set to take place throughout the year will also include an exhibition at the Chelsea Museum on football and British Jews and screenings of Liga Terezin - a documentary about a football league run from a concentration camp during the Holocaust. The club has also invited Holocaust survivor Harry Spiro to Chelsea to share his and his family’s story.
Educational visits to former concentration camps for staff, fans and stewards are also planned, similar to an initiative launched by the government to take student leaders to visit Auschwitz.
On Tuesday, Secretary of State for Communities and Local Government Sajid Javid announced that his Ministry, together with the Department for Education, will establish a new strand of the Holocaust Educational Trust´s "Lessons from Auschwitz" program.
The program brings students and teachers on visits to the former death camp, preceded and followed by half-days seminars. The new government initiative, was proposed by the Holocaust Educational Trust and the Union of Jewish Students to tackle antisemitism, prejudice and intolerance on university campuses. The program will invite two sabbatical Officers from each university to visit the death camps and Vice-Chancellors will also be encouraged to take part.
StandWithUs UK also tackled the issue of campus antisemitism this week, arranging an event at Parliament, hosted by the Labour Friends of Israel. MP Joan Ryan, Chair of Labour Friends of Israel, responded to questions about antisemitism in the Labour party as well as discussing the UK-Israel relationship, the Middle East conflict and BDS. Student leaders from more than 20 universities across the UK attended the event.
Later in the event, StandWithUs announced its annual campaign in parallel with Apartheid Week, called ‘Peace Week UK’, which will run throughout the month of February and March. Peace Week UK seeks to foster a new dialogue between students, reform campus culture and build bridges between student groups from different backgrounds, faiths and ideologies, while working to combat the delegitimization of Jewish and pro-Israel students in the UK.