About the IHRA Working Definition of Antisemitism. ADL (feb 2021 bekeken).
"The IHRA Definition is an important tool for education and guidance on antisemitism. ... The definition should not be viewed as a substitute or replacement for existing laws. It is not a "charging authority.""
AJC Disappointed by OSCE Failure to Adopt Antisemitism Definition. AJC, 9 dec 2016.
"AJC, the global Jewish advocacy organization, was instrumental in developing the definition [...] The definition is an educational tool and guide for civil society monitors and government authorities to help them better understand the problem and how to combat it."
amazon.co.uk
Teaching the Holocaust: Educational Dimensions, Principles and Practice (ed. Ian Davies), p.28-29; citaat: Many teachers in religious education believe that developing the students' knowledge and understanding of Judaism may help to dislodge stereotypes [...]. They hope that in presenting a positive image of the people and their religious tradition, they may help to prevent some of the misunderstanding and thereby play a part in reducing antisemitism.[1][2]
Moritz Steinschneider (1860), Hebräische Bibliographie. Blätter für neuere und ältere Literatur des Judenthums, vol. III, nr. 13, blz. 16 - Lees op Google Books: "Hoe meer het glanzende, dialectische en stilistische talent van Renan de lezer met zich meevoert, hoe groter de noodzaak om de consequenties, of juister de inconsequenties van zijn antisemitische vooroordelen te onthullen - die uiteindelijk ook niet zonder specifieke bijstelling konden blijven (zie hier blz. 336)."
Teaching the Holocaust: Educational Dimensions, Principles and Practice (ed. Ian Davies), p.28-29; citaat: Many teachers in religious education believe that developing the students' knowledge and understanding of Judaism may help to dislodge stereotypes [...]. They hope that in presenting a positive image of the people and their religious tradition, they may help to prevent some of the misunderstanding and thereby play a part in reducing antisemitism.[1][2]
The Myth of the New Anti-Semitism. Brian Klug, The Nation, 15 jan 2004.
"It goes like this: "Given the principle of self-determination for nations, the Jewish people have a right to their own state, like everyone else. To deny that right, especially if this means singling Jews out, is anti-Semitic."This argument assumes that Jews, or the Jewish people, constitute a nation in the relevant sense, the sense in which the principle of self-determination applies. But this question is no less a burning issue today–not least for Jews themselves–than it was in 1917, when the Conjoint Committee disputed it. (It has been disputed from the beginning of political Zionism in the late nineteenth century down to the present day.)"