Anti-semitism is often described as anti-Zionism by its proponents. Nobody would deny freedom to criticise the State of Israel, its policies, its politicians or aspects of its society as would be the case with any country but all too often these critics reveal themselves to be blatantly critical of Jews being Jews whether in Israel or anywhere. And so to the report copied below from Jewish News.
The performer Alison Chabloz, on
 trial this week at Westminster Magistrates’ Court over three songs 
alleged to be antisemitic, was repeatedly denounced as a Holocaust 
denier by the Crown Prosecution Service barrister Karen Robinson. But
 Ms Chabloz, giving lengthy evidence on her own behalf in a delayed 
second day in court, insisted that her songs were “satire”, that she was
 “an artist”, and that freedom of speech meant she was entitled to her 
opinions. Ms Chabloz is facing five charges of sending, 
or causing to be sent for viewing on social media, several videos of her
 playing three songs, two of which were performed in front of an 
audience of the London Forum in September 2016. She is said to have embedded a link to one of 
the performances on a WordPress page she runs, called “Tell Me More 
Lies,” and posted a separate performance on YouTube. But in nearly two hours of testimony, Ms 
Chabloz insisted that “many Jewish people find my songs funny”, and 
claimed that there was no “official” evidence that gas chambers had been
 used as a murder weapon to kill Jews during the Holocaust. Defending the lyrics of her songs, which 
include the description of Auschwitz as a “theme park”, Ms Chabloz 
referred repeatedly to “the so-called Holocaust” which she said was “a 
fiction” designed to facilitate “the criminal Jewish state” in 
Palestine. She complained about the “official narrative” 
of the deaths of six million Jews and deplored the practice of sending 
schoolchildren to visit Auschwitz, which she said was”allowing the 
so-called Holocaust to be used as a manipulative weapon to prevent 
nationalist feelings among Europeans”. It was used, she said, to 
“persecute Holocaust dissidents in democratic countries.” The Holocaust,
 she declared, was “used for Machiavellian ends”, and claimed that 
“there are plenty of Holocaust revisionists who are Jewish.” She described herself as a Holocaust 
revisionist rather than a Holocaust denier, but said that there had 
never been “an official investigation” into many of the claims made 
about what happened during the Second World War. Prosecutor Karen Robinson asked the defendant 
over and over again to explain the lyrics of her songs, which she said 
had been deliberately set  to well-known Jewish melodies such as Hava 
Nagila in order to cause maximum offence. But Ms Chabloz denied this, 
and said she had no hostility to Jewish people. She had the right to 
express her views, she said, and disagreed vehemently with Ms Robinson 
who said that such views as expressed in the disputed songs were 
“racist”. “Some may say that”, Ms Chabloz said, smiling broadly. She said that her very presence in court was 
“proof” of an external control of the media, society, the banks and even
 the justice system. There were “a disproportionate number of Jews in 
the media, the Houses of Parliament”. And, she added: “I strongly 
disagree that [my lyrics are] racist. The love of a people for its 
country is not racist and could equally be applied to Israel and Jews”. No-one, she said, was forced to listen to her 
songs and she did not accept that they were grossly offensive, instead 
insisting that they were “funny” and that those who were offended “were 
offended at being laughed at”. Ms Chabloz said her attacks were aimed at 
“Zionist Jews” and that “Orthodox Jews don’t want a state of Israel”. 
When Ms Robinson said that her songs “targeted Jews because they are 
Jews”, the defendant responded: “There are plenty of Jews who find my 
songs funny”. One of the three contested songs, 
(((Survivors))), using the “echo” brackets said to identify Jews on 
line, focuses on the experiences of three survivors, Irene Zysblat, Elie
 Wiesel and Anne Frank. Ms Chabloz said stories of all three had been 
debunked, and that she had chosen to write about them “because their 
tales are dubious”. A written submission to the court was provided
 by Ms Chabloz’s friend Peter Rushton, described as a writer, who had 
researched documents in the British Library designed to support the 
defendant’s assertions. Among the books he cited on her behalf, it was 
said, had been Norman Finkelstein’s controversial book “The Holocaust 
Industry”. District Judge John Zani said he would take 
written and final oral submissions from Ms Robinson and Ms Chabloz’s 
defending barrister, Adrian Davies, before announcing a verdict on May 
25.
 

 





 Lucy Frazer
                    The Parliamentary Under-Secretary of State for Justice
                    Lucy Frazer
                    The Parliamentary Under-Secretary of State for Justice
                

















