Search Results for 'spent{D167.VIP}.yfr'
Annual Review 2016
27 February 2017
This week CST released the Annual Review 2016. The review is a chance to see the highlights of CST’s crucial work over the past year. CST received charitable status in 1994, and works to secure the Jewish community in the United Kingdom and fight antisemitism.
Are we doing enough to tackle terror in the UK?
The horrific terrorist attacks in London and Manchester in recent weeks have opened a debate about whether this country doing enough to tackle terrorism, and what else can be done to stop young men (and it is usually men) from going out to kill as many people as they can in the name of radical Islamist ideology.
Chief Rabbi Ephraim Mirvis praises the crucial work of CST
16 July 2018
Last week, CST’s Chief Executive, David S Delew, had the privilege of addressing the Office of the Chief Rabbi’s annual conference. Chief Rabbi of the United Hebrew Congregations of the Commonwealth, Ephraim Mirvis, gave a warm introduction to David, who spoke about the crucial work CST undertakes to protect our Jewish community.
John Mann MP at the CST Annual Dinner: We have to take the war to the antisemites
1 March 2019
On 27 February 2019, John Mann MP, spoke at the CST Annual Dinner 2019. Below the video and the is the full transcript of the speech.
Teshuva: Labour and Antisemitism
Just in time for Rosh Hashanah and Yom Kippur, the Labour Party has relented and finally decided to adopt the same basic definition of antisemitism as used by everybody else. To be more accurate, they have relented a bit: because they still feel the need to additionally say that it is okay to “criticise” Israel. (Of course the tachless is that the word “hate” is probably a lot more accurate than the word “criticise”.)
Joint Maccabi GB and CST project Streetwise celebrates ten years of inspiring confidence
18 December 2015
Last night Streetwise celebrated its ten year anniversary with a reception and exhibition. Streetwise is a joint project by Maccabi GB and CST providing sessions on personal safety and development for young Jewish people in the United Kingdom.
Babar Ahmad’s “ideal of jihad” is still a problem
Babar Ahmad is a British jihadi who returned home to the UK last year after being sentenced to 12 and a half years prison in America for terrorism offences. These offences related to a jihadi website called Azzam Publications (named after Abdullah Azzam, the godfather of the first Afghan jihad) that Ahmad set up and ran.
Race hate thugs convicted in Manchester
9 February 2010
From the Manchester Evening News: A mother and son carried out a series of racist attacks on Jewish people by driving past shouting abuse and spraying them with liquid. Dean Parker, 22, and his mum Shameem Parker spent two days driving around the Broughton area of Salford targeting members of the…
Being Jewish is not "an act of provocation"
20 February 2015
On Monday I warned, in an article on Left Foot Forward, that the idea we should appease jihadist terrorists by desisting from doing the things that might 'provoke' them had troubling implications for Jews:
'White Jihad': Jack Renshaw's journey from a far right student to would-be terrorist
13 May 2020
A year ago this week, on 17 May 2019, Jack Renshaw was sentenced to life imprisonment for his attempt to murder a Member of Parliament and a senior police officer in what would have been a shocking act of neo-Nazi terrorism. Renshaw’s path from far right student activist to would-be neo-Nazi terrorist is an example of the danger of hateful extremism, and the power of the violent rhetoric that permeates Britain’s far right. It is also a chilling reminder that hatred of Jews lies at the core of neo-Nazi ideology: while discussing his terror plot with his closest colleagues, Renshaw considered attacking a synagogue.