Gilad Atzmon

Gilad Atzmon (Hebrew: גלעד עצמון, [ɡiˈlad at͡sˈmon]; born 9 June 1963) is a British jazz saxophonist, novelist, political activist, and writer. He has been described by scholars and anti-racism activists as antisemitic and a Holocaust denier.

Gilad Atzmon
גלעד עצמון
Atzmon in concert, February 2007
Born
Gilad Atzmon

(1963-06-09) 9 June 1963
Ramat Gan,Tel Aviv, Israel
NationalityBritish
Education
OccupationMusician, writer
Home townLondon, United Kingdom
Children2
Musical career
OriginJerusalem, Israel
Genres
Instruments
Years active1987–present
Labels
Associated acts
Writing career
Genres
Subjects
Years active2001–present

Early life

Atzmon was born in Ramat Gan[1], Tel Aviv,[2] Israel to Israeli-born parents[3] and brought up as a secular Jew[4] in Jerusalem[2] where his father worked in the military.[5] Atzmon describes his background as "conservative, secular, Zionist”.[6] Of his ancestry, Atzmon says “My great-great-grandfather on my father's side was buried on the Mount of Olives.”[7]

Atzmon first became interested in British jazz as a teenager when he discovered a British record shop and was entranced by Ronnie Scott and Tubby Hayes, subsequently regarding London as the world centre of jazz.[8] Of hearing Charlie Parker's With Strings album on the radio, he has said it "was the first jazz album I fell in love with when I was 17. It's the record that made me want to be a jazz musician."[9] Incapacitated for almost a year by injuries from a climbing accident, he picked up a saxophone and started playing in earnest.[5]

During his compulsory military service, he served as a combat medic in the Israeli army during its 1982 invasion of Lebanon, before transferring to the Israeli Air Force orchestra.[9][2] Atzmon recounts that, after he was demobilised, he busked in Europe for a few months until the winter weather prompted his return.[10]

Musical career

Early years

In the following years, he trained at the Rubin Academy of Music in Jerusalem.[11] During the late 1980s and 1990s Atzmon was a popular session musician and producer, recording extensively and performing with Israeli artists such as: Yehuda Poliker, Yardena Arazi, Si Himan, Meir Banai and Ofra Haza. Additionally, he started the first incarnation of the "Gilad Atzmon Quartet" and a group named "Spiel Acid Jazz Band" with fellow Israeli Jazz musicians, and performed regularly at the Red Sea Jazz Festival.[2]

In 1994, Atzmon planned on studying abroad in the United States but ended up in England,[2] attending the University of Essex[12] and earning a master's degree in Philosophy, according to CounterPunch.[13] He has lived subsequently in the UK,[14] becoming a British citizen in 2002, according to CounterPunch[15] and renouncing his Israeli citizenship.[16]

Instruments and style

While Atzmon's main instrument is the alto saxophone, he also plays soprano, tenor and baritone saxophones and clarinet, sol, zurna and flute.[11][17]

Atzmon told The Guardian that he draws on Arabic music which he says cannot be notated like western music but must be internalised, which he calls "reverting to the primacy of the ear". Atzmon's musical method has been to play with notions of cultural identity, flirting with genres such as tango and klezmer as well as various Arabic, Balkan, Gypsy and Ladino folk forms. Atzmon's recordings deliberately differ from his live shows. "I don't think that anyone can sit in a house, at home, and listen to me play a full-on bebop solo. It's too intense. My albums need to be less manic."[9]

Collaborations and groups

Atzmon joined the veteran punk rock band Ian Dury and the Blockheads in 1998, and continued with the Blockheads after Dury's death.[18][19] He has recorded two albums with Robert Wyatt, who describes him as "one of the few musical geniuses I've ever met".[9]

Atzmon founded the Orient House Ensemble band in London in 2000 with Asaf Sirkis on drums, Frank Harrison on piano and Oli Hayhurst on bass. In 2003 Yaron Stavi replaced Hayhurst. In 2009 Eddie Hick replaced Sirkis.[20] The group was named after Orient House, the former East Jerusalem headquarters of the Palestine Liberation Organization.[9] The band has recorded eight albums. Orient House announced a 40-date tour in 2010.[21]

Robert Wyatt, who has said that Atzmon combines "great artistry with a sense of the intrinsically non-racialist philosophy that's implicit in jazz,"[22] worked with Atzmon and others on his album Comicopera (2007).[23] Wyatt collaborated with Atzmon and Ros Stephens, as well as lyricist Alfreda Benge, on the album For the Ghosts Within (2010), released on Domino Records.[24][25]

Atzmon produced and arranged two albums for Sarah Gillespie Stalking Juliet (2009) and In The Current Climate (2011). Both albums were critically acclaimed.[26] He has toured extensively as a member of Sarah Gillespie's band, playing saxophone, clarinet and accordion.[27]

In 2014, Atzmon performed on The Endless River, the last album of Pink Floyd.[28]

Atzmon is on the creative panel of the Global Music Foundation,[11] a non-profit organization formed in December 2004 which runs residential educational and performance workshops and events in different countries around the world.[29] A musical transcription of ten saxophone solos by Atzmon was released in 2010.[30]

According to reviewer Chris Searle in 2010, writing in the Morning Star, "No jazz musicians have done more to honour, publicise and spread solidarity with the struggle of the Palestinians than Atzmon and the Orient House Ensemble.”[31]

Reviews and awards

Atzmon and his ensemble have received favourable reviews from the Financial Times, The Scotsman, and the Birmingham Post.[32] Reviews of his 2007 album Refuge included:

Manchester Evening News: "The individuality of the music is extraordinary. No one is more willing to serve his music with raw political passion, and that curious cantor-like tone on clarinet is immediately arresting, like Artie Shaw writhing in his death throes."[33]
BBC: "...the OHE is finding its voice in an increasingly subtle blend of East and West, that’s brutal and beautiful."[34]

In February 2009, The Guardian jazz critic John Fordham reviewed Atzmon's newest album In loving memory of America which was described by Atzmon as "a memory of America I had cherished in my mind for many years". It includes five standards and six originals "inspired by the sumptuous harmonies and impassioned sax-playing of (Charlie) Parker's late-40s recordings with classical strings".[35]

While music journalist John Lewis has praised much of Atzmon's work, he notes that "trenchant politics often sit uneasily alongside music, particularly when that music is instrumental". In a 2009 profile in The Guardian, Lewis criticised his 2006 comedy klezmer project, Artie Fishel and the Promised Band, as "a clumsy satire on what he regards as the artificial nature of Jewish identity politics." While Lewis described Atzmon as "one of London's finest saxophonists", he observed that: "It is Atzmon's blunt anti-Zionism rather than his music that has given him an international profile, particularly in the Arab world, where his essays are widely read."[9]

Atzmon's Exile was BBC jazz album of the year in 2003.[36]

Writings

Views

Atzmon has defined himself variously as "not a Jew anymore. I indeed despise the Jew in me (whatever is left)",[37] a "proud self-hating Jew" in the style of Otto Weininger,[38] "a Jew who hates Judaism",[39][40], and as "a Hebrew-speaking Palestinian".[14]

He has said: "I don't write about politics, I write about ethics. I write about Identity. I write a lot about the Jewish Question – because I was born in the Jew-land, and my whole process in maturing into an adult was involved with the realisation that my people are living on stolen land".[41] Atzmon has said that his experience in the military of "my people destroying other people left a big scar" and led to his decision that he was deluded about Zionism. Atzmon has compared "the Jewish Ideology" to that of the Nazis and has described Israel's policy toward the Palestinians as genocide.[42] He has condemned "Jewishness" as "very much a supremacist, racist tendency", but has also stated that "I don't have anything against Jews in particular and you won't find that in my writings".[14] Regarding the one-state solution, Atzmon concedes that such a state probably would be controlled by Islamists, but says, "That's their business".[9]

Periodicals

Atzmon has written for CounterPunch and The Palestine Chronicle.[43][44] In 2009, he wrote for and edited the website, Palestine Think Tank.[9]

Books

Atzmon's A Guide to the Perplexed, published in 2001, is set in a 2052 in which Israel has been replaced by a Palestinian state. Jeffrey St. Clair in CounterPunch describes it as "vividly written satire, infused with a ribald sense of humor and an unsparing critique of the incendiary political cauldron of the Mideast". It largely reviews memoirs of the alienated Israeli Gunther Wunker's rise to fame as a "peepologist", or voyeur. The perplexed are defined as "the unthinking Chosen" who "cling to clods of earth that don't belong to them". The novel excoriates what it describes as the commercialization of the Holocaust and "argues that the Holocaust is invoked as a kind of reflexive propaganda designed to shield the Zionist state from responsibility for any transgression against Palestinians".[15]

Matthew J. Reisz, a reviewer for The Independent, wrote that "As a viciously black satire on Israeli life" the book "is grandiose, childish and nasty, but with just enough connection with reality to give it a certain unsettling power".[45] Darren King in The Observer noted of this "provocative debut novel" that it is "odd to mix knob gags with highly serious assertions", but thought it works because "Atzmon writes with so much style and his gags are so hilarious".[46]

Atzmon's second novel, My One and Only Love, was published in 2005 and features as a protagonist a trumpeter who chooses to play only one note (extremely well), as well as a spy who uncovers Nazi war criminals and locks them inside double bass cases which then tour permanently in the protagonist's orchestra's luggage.[47] The book is also a comedic take on "Zionist espionage and intrigue" which explores "the personal conflict between being true to one’s heart and being loyal to The Jews".[48] By 2009, his two comic novels had been published in 24 languages.[9]

Atzmon's 2015 book, A to Zion: The Definitive Israeli Lexicon, was summarised by Eugene Schulman in CounterPunch as "designed to alphabetically define certain aspects of Zionism and Zionist personalities in one-liner jabs" and said it would "knock a hole in all your prejudices".[13]

Atzmon's fifth book, Being in Time: A Post-Political Manifesto, published in 2017, was described by James Petras as "a brilliant and substantive critique of identity politics and Jewish political ideology and culture" and as "an essential read for understanding and confronting authoritarianism of all stripes and colours".[49] Keith Kahn-Harris, in an opinion piece, argued that its critique of identity politics and ascription of it to Jewishness was inherently antisemitic.[50]

The Wandering Who?

In 2011, Zero Books published Atzmon's book, The Wandering Who? A Study of Jewish Identity Politics, stating that it "examines Jewish identity politics and Jewish contemporary ideology using both popular culture and scholarly texts".[10]

Marc H. Ellis likens Atzmon's rhetorical extremism and harsh censure of Jews to the prophetic voices of the Old Testament, arguing that, for Atzmon, diasporic Jews are asked to construct their identity on the basis of the State of Israel and the Holocaust, an identity he regards as without foundation. He adds that Atzmon considers charges that he is antisemitic as 'last ditch attempts' to validate that identity. In Ellis's view, there may be, in the perceived anxiety in these repeated attacks, a reflection of the same anxiety Atzmon himself arguably embodies.[51]

In The Atlantic, Jeffrey Goldberg described Atzmon as "jazz saxophonist who lives in London and who has a side gig disseminating the wildest sort of anti-Semitic conspiracy theories", and described several instances of Holocaust denial and antisemitic discourse by Atzmon including: describing the Holocaust as "the new Western religion", that Hitler was persecuted by Jews, and that Jews traffic in body parts. Goldberg notes that even Boycott, Divestment and Sanctions activists have repudiated him. According to Goldberg, Atzmon in the book calls for renewed scholarship into the veracity of long-rejected medieval blood libels.[52]

According to Alan Dershowitz in The New Republic, at least ten authors associated with the publisher called on it to distance itself from Atzmon’s views, asserting that the “thrust of Atzmon’s work is to normalise and legitimise anti-Semitism".[53]

Allegations of antisemitism

Timeline

In December 2004,[54] Atzmon stated that "I'm not going to say whether it is right or not to burn down a synagogue, I can see that it is a rational act".[55][56][57] This statement was included in a dossier of alleged antisemitic behaviour at the institution prepared by the Board of Deputies of British Jews.[58]

In a 2005 opinion piece, David Aaronovitch criticised Atzmon for his essay "On Anti-Semitism" and for circulating an article promoting Holocaust denial.[59] In June, members of the Jews Against Zionism (JAZ) group protested in front of a London bookshop against an appearance by Atzmon who was criticised by JAZ for circulating a Paul Eisen work that defended Holocaust denier Ernst Zündel.[60]

In a 2006 opinion piece, David Hirsh criticised what he called Atzmon's "openly anti-Jewish rhetoric", including Jewish deicide.[61] In response to a question about this Atzmon replied, in CounterPunch, "I find it astonishing that people today happen to be offended by such accusations (i.e. about an event almost 2000 years ago)".[62]

In 2011, David Landy, an Irish academic and former chair of the Ireland Palestine Solidarity Campaign,[63] wrote that Atzmon's words, "if not actually anti-Semitic, certainly border on it".[64]

In 2012, the US Palestinian Community Network published a statement by three members of its National Coordinating Committee and other Palestinian activists, including Ali Abunimah, Naseer Aruri, Omar Barghouti, Nadia Hijab and Joseph Massad, calling for "the disavowal of Atzmon by fellow Palestinian organizers, as well as Palestine solidarity activists, and allies of the Palestinian people" and affirming that "we regard any attempt to link and adopt antisemitic or racist language, even if it is within a self-described anti-imperialist and anti-Zionist politics, as reaffirming and legitimizing Zionism."[65][66]

At a talk by Richard A. Falk at LSE in March 2017, which was being disrupted by pro-Israel activists, Atzmon was alleged to have commented that Jews had been "expelled from Germany for misbehaving" and also to have suggested that people should read Holocaust denier David Irving.[67]

In 2018, Islington Council banned Atzmon from performing at the Islington Assembly Hall, as the council feared Atzmon's appearance could harm relationships with religious communities.[68]

Anti-racism organisations

David Neiwert, writing in the Southern Poverty Law Center's Hatewatch, described Atzmon as "a self-described 'self-hating ex-Jew' whose writings and pronouncements are rich in conspiracy theories, Holocaust trivialization and distortion, and open support of anti-Israeli terrorist groups."[69]

The Anti-Defamation League described Atzmon as "an outspoken promoter of classic anti-Semitic conspiracy theories and a fierce critic of the State of Israel (who) has engaged in Holocaust diminution and has defended the right of Holocaust deniers to challenge historical narratives and offer revisionist theories about the Holocaust.".[70]

Hope not Hate described Atzmon as "an antisemite who has promoted the works of Holocaust deniers".[71][72] relating the Holocaust denial support mainly to circulating a work of Paul Eisen.[72]

Scholarship

According to David Hirsh, Atzmon attempted to lead an antisemitic purge of the anti-zionist movement, however runs counter to the anti-Racist values of most anti-zionists. Despite this, it took some time for the Palestine Solidarity Campaign and Socialist Workers Party to stop treating Atzmon as legitimate.[73]

Nicolas Terry characterised Atzmon, along with Paul Eisen and Israel Shamir, as one of the very few Jewish Holocaust deniers who were associated with Deir Yassin Remembered. Terry notes that after the Palestine Solidarity Campaign expelled several Holocaust deniers, Atzmon rallied other sympathisers around the Deliberation website.[74]

Responses

Atzmon describes charges of antisemitism as being a "common Zionist silencing apparatus".[75] and claims that "there is an international smear campaign against me". [76] According to Atzmon, his statements have lost him performance contracts, especially in the United States,[77] while in Britain, the Campaign Against Antisemitism has sought to stop him performing.[78][79]

Atzmon has written that he was quoted inaccurately and out of context.[80] Atzmon has acccused the anti-fascist Hope Not Hate as being “an integral part of the Zionist network, dedicated to promoting Jewish tribal politics”.[81] In 2009, Atzmon said "I've got nothing against the Semite people, I don't have anything against people — I'm anti-Jewish, not anti-Jews".[42]

Oren Ben-Dor wrote in CounterPunch in 2008 "I am firmly convinced that these vulgar attempts at silencing of Gilad and other courageous voices offends against supremely thoughtful, compassionate and egalitarian intellectual endeavours".[82]

In 2012, Norton Mezvinsky wrote that "Gilad Atzmon is a critical and committed secular humanist with firm views, who delights in being provocative".[83][84]

Libel case

In July 2018, Atzmon was forced to apologise to Gideon Falter, the chairman of the Campaign Against Antisemitism and agreed to pay costs and damages, after being sued for libel. Atzmon had falsely alleged that Falter had profited from fabricating antisemitic incidents.[85][78][86] Atzmon had sought help from his supporters to cover the remaining £40,000 of legal costs and damages.[87]

Personal life

Atzmon is married with two children and lives in London.[41][2]

Discography

  • The Spirit of Trane (Fanfare Jazz, 2017)
  • World Peace Trio (Enja, 2017)
  • The Whistle Blower (Fanfare Jazz, 2014)
  • Songs of the Metropolis (World Village, 2013)
  • For the Ghosts Within with Robert Wyatt and Ros Stephen (Domino, 2010)
  • The Tide Has Changed (World Village, 2010)
  • In Loving Memory of America (Enja, 2009)
  • Refuge (Enja, 2007)
  • Artie Fishel and the Promised Band (WMD, 2006)
  • MusiK with Robert Wyatt (Enja, 2004)
  • Exile (Enja, 2004)
  • Nostalgico (Enja, 2001)
  • Gilad Atzmon & The Orient House Ensemble (Enja, 2000)
  • Juizz Muzic (Fruitbeard, 1999)
  • Take It or Leave It (Face Jazz, 1997)
  • Spiel: Both Sides (MCI, 1995)
  • Spiel Acid Jazz Band (MCI, 1995)
  • Spiel (In Acoustic & H.M. Acoustica, 1993)

Bibliography

  • A Guide to the Perplexed (Serpent’s Tail, 2002) ISBN 1-85242-826-0
  • My One and Only Love (Saqi Books, 2005) ISBN 978-0-86356-507-6
  • The Wandering Who?: A Study of Jewish Identity Politics (Zero Books, 2011) ISBN 978-1-84694-875-6
  • A to Zion: The Definitive Israeli Lexicon (Fanfare Press, 2015) ISBN 978-0993183706
  • Being in Time: A Post-Political Manifesto (Skyscraper Publications, 2017) ISBN 978-1911072201

Filmography

  • Gilad and All That Jazz (Contra Image, 2012)

References

  1. "A to Zion". Fanfare Publications. Retrieved 2 May 2020.
  2. Frid, Yaron (15 October 2010). "Haunted by Ghosts". Haaretz. Retrieved 12 January 2018.
  3. Sabra, Martina (2003). ""I already Consider Myself a Palestinian"". Qantara. Retrieved 20 May 2020.
  4. Nicholson, Stuart (13 March 2005). "With anger in his soul". The Guardian. Retrieved 20 May 2020.
  5. Panayides, Theo (21 February 2010). "Wandering jazz player". Cyprus Mail. Retrieved 20 May 2020.
  6. "Manic beat preacher". The Guardian. 6 March 2009. Retrieved 21 June 2020.
  7. S, Clara (23 January 2018). "On the wrong of the story?". Neue Rheinische Zeitung. Retrieved 21 June 2020.
  8. Atzmon, Gilad (13 October 2005). "How jazz got hot again". The Telegraph. Retrieved 1 May 2020.
  9. John Lewis "Manic beat preacher", The Guardian, 6 March 2009
  10. Gilad Atzmon, The Wandering Who? A Study of Jewish Identity Politics, Zero Books, 2011. ISBN 978-1-84694-875-6
  11. "Gilad Atzmon". People. Global Music Foundation. Retrieved 28 October 2008.
  12. University of Essex news release dated 14 December 2007 notes Atzmon is a "graduate" Archived 22 April 2008 at the Wayback Machine, Essex.ac.uk; accessed 27 February 2016.
  13. Schulman, Eugene (22 May 2015). "On Gilad Atzmon's Definitive Israeli Lexicon/". CounterPunch. Retrieved 1 May 2020.
  14. Gilchrist, Jim (22 February 2008). "'I thought music could heal the wounds of the past. I may have got that wrong'". The Scotsman. Retrieved 21 March 2009.
  15. Jeffrey St. Clair,'Gilad Atzmon's "A Guide to the Perplexed",' CounterPunch 17 July 2003
  16. Karen Abi-Ezzi, 'Music as a Discourse of Resistance: The Case of Gilad Atzmon,' in Olivier Urbain (ed.), Music and Conflict Transformation: Harmonies and Dissonances in Geopolitics, I. B. Tauris, 2015 pp.93–103, p. 93
  17. Cook, Richard (2005). Richard Cook's Jazz Encyclopedia. London: Penguin Books. p. 23. ISBN 0-141-00646-3.
  18. Stephen Robb, "The old Blockheads shows go on", BBC News, 25 January 2007.
  19. Sara Greek, Blockheads come to Hertford Corn Exchange Archived 6 December 2013 at the Wayback Machine, Hertfordshire Mercury, 28 October 2011.
  20. John Fordham, Asaf Sirkis Trio: Letting Go – review, The Guardian, 14 October 2010.
  21. John Fordham, Gilad Atzmon Orient House Ensemble – review, The Guardian, 5 October 2010.
  22. Lester Paul "So who is top of the pops", The Guardian, 26 June 2010.
  23. Chris Jones, A national treasure makes another peerless album, BBC, 5 October 2007.
  24. Andy Gill, Album: Wyatt, Atzmon, Stephen, For The Ghosts Within (Domino), The Independent, 8 October 2011.
  25. Alex Hudson, "Robert Wyatt Unveils New Collaborative Album", Exclaim!, 8 July 2010
  26. John Fordham "Stalking Juliet review", The Guardian, 10 April 2009
  27. "Robert Shaw, Guitarist Keeps Her Finger on the Pulse", Metro.co.uk, 6 January 2011.
  28. Woodcroft, Molloy (9 November 2014). "Pink Floyd: The Endless River review – 'a good way to call it a day'". The Observer. Retrieved 11 May 2020.
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  35. John Fordham, "Gilad Atzmon: In Loving Memory of America", The Guardian, 27 February 2009.
  36. Jazz winners span generations, BBC, 30 July 2003.
  37. Gidley, Ben (30 October 2017). "Why Are U.K. Progressives Still Celebrating a Grotesque anti-Semite and Holocaust Denier?". Haaretz. Retrieved 3 May 2020.
  38. Theo Panayides, 'Wandering jazz player,', Cyprus Mail, 21 February 2010: "My ethical duty is to say the things that I know and feel. I’m an artist. Do you know.. this is something I learned from Otto Weininger, the Austrian philosopher. He was a clever boy, killed himself when he was 21. ..He was definitely a proud self-hating Jew! I’m not a self-hating Jew: I’m a proud self-hating Jew! It’s a big difference… I celebrate my hatred towards everything I represent – or better to say [everything] I’m associated with".
  39. חלילי, יניב (9 November 2011). הפרוטוקולים של גלעד עצמון. Yediot Ahronot (in Hebrew). Retrieved 1 August 2013. דווקא בתור יהודי ששונא יהדות, אני שם את עצמי תחת זכוכית מגדלת ובוחן כל אספקט יהודי בתוכי. (As a Jew who hates Judaism, I put myself under a magnifying glass and examine every Jewish aspect in me).
  40. Halily, Yaniv (14 November 2011). "The protocols of Gilad Atzmon". Yediot Ahronot. Retrieved 1 August 2013.
  41. Theo Panayides, 'Wandering jazz player,', Cyprus Mail, 21 February 2010.
  42. Gibson, Martin. "No choice but to speak out — Israeli musician 'a proud self-hating Jew'", The Gisborne Herald, 23 January 2009.
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  44. Examples of Gilad Atzmon in CounterPunch:Vengeance, Barbarism and Tarantino's Inglourious Basterds, 18 September 2009; Collective Self-Deception: The Most Common Mistakes of Israelis, 28 August 2003; The Left and Islam: Thinking Outside of the Secular Box, 10–12 July 2009.
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  47. Sholto Byrnes. "Talking Jazz", The Independent, 25 March 2005
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  52. Goldberg, Jeffery (23 September 2011). "John Mearsheimer Endorses a Hitler Apologist and Holocaust Revisionist". The Atlantic.
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  58. Curtis, Polly. "SOAS faces action over alleged anti-semitism", The Guardian, 12 May 2004.
  59. Aaronovitch, David (28 June 2005). "How did the far Left manage to slip into bed with the Jew-hating Right?". The Times. London. Retrieved 24 February 2018. (subscription required)
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  61. Hirsh, David. Openly embracing prejudice, The Guardian, 30 November 2006. Hirsh also refers to the statement in "What charge?", "The Guardian", 3 April 2006.
  62. "Are You a Christian?" "Do I Look Like the Pope?" – An Exchange Between Lenni Brenner & Gilad Atzmon, CounterPunch, 15 February 2007.
  63. "Palestine campaigners target LUAS operator's complicity with Israeli apartheid". 29 April 2010. Retrieved 2 May 2020.
  64. Landy, David (2011). Jewish Identity and Palestinian Rights: Disapora Jewish Opposition to Israel. London: Zed Books. p. 167. ISBN 978-1-84813-926-8.
  65. "Palestinian writers, activists disavow racism, anti-Semitism of Gilad Atzmon". Electronic Intifada. 13 March 2012. Retrieved 25 March 2012.
  66. Goldstein, Alyssa (18 March 2012). "Gilad Atzmon and the Problem of Jerks in your Movement". Jewish Currents. Retrieved 30 April 2020.
  67. "Jewish students told 'don't study at LSE' by Board president". Jewish News Online. 23 March 2017. Retrieved 22 November 2017.
  68. "Labour MP sorry for backing musician accused of anti-Semitism". BBC News. 21 December 2018.
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  70. "Gilad Atzmon". ADL. Retrieved 22 November 2017.
  71. Welch, Ben (21 December 2018). "Labour MP Chris Williamson branded 'Jew baiter' for signing petition supporting 'Holocaust denier' Gilad Atzmon". The Jewish Chronicle.
  72. Meszaros, Paul. "GILAD ATZMON HEADS TO READING". Hope Not Hate.
  73. Hirsh, David. Contemporary Left Antisemitism. Routledge. p. chapter 8.
  74. Terry, Nicolas. Holocaust and Genocide Denial: A Contextual Perspective. Routledge. p. 47.
  75. Barnaby Smith, Sax With An Axe To Grind, Interview with Gilad Atzmon in London Tour Dates magazine, 5 October 2006
  76. Deeks, Steve (27 March 2019). "Jazz musician cancelled by Southsea club over 'anti-semitic' claims says he is victim of 'international smear campaign'". The News. Retrieved 3 May 2020.
  77. Karen Abi-Ezzi, "Music as a Discourse of Resistance: The Case of Gilad Atzmon”, Chapter 7 of Olivier Urbain, Editor, Music and conflict transformation: harmonies and dissonances in geopolitics, I.B. Tauris, 2008 p. 101.
  78. Welch, Ben (2 July 2018). "Gilad Atzmon is forced to apologise to CAA's Gideon Falter over libel". The Jewish Chronicle. Retrieved 3 July 2018.
  79. Frazer, Jenni (22 May 2018). "Gilad Atzmon to face trial for accusing Jewish activist of 'inventing anti-Semitism'". Jewish News. Retrieved 2 May 2020.
  80. Atzmon, Gilad (24 April 2005). "Letters to the Editor". The Observer. Retrieved 9 May 2020.
  81. Cumiskey, Lucas (20 December 2018). "Islington Council bans famous jazz musician accused of antisemitism from performing with The Blockheads". Islington Gazette. Retrieved 9 May 2020.
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  83. Norton Mezvinsky, Gilad Atzmon and The Wandering Who?, Washington Report on Middle East Affairs, May 2012.
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