The only marvelous thing here are your lies. These are not IDF soldiers.Apologies would be in order. https://t.co/ImIY9nD8lX
— Israel Defense Forces (@IDF) April 22, 2019
Swindon later deleted the video, but Morris's comments were still on Twitter until April 23.
Replies pointed out that the reference “may God forgive them,” may have anti-Jewish overtones. “Will Mr. Morris now address his next tweet to the Guatemalan army, seeing as the errors of his ways have been exposed? Or does he only address his conscientious tweets to Jews,” one man responded.The same MP retweeted another video from Swindon the same day, that claimed to show “Gaza” but was actually a video from Hebron.
Absolutely astonishing. When people tell you Gaza is like a prison it is not an exaggeration. I can’t quite find the words for this. pic.twitter.com/tfJ7gGY3Zj
— Rachael Swindon (@Rachael_Swindon) April 22, 2019
The same MP retweeted another video from Swindon the same day that claimed to show “Gaza” but was actually a video from Hebron. “May God forgive them” may be a paraphrase of Jesus’ last words as he is crucified on Easter Friday, “Father, forgive them, for they do not know what they are doing.” (Luke 23:34).Morris rarely tweets about God. A search of his tweet history shows he only used word 12 times since 2010, which points to it being employed particularly against Israel on Easter. The Labour party in the UK has been accused of ignoring antisemitism in the last several years.