This one comes from the Jerusalem Post:
'We Are Looking At the Beginnings Of A Holocaust'
The situation facing European Jewry is “simply intolerable,
unacceptable and inexcusable,” Israeli Jewish Congress president
Vladimir Sloutsker told MKs and foreign diplomats at a special session
of the Knesset Immigration, Absorption and Diaspora Committee on
Monday.
Calling the rise in anti-Semitic incidents accompanying Israel’s invasion of Gaza an “SOS situation,” Sloutsker warned that if left unchecked, such behavior could lead to another European genocide.
“Never before since the Holocaust, have we seen such a situation as
today,” he said, referring to the continent-wide demonstrations by
pro-Palestinian activists, a number of which have generated into
violence and many of which have featured racist rhetoric.
“We are potentially looking at the beginning of another Holocaust
now. These events [violent demonstrations and expressions of
anti-Semitism] will only grow in scale across Europe,” he asserted.
Addressing
the legislators and representatives of a number of European
governments, including those of Denmark, Holland and France, the
oligarch and former head of the Russian Jewish Congress called for
Jewish communities across the continent to “unite and consolidate.”
Sloutsker
also called on all European governments to impose what he called
“strict regulations” on the format and content of demonstrations in
order to prevent further violence against Jews.
Citing a recent
proposal by Belgian Jewry to establish a position of Special European
Commissioner to monitor and combat anti-Semitism and racism, Sloutsker
said such measures would “help send a strong message that European
leadership is united and committed to combating anti-Semitism, racism
and xenophobia.”
A number of Israeli legislators echoed Sloutsker’s call for a more proactive European approach to combating anti-Semitism.
“Fight
together with us,” MK Shimon Ohayon urged the diplomats present,
adding that he was opposed to “dangerous propaganda” that painted
Israel as an aggressor.
Jews in Europe have been targeted because
they are Jewish and not because of any territorial claim or conflict in
the Middle East, the lawmaker asserted, but “because they are against
them because they are Jews,” citing attacks against Jews in France,
including a recent riot in the Parisian suburb of Sarcelles in which
the synagogue and Jewish stores were targeted by people.
“We ask you to stop this wheel” of “anti-Semitic hatred in Europe,” he added, calling anti-Zionism the “new anti-Semitism.”
The
world “must understand” that Israel is fighting against terrorism,
committee chairman Yoel Rzbozov said in response to Ohayon’s statement,
echoing the prevailing sentiment among the lawmakers present.
The
state will not allow one Jew to remain undefended, MK Yisrael Hasson
chimed in, asserting that the fates of European and Israeli Jews are
intertwined.
Jews in Belgium are being asked “why are you killing
children in Gaza?” Rafael Werner, a representative of Belgium's Jewish
community recounted, asserting that there is little distinction being
made between Jews and Israelis.
“There is no hasbara in Europe,” he complained, using the Hebrew term for public diplomacy.
The
situation in Europe is “dire,” said MP Meir Habib, a Jew who
represents French expatriates in the National Assembly. While praising
the French political leadership for their commitment to defending their
country’s Jewish community, he said that hearing calls for the deaths
of Jews at demonstrations left him “concerned that there will be a
second Toulouse,” a reference to the 2012 shooting deaths of several
Jews at a Jewish school in that city.
Decrying what he perceived
as a lack of concern for the mass deaths accompanying the Syrian civil
war, Habib complained that accusations of “disproportionate” actions by
Israeli forces have been harmful and asserted that the media is “the
primary problem.”
Most French Jews will remain in France despite a
high rate of emigration, he concluded, imploring his Israeli
counterparts to “help those who stay.”
European representatives
present during the meeting sought to assure the room that their
governments are committed to defending local communities.
“We
refuse to allow any conflict to be imported into French society,” a
representative of the French embassy said. “The security of the Jewish
citizens of France is an utmost priority for us. Our determination will
not falter.”
“Forceful measures have to be taken against cases
of anti-Semitism or it will increase,” Dutch Ambassador Casper Veldkamp
said. “The situation is severe. We risk importing the conflict from
the Middle East to Europe when Europe should export respect.”
Danish
Ambassador Jesper Vahr agreed but cautioned the communal leaders and
legislators about linking anti-Semitism and the current Israeli
military operation.
“We are discussing anti-Semitism. There is
also another discussion going around the table pertaining Operation
Protective Edge,” he said. “I would warn against mixing apples and
oranges…we as a society also defend the right of people in Denmark to
voice their protests against the actions happening on the ground. You
know the position of my government on that.”
3 comments:
This just fills me with dread. The time of Rachels trouble is coming.
I agree...We know what's coming in the Tribulation for Jews and Christians alike - this is just the very beginnings of that.
Do you mean Jacob's trouble?
Post a Comment