ANTISEMITISM TODAY
Transcription
ANTISEMITISM TODAY
ANTI-SEMITISM TODAY Thursday 16 April, this past week, was Holocaust Remembrance Day (Yom Hashoah – Day of Remembering the Catastrophe). Exactly 70 years ago, the same period as the period of Babylonian Exile, the Allied Forces announced that the war against Nazi Germany was over. A war in which it is estimated that up to 6 million Jews lost their lives – approximately two thirds of all the Jews who were living in Europe at that time. According to the great historian of the Holocaust, Raul Hilberg, the phrase “Never Again” first appeared on handmade signs put up by inmates at Buchenwald in April, 1945, shortly after the camp had been liberated by U.S. forces. During 2014 the Kantor Center registered 766 violent anti-Semitic acts perpetrated with or without weapons and by arson, vandalism or direct threats against Jewish persons or institutions such as synagogues, community centers, schools, cemeteries and monuments as well as private property. This is a 38% increase, compared to 2013. A survey in 2013 by the European Union Agency for Fundamental Rights showed that almost a third of Europe’s Jews have considered emigrating because of anti-Semitism, with numbers as high as 46% in France and 48% in Hungary. Quietly, many Jews are asking whether they have a future in Europe. Question: Has the world stuck to its commitment to “NEVER AGAIN” allow something like the holocaust to happen? Jonathan Sacks Emeritus Chief Rabbi of the British Commonwealth • Anti-Semitism has returned to Europe within living memory of the Holocaust. Never again has become ever again. • The assault on Israel and Jews world-wide is part of a larger pattern that includes attacks on Christians and other minority (groups) — a religious equivalent of ethnic cleansing. • Historically ... anti-Semitism has (always) been the early warning signal of a society in danger. That is why the new anti-Semitism needs to be understood—and not only by Jews. RECENT INCIDENTS OF ANTI-SEMITISM January 9, 2015 - Paris - Four Jewish men were killed by terrorist Amedy Coulibaly after Coulibaly stormed a Kosher supermarket and took shoppers hostage. French police eventually killed Coulibaly, and rescued the remaining hostages. Coulibaly was an accomplice of brothers Said and Cherif Kouachi who carried out the terrorist attack at the Charlie Hebdo newspaper, killing 12 people, 2 days before. The Kouachi brothers were also killed by French police. February 14, 2015 - Copenhagen - A gunman opened fire at the Great Synagogue, killing a member of the Copenhagen Jewish community who was guarding a celebration at a Jewish community building near the synagogue, and wounding two police officers. March 17, 2015 - St. Pölten (Lower Austria) – A man wearing a Star of David necklace was attacked at shopping mall by a group of young men, who swore at him for being Jewish and then began to beat him with their fists and feet. The victim took himself to the hospital. March 21, 2015 - Johannesburg - Three visibly Jewish teenagers were attacked in a shopping mall by three men. One of the attackers punched one of the teens while another shouted: "You f***ing Jew" and "Your f***ing people are killing our innocent children.” UN World Conference against Racism, Racial Discrimination, Xenophobia and Related Intolerance (27 Aug – 8 Sep 2001) Durban, South Africa Joëlle Fiss was born in Brighton, UK, and moved to Geneva, Switzerland, where she studied at the Graduate Institute of International Studies. She served as chair of the European Union of Jewish Students, 19992001. She is currently working in Brussels, Belgium, as a policy advisor for the Alliance of Liberals and Democrats for Europe in the European Parliament. This is the story of a group of young Jews who return from Durban, puzzled and disoriented. For the first time in their lives, they have been subjected to racism—by people who staged antiracist speeches. Thousands of people united to isolate, offend, and intimidate them—all in the name of antiracism. Their perceptions shift. Nothing seems to be the same. A new phenomenon, Judeophobia, an abstract notion until then, brutally imposes itself as a new political reality before their eyes. (Abstract from the booklet “The Durban Diaries” by Joëlle Fiss) Video taken two days ago on Holocaust Remembrance Day in Israel, during the two minutes of silence, in which practically the entire country came to a standstill. Protest of the masses after the Charlie Hebdo events in Paris, France, on the 7th of January 2015, which claimed the lives of 12 people: “I am Charlie” – (Fr: "Je suis Charlie") Never again has become ever again (Jonathan Sacks). Simply taking sides with the Jews every time they hit the news, is not the solution. It has become politically and socially “incorrect” to take sides with the Jews and Israel, anyway. Moreover, in South Africa we do not have a “Jewish” problem only – we also have a “Xenophobic” problem, which is very real and very severe! What should we do? Taking a lead from the “I am Charlie” slogan – “I am a child of Yahweh” – what does this mean? As children of Yahweh we are under his authority, above all else Only the peacemakers will be called children of Yahweh Children of Yahweh should love and pray for those who oppose them Children of Yahweh are those who are led and driven by the Spirit of Yahweh Children of Yahweh who suffer like Y’shua will also be exalted like Y’shua Children of Yahweh are not known and understood by this world because they do not know and understand Yahweh Those who do not do righteousness and do not love his brother cannot be a child of Yahweh Children of Yahweh are strengthened by the the constant knowledge “He who is in you is greater than he who is in this world – this second “he” incidentally, is not the spirit of anti-semitism, but the spirit of anti-messiah. This knowledge should both be our biggest strength and our biggest passion.