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Even in quiet German city, European Jews fear 'new' anti-Semitism
AP ^ | Dec 03, 2003 | Mort Rosenblum

Posted on 12/03/2003 9:17:48 PM PST by witnesstothefall

REGENSBURG, Germany --

Even in this storybook city on the Danube, where Oskar Schindler lived among Jews he saved and David Ben-Gurion shopped for Israel's first air force, the old dread looms.

Few here imagine another fanatical Fuehrer re-emerging anywhere in Europe. Yet even in Regensburg, in a Germany whose Nazi past has driven it to the most profound acts of atonement, Jews who have fit so well into post-World War II surroundings feel a growing unease.

Across much of Europe, Jews see old prejudices mixing with new threats from militants among the continent's 17 million Muslims, spread rapidly by mosques, the Internet and Arab satellite TV.

In a clear reflection of Israeli-Palestinian tensions and the war in Iraq, many Jews also say they sense growing hostility among European intellectuals they see as demonizing Israel.

Surveys say anti-Jewish assaults and incidents in much of Europe are at their most frequent since Hitler's defeat.

Germany is especially sensitive because, within living memory, Hitler put to death 6 million Jews. But violence is more prevalent in France, where slums are crowded with disaffected young Arabs.

"Of course, we're afraid - we are terrified," said Ima Buchinger, an 18-year-old student at the Regensburg synagogue on the anniversary of Kristallnacht, the nationwide Nazi pogrom of 1938.

Tall and blonde, she might pass for a Wagnerian opera diva. Still, she said, young Arabs, Turks and Germans taunt her and her Jewish friends, sometimes threatening physical violence.

As she spoke, German police in a Volkswagen van were at their usual spot outside, just as security forces watch over synagogues in Vienna, Paris or London.

An ugly climate extends to places where tension has been less acute. In Budapest, a Jewish-supported soccer team sometimes hears rival fans chant, "The train is leaving for Auschwitz." In Athens, Mikis Theodorakis, composer of music to the film "Zorba the Greek," last month called Jews "the root of all evil."

This new mood taints even traditionally tolerant Britain, where the Conservative Party has just elected Michael Howard, son of a Romanian Jewish immigrant, as its leader.

"Why is the liberal left not sufficiently concerned about the growth of anti-Semitism?" the British Guardian newspaper asked in an editorial last month.

"A new anti-Semitism is on the march across the globe," it said. "It is no wonder that the Jewish community in the United Kingdom feels unsettled, uncomfortable and fearful."

Numbers are difficult to assess because many incidents go unreported, and police sometimes dismiss anti-Semitic acts as common crime.

Tel Aviv University, which keeps track worldwide, reported that 2002 and early 2003 "witnessed an alarmingly significant increase in the number of anti-Semitic acts."

It counted 56 assaults involving weapons or explosives in 2002, compared to 50 in 2001, and 255 other violent incidents, also a 12 percent increase over 2001. Most incidents were in western Europe.

The pace in most countries is quickening in 2003, the study said, and simple vandalism is giving way to physical assaults on Jews.

David Harris, executive director of the American Jewish Committee, testified in Congress that European Jews face "a level of unease not seen in the postwar years."

In Geneva, he said, he saw demonstrators chant "Death to Jews" while police watched.

Rabbi Dannyel Morag advises calm but caution to his Regensburg community - 700 in a city of 160,000, many of them recent Russian immigrants with a thin grasp of either Hebrew or Torah.

"So far, we're OK," he said, "but in big cities it can be terrible. Some Jews can't find non-Jewish business partners because so many Germans think there may be trouble again, and they're afraid."

In Germany's 89 Jewish communities and in Europe beyond, anti-Semitism is seen from differing angles.

At 80, with an Auschwitz tattoo on his arm, Otto Schwerdt counsels against exaggeration. He came to Regensburg after the war when 3,500 surviving Jews jammed the city awaiting passage to Israel or America.

That was when Schindler came and lived for five years among some of the 1,200 Jews he had saved in Poland - a story that would one day be immortalized in the movie "Schindler's List."

Because fog confused British pilots, Regensburg escaped the bombing that leveled many old German cities. Its Messerschmidt plant still turned out aircraft, and founders of Israel came to deal.

Schwerdt chose not to settle in Israel. "If all the Jews had fled Germany afterward, Hitler would have won," he said.

His book, "When God and the World Slept," recounts the Nazi horror he survived. A few weeks ago, Regensburg's elite jammed the old city hall to honor his interfaith efforts.

"All of my friends are young," he said. "I don't frequent people my age because I don't know what they've done. Now is a new time."

But Henryk Broder, a Berliner with Der Spiegel magazine who made waves across Germany with a 1986 book called "The Eternal Anti-Semite," rails against denial.

Many Jews refuse to face reality, to avoid having to confront the unthinkable, he said.

Broder believes the phenomenon of new anti-Semitism is real and growing. He sees a generalized antipathy toward Jews, whatever individuals may feel about the Jewish state or its prime minister, Ariel Sharon.

"This is the globalization of anti-Semitism," he said. "What used to be directed at 'the Jew' is now directed at 'Israel."'

He sees this new mood creating a backlash among more militant Jews. "Two thousand years of being a whipping boy is more than enough."

Broder concluded, "People call me paranoid, but I have a feeling that many Europeans secretly hope that the Arabs might finish the business that Germany started with the Jews in 1938."

Deirdre Berger, the American Jewish Committee director in Berlin, worries young Arabs are inciting the far more numerous Turks who seldom opposed Jews before.

Also, she said, many Germans now blame Jews for economic ills. Germany has changed, she said, "but just because the Nazis were defeated doesn't mean anti-Semitism is over."

In a book subtitled "Reflections on the Coming Anti-Semitism," French author Alain Finkielkraut writes: "Jews have a heavy heart and, for the first time since the war, they are afraid."

Several European leaders have responded vigorously. The Greek government registered its objection to Theodorakis' "root of all evil" comment. In October, Italian Premier Silvio Berlusconi, hosting Sharon, promised to fight the anti-Semitic revival.

French President Jacques Chirac recently called a special Cabinet session to confront what he called a growing wave of anti-Semitism. "Any blow against Jews injures France," he said.

Governments reacted with alarm in October to a poll of 7,500 Europeans that found 59 percent consider Israel the greatest threat to world peace, followed by Iran, North Korea and the United States.

In France, with two-thirds of Europe's estimated 900,000 Jews and nearly a third of its Muslims, Shimon Samuels of the Simon Wiesenthal Center sees radical Islam gaining strength in the slums.

"To climb up in status, how do you prove yourself? You go attack a synagogue," he said.

France's chief rabbi, Joseph Sitruk, has advised young Jews to wear baseball caps instead of yarmulkes in public.

Bullets and razor blades have been mailed to the International League Against Racism and Anti-Semitism, a French organization, with warnings such as one that read: "The next one won't come via the post office."

In Germany, leaders conscious of the past take a tough stance against anti-Semitism, but they face a growing problem.

Parliament is preparing a declaration against all forms of anti-Semitism, acknowledging that it is noticeable throughout society, not just in the fringes. The text, which is to be adopted this month, calls on individuals to make it their duty to combat anti-Semitism.

German Interior Ministry figures show 1,594 incidents nationwide in 2002, up by 150 from 2001.

The conservative opposition Christian Democrats expelled Martin Hohmann from their parliamentary caucus after he publicly equated Jews with Nazis. But he remains a lawmaker.

Brig. Gen. Reinhard Guenzel, Germany's special forces commander, was fired for writing a letter to Hohmann praising his "courage."

German President Johannes Rau helped dedicate a new synagogue in Munich on Nov. 9. Earlier, police caught four neo-Nazis with 31 pounds of explosives allegedly plotting to blow it up. Afterward, vandals defaced the site.

In Regensburg, 250 miles (400 kilometers) south of Berlin, Jews have never numbered more than 1,000, yet in the Middle Ages they made up a significant percentage of a smaller population.

Their painful history is stamped into the stolid yet colorful heart of town. The first Crusaders came through in 1096 and, finding no Muslims, slaughtered Jews. A 1519 pogrom razed the Jewish quarter. After tumultuous ups and downs, a new synagogue opened in 1912. Nazis destroyed it 26 years later.

Rainer Ehm, who runs a museum, went to this year's Kristallnacht services wearing a black beret. He is not Jewish, but his best friends are. For 20 years, he has led tours of the old quarter.

At the towering cathedral, he points out weathered stone in the facade depicting a pig suckling three Jews. It was meant to humiliate people exiting the narrow gate of their adjoining ghetto.

He shows Jewish gravestones built into old townhouse walls, now preserved by Jews and non-Jews alike so new generations do not forget these desecrations.

At a square that was once the heart of the ghetto, Ehm takes visitors underground to a striking memorial - called simply the Document - that the city built to recall its past.

It is literally a slice of history. Ancient Roman stones support the foundation of a synagogue, upon which was built a Catholic church.

"People still get along well in Regensburg today, but this new anti-Semitism is extremely dangerous," Ehm said. "All it takes is some clever speaker to focus it and whip it to a fury."

He paused. "You know, people here act polite to Jews because that is the politically correct thing to do. But I don't think very many people like them."


TOPICS: Culture/Society; Extended News; Foreign Affairs; Germany; Israel; Philosophy; War on Terror
KEYWORDS: antisemitism
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The canard that Muslim anti-Semitism in Europe is related to their situational disaffection and addresses in the slums of Europe is already well-worn and widely accept, even by the Jewish writer author of this piece.

I once deeply offended a Jewish business colleague when, over lunch, I happened to mention that Mein Kaampf should be required reading in the public schools.

He icily asked me why, and I told him so that it can never happen again. He understood but didn't agree. Like so many American Jews, the shame of the Holocaust outweighed the critical importance of educating the masses with its lessons.

Today I know more about the Holocaust and its roots than most American Jews my own age, and that disturbs me a great deal. The world is forgetting.

1 posted on 12/03/2003 9:17:49 PM PST by witnesstothefall
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To: witnesstothefall
>continent's 17 million Muslims

Reading that statistic makes me almost want to throw up. Ugh...how did that happen? Thanks a lot, you left-wing socialist pink traitors.
2 posted on 12/03/2003 9:23:33 PM PST by Norse
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To: witnesstothefall
Indeed.
3 posted on 12/03/2003 9:25:50 PM PST by Nachum
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To: Norse
that statistic

Yes it rather leaps off the page doesn't it.

4 posted on 12/03/2003 9:31:52 PM PST by witnesstothefall
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To: witnesstothefall
We are back in the 1930`s. Many similarities. Russia looking to extend her sphare of influence. Europe becoming anti-Semitic, and America (playing the role of British Empire) fighting wars in distant parts of the world.
5 posted on 12/03/2003 9:36:56 PM PST by Spartano
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To: witnesstothefall
I agree with you. There are too many people who don't know about the horrors of the Holocaust and we all know that knowledge is power.

I have seen anti-Semitism in places and people that I'd never expect it. It isn't violent but it is insidious.

I've always wondered about the mindset of those who, more or less, let the Holocaust happen. Or those who actually cooperated willingly. Is it so easy to manipulate that many people by slowly and insidiously filling their minds with hate so that when they commit egregious acts they can justify it within themselves?

I've always wondered if I would have been brave enough to help and I've always hoped that I would have but I haven't been put to the test.

6 posted on 12/03/2003 9:39:34 PM PST by tiki
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To: tiki
but I haven't been put to the test.

The century is young.

7 posted on 12/03/2003 9:46:16 PM PST by witnesstothefall
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To: tiki
I'm surprised that The Guardian is suddenly concerned about anti-Semitism. I used to check out their message boards, and the anti-Israeli posters were rabid. I considered many of the posts anti-Semitic.
8 posted on 12/03/2003 9:50:20 PM PST by Ciexyz
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To: witnesstothefall
If Europe increasingly feels usurped by the US in the world, this could get very, very serious. Anti-Semitism always seems to crop up when people are feeling bitter and resentful and looking for scapegoats, and that is starting to fit Europe to a T. Not that that is an excuse for them, just a recognition of old patterns.

The most interesting thing is that the Europeans are turning against the Jews and not the Muslims, the real invader, which says a lot about the underlying Anti-Semitism that endures through thick and thin there.

9 posted on 12/03/2003 10:05:30 PM PST by KellyAdmirer
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To: Spartano
We are back in the 1930`s. Many similarities,

You're right there are many similarities ..

10 posted on 12/03/2003 10:17:32 PM PST by Mo1 (House Work, If you do it right , will kill you!)
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To: tiki
Conside being well armed. Those without weapons are helpless. The unarmed can help neither themselves nor others.
11 posted on 12/03/2003 10:17:43 PM PST by GladesGuru (In a society predicated upon liberty, it is essential to examine principles - -)
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To: KellyAdmirer
The most interesting thing is that the Europeans are turning against the Jews and not the Muslims, the real invader, which says a lot about the underlying Anti-Semitism that endures through thick and thin there.

Jews are an easier target IMHO. I've travelled and lived in various parts of Western Europe since 1979 and the changes that I've seen are dramatic. Take a 'neat' country like Germany and look at it today. Graffitti and trash are everywhere (I once lived in a town that was so 'quiet' that the Polizei station 'closed' at 9PM. This was 1999-2001 BTW.) The graffitti on the walls and such was obviously done by muslim immigrants. I'm no linguist, but I could tell.

I met a German girl whom I suspect had AIDs from being forced to screw all of her muslim boyfriend's friends. She told me this herself. She had been conditioned to believe that she really was a whore and I suspect that her socialist utopian upbringing contributed to this situation. What would someone like her do, shoot the bastard that did her this way? Not with the current situation.

To make a long story short, the conditioning is there for the musli trash to gain a real foothold and it seems to be happening everywhere on the planet as we speak.

But so many Americans are so clueless and live for their 'bread and circuses' that I don't have much hope for most of them.

I'm just a guy from the mountains but I see what I see.

Yes, Europe should be very scared of the REAL threat and quit trying to deny the obvious.

And it's time for Americans to forget all this make nice PC BS and Wake The F*** Up!

12 posted on 12/03/2003 10:25:14 PM PST by Looking4Truth (I'm in one of 'those' moods again....)
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To: witnesstothefall
"A new anti-Semitism is on the march across the globe,"

The "Religion of Peace"™ marches on.

13 posted on 12/03/2003 10:30:05 PM PST by Mike Darancette (Proud member - Neoconservative Power Vortex)
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To: Mo1
You heard it here first.
14 posted on 12/03/2003 10:31:05 PM PST by Spartano
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To: Norse
My apologies, but we're only a few decades behind that over here. Someone make it stop...please?
15 posted on 12/03/2003 10:37:14 PM PST by July 4th
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To: July 4th
I wonder if conditions are so bad why do the Jews continue to live there??
16 posted on 12/03/2003 10:41:51 PM PST by BooBoo1000
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To: KellyAdmirer
Blocks:

1) Holly Mother Russia and Imperium Europa will be allies. The Bosnians and Albanians will be forced to convert to Christianity.

2) USA, Canada, Australia, New Zeland and Chile will make another block.

3) China, Japan, Unified Korea, Singapur, Malasya, The Philipins will be allies.

4) The Arab countries, Turkey and North Africa will form an Islamic block.

5) India, Nepal and the countries nearby will form the Indian block.

Sub-Saharan Africa and LatinAmerica will be in chaos, total anarchy.

Chile will develop nuclear weapons to protect itself from the other poor LatinAmerica nations. Chile is already considered a First World country, thanks to General Augusto Pinochet.

Mexico will be a colonie of USA, there will be a revolution, America won`t be happy (it does not want problems on her backyard) and american soldiers will patrol Mexico and the border will be sealed, probably with a wall. USA will want Mexico to be a colonie for two reasons: for cheap manufacturing and to contain innmigration from South America.

Wait and see, you heard it here first.
17 posted on 12/03/2003 10:46:56 PM PST by Spartano
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To: BooBoo1000
I wonder why Jews don`t go to live to Israel. Israel spends a lot of money on defense, it has fought and won 3 wars. A lot of sacrificie not being honored by Jews living outside Israel.
18 posted on 12/03/2003 10:48:49 PM PST by Spartano
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To: Norse
Time to call the Teutonic Knights.
19 posted on 12/03/2003 10:49:18 PM PST by Spartano
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To: GladesGuru
Rest assured, we have plenty of weapons in the house:-}
20 posted on 12/03/2003 10:53:35 PM PST by tiki
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