Germans fans call Israel soccer player ´dirty Jew´ (JERUSALEM POST) By BY BENJAMIN WEINTHAL, JERUSALEM POST CORRESPONDENT 02/28/12)
Source: http://www.jpost.com/International/Article.aspx?id=259776
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Berlin - Right-wing extremist soccer hooligans called Israeli soccer
player, Itay Shechter, a "dirty Jew" on Sunday. The outbreak of anti-
Semitism in the soccer stadium prompted a wave of criticism and
coverage in the German media.
Germany´s football federation (DFB) will not tolerate anti-Semitic or
racist attacks after a small group of people verbally abused Israeli
player Itay Shechter during a Kaiserslautern training session, the
DFB said on Tuesday.
The incident took place on Sunday, a day after relegation-threatened
Kaiserslautern´s 4-0 defeat at Mainz 05 left them in 17th place,
level on points with bottom-placed Freiburg.
A small group of people attended training, shouted anti-Semitic
insults at Schechter and gestured at him with the Nazi salute. A few
hundred fans had met with players and officials to discuss the club´s
sporting situation.
"Together with the president we want to underline that the DFB will
not tolerate such actions and we must act decisively," Wolfgang
Niersbach, who will take over from DFB boss Theo Zwanziger next
month, told reporters. "Racism and anti-Semitism have no place in
football. We must defend ourselves against this and we hope that the
authorities chase up this incident."
Alex Feuerherdt, a German journalist who reports on anti-Semitism in
the field of soccer, told The Jerusalem Post on Tuesday that "anti-
Semitism in German soccer is still a serious problem. While the
number of anti-Semitic and racist incidents in games in the top
German leagues of the Bundesliga as a whole has dropped, there
continues to be anti-Semitic incidents in the second league and in
amateur soccer, particularly in East Germany." He said the word "Jew"
is used with the intention of insult.
According to Feuerherdt, the "example of Kaiserslautern has now shown
that anti-Semitism is an entirely serious problem at the highest
league." Feuerherdt, who referees German soccer matches, said the
German soccer federation (DFB) stresses that its regional and state
clubs are strictly against anti-Semitism and racism and rigorously
act against it. But in practice, noted Feuerherdt, the federation
does too little and its penalties are too mild." Campaigns against
anti-Semitism are not useful when there are no consequences," he said
According to German media reports on Monday, the police, who were
present on the game, did not eject the participants due
to "deescalation reasons." It is unclear why the police retreated and
did not intervene at the scene of the alleged crime. German police
frequently employ a deescalation strategy to combat protests. Critics
see the tactic as a way to tolerate greater violence and allow
perpetrators to escape prosecution. German journalist Feuerherdt said
it is "completely inexplicable that the police did not intervene. He
said the police should have intervened when the hooligans called
Schechter a "dirty Jew."
Police have launched an investigation to identify those involved,
while the club - which has called on fans to help identify the people
involved - condemned the incident saying those responsible were not
football fans.
"The players understood the feelings, views and fears of the fans,"
Kaiserslautern chairman Stefan Kuntz said on Tuesday at a meeting
with the Kaiserslautern fans.
"As a conclusion, it is this meeting with 300 club fans that should
be in focus and not the inexcusable behavior of a handful of
radicala," said Stefan Frank, a German journalist who has written
about modern anti-Semitism in the Federal Republic.
Frank told The Jerusalem Post on Tuesday that many of the anti-
Semitic slurs and racist comments are heard not in the stadiums of
the professional clubs but on the way to the stadiums in trains and
other forms of public transportation. Frank noted that rule Number 58
of Fédération Internationale de Football Association (FIFA)
Disciplinary Code, says "anyone who offends the dignity of a person
or group of persons through contemptuous, discriminatory or
denigratory words or actions concerning race, color, language,
religion or origin" can face sanctions.
The display of Nazi symbols is banned in Germany and there have been
growing concerns since the revelations last November that an
extremist right-wing cell calling itself the Nationalist Socialist
Underground lay behind the killings of 10 people, eight Turks, a
Greek and a German policewoman.
Germany´s Nazi past makes right-wing militancy a particularly
sensitive subject in the country. Experts have long warned of
extremism among disenchanted young people in eastern regions of the
country where unemployment is high and job prospects poor.
"The club´s fan representatives want to distance themselves from any
racist, discriminatory or anti-Semitic comments of any kind,"
Kaiserslautern fan clubs said in a joint statement on Tuesday.
Reuters contributed to this report. (© 1995-2011, The Jerusalem Post
02/28/12)
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