Antisemitism on the Rise in Europe (GateStone Institute) by Michael Curtis 05/07/12)
Source: http://www.gatestoneinstitute.org/3050/antisemitism-europe
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Ominously, an inversion of victim and perpetrator has taken place.
The virus of antisemitism persists in haunting Europe. In recent
months, antisemitism has been exhibited all too often in European
countries, not just in theory but in practice. France has been the
scene for the murder of Jewish schoolchildren in Toulouse; attacks on
Jewish property in Paris and Dijon; desecration of Jewish graves in
Nice, and anti-Semitic graffiti throughout the country. Malmo,
Sweden, with a now considerable Muslim population, has witnessed
increasing outbreaks of violence against Jews. It is disquieting that
Ilmar Reepalu, the mayor of the city, has denied these attacks, and
dismissed criticism of his denials as the work of the "Israel lobby."
Over the last decade, antisemitic incidents have occurred not just in
France and Sweden but also throughout Europe; some of the more
notable have been in the Kreuzberg section of Berlin populated by
Palestinians and Turks; even more significantly, in other
neighborhoods of Berlin that are not populated by Middle East
immigrants; in Stockholm, Amsterdam, and major French cities besides
Paris; on the island of Corfu in Greece, and in Rome.
In the 1997 Treaty of Amsterdam, the European Union called for joint
efforts to combat prejudice and discrimination experienced by
individuals and groups on the basis of their ethnic features,
cultural background, religion, gender, sexual orientation, age, or
disability. As a result of this treaty, comprehensive data and an
analysis of the state of discrimination in Europe with special
emphasis on antisemitism is now available in a just-published
comprehensive study by the Friedrich Ebert Foundation in Berlin.
This study, Intolerance, Prejudice and Discrimination: a European
Report, was based on interviews with sample populations of 1,000
people in eight European countries. It examined negative attitudes
and prejudices against groups defined as "other," "foreign,"
or "abnormal." The overall result -- showing widespread intolerance,
racism, sexism, dislike of Muslims, concern about immigrants,
opposition to homosexuals and gay marriage, and antisemitism -- is
dispiriting.
Although the prejudices against the various groups differ, the study
suggests that they are interconnected: that people who denigrate one
group are also very likely to target other groups. Prejudices against
the different target groups are linked and share a common ideology,
one that endangers democracy and leads to violence and conflicts. The
problem that democratic countries and well-meaning people now face is
how to confront and overcome these prejudices that are so observable.
The overall saddening conclusion of the report, which deals with a
number of areas of discrimination, is that group-focused enmity
towards immigrants, blacks, Muslims, and Jews is widespread
throughout Europe; and that anti-Semitism is an important component
of this hostility. The Report defines anti-Semitism as social
prejudice directed against Jews simply because they are Jews. Being
Jewish is seen as a negative characteristic. Current antisemitism
takes many forms: political (the Jews have a world conspiracy);
secular (the Jews are usurers); religious (the Jews are responsible
for the death of Jesus); racist (Jews through their genetics are not
people to be trusted). The report continues with additional detail:
Jews have too much influence; Jews try to take advantage of having
been victims during the Nazi era; Jews in general do not care about
anything or anybody but their own kind.
Two additional troubling points of view were documented: the first is
why people do not like Jews when one considers Israel´s policy; the
second is the belief that Israel is conducting a war of extermination
against the Palestinians.
Even though the study deals with a limited number of individuals and
European countries, its findings are significant. The details are a
warning of possible future danger. The study shows that animosity
against Jews is strongest in the Eastern European countries (Poland
and Hungary) and in Germany, moderate in France, Italy, and Portugal,
and weakest in the Netherlands and Britain. A recent shift appears to
have occurred from traditional anti-Semitism to a new anti-Semitism
in relation to the Holocaust. Ominously, an inversion of perpetrator
and victim has taken place.
Auschwitz was liberated on January 27, 1945, but the of the Final
Solution seems to have been forgotten in the view of European
citizens. The study shows that 72% of Poles, 68% of Hungarians, and
49% of Germans believe, strongly or somewhat, that the Jews today are
benefitting from the memory of the camp and exploit the Holocaust.
Even in the countries with the lowest expression of prejudice, the
percentages of people who hold the view that Jews exploit the
Holocaust are alarming.The figure for the Netherlands is 17% and in
Britain 21%.
The most frequently expressed-anti-Semitic perception is the
certitude that Jews have too much influence in the country of the
respondent. Nearly 70% of Hungarians hold this view. In Poland, where
few people even know a Jew since Poland has such a small Jewish
community, some 50% hold this belief. The lowest figures are in the
Netherlands where this view is held strongly by 6% and in Britain
where 13.9% profess agreement with this assessment. The other four
countries around 20% concur with this statement.
On the question of Jews caring only about themselves, the range of
views is different. Portugal joins Hungary and Poland in agreeing, 51-
57%, while the other six vary between 20 and 30%. Somewhat
surprisingly, a majority in all eight countries believe that Jews
have enriched the culture of the country; the highest figures are in
the Netherlands, (72%), Britain (71%) , and Germany (69%).
Not unexpectedly the animosity towards Jews extends to the state of
Israel. Nearly 40% of the Europeans in the survey believe that Israel
is waging a war of extermination against the Palestinians. The Polish
figure is 63%. The other countries range from Portugal (48%) to Italy
(37%). A similar range was found in the accompanying question; nearly
half in some of the countries think that attitudes of antisemitism
result from disapproval of Israel´s activities, Poland (55%) to
Germany and Britain (35%).
It is the task of political education to overcome those factors that
favor prejudiced attitudes: a low level of education, low income, and
a culture, especially in Eastern Europe, where prejudice in general
is more widespread than in Western Europe. For this purpose some
generalizations are pertinent. Antisemitism is prevalent among people
in age group 50-65, and disappointingly in the 16-21 group, and
lowest among the 22-34 group. Hostility generally increases with age,
making the level of hate in the 16-21 age group worrisome. Although
European educational systems are diverse, it appears that people with
the median level of education are not significantly different from
those at a low level, and are more antisemitic than well educated
people. Gender plays a minor role; women, however, more likely to be
prejudiced than men regarding immigrants and Muslims, are not more
antisemitic than men.
The report was restricted to attitudes and beliefs. It therefore did
not include physical acts of anti-Semitism such as the overt
harassment of Jews through threats or attacks, both physical and
verbal; the vandalism of Jewish property, institutions, and memorial
sites; the use of cyberspace to convey hostile messages; the revival
of blood libel charges; the widespread allegation of Jewish
conspiracies, the rise of openly anti-Semitic parties, and the
success of Islamist parties and groups. Neither does the Report deal
with the newest form of antisemitism, that of Muslim extremists.
The Ebert Foundation is allied with the German Social Democratic
party. Not surprisingly. Its report is mainly concerned with right
wing or populist political attitudes, not with those of the political
left. It finds that the further to the right of self-identification,
the more it is that people hold prejudicial views. It did also
mention, nevertheless, that extreme left groups and individuals,
probably because of their authoritarian attitudes, were more
prejudiced than those of the moderate left. It does not belittle the
importance of the report to comment that it minimizes the degree of
antisemitism displayed by a number of individuals from well-educated
groups, and by the media and the academic community. These last
groups repeatedly issue international condemnations against Israel
with their calls for boycott, divestment, and sanctions against
Israel, and their attempts to delegitimize the state of Israel. These
attacks can be explained in a number of ways, but certainly a major
one would be an implicit antisemitism. A warning for these
groups: "Teacher heal thyself: prejudice and discrimination are on
display."
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