State Dept. reports growing global anti-Semitism (JERUSALEM POST) By BENJAMIN WEINTHAL, JPOST CORRESPONDENT, JTA 08/01/12)
Source: http://www.jpost.com/JewishWorld/JewishNews/Article.aspx?id=279600
JERUSALEM POST
JERUSALEM POST Articles-Index-Top
Publishers-Index-Top
The US State Department’s report on religious freedom described
a “global increase” in anti-Semitism and said the “rising tide of
anti-Semitism” was among the key trends of last year. In addition to
the spread of Jew-hatred, the report outlined the mushrooming
persecution of Christian and Baha’i religious groups in the Islamic
Republic of Iran.
The executive summary of the report for 2011, released Monday, also
detailed the “impact of political and demographic transitions on
religious minorities” and “the effects of conflict on religious
freedom.”
The increased anti-Semitism was “manifested in Holocaust denial,
glorification and relativism; conflating opposition to certain
policies of Israel with blatant anti- Semitism; growing nationalistic
movements that target ‘the other’; and traditional forms of anti-
Semitism, such as conspiracy theories, acts of desecration and
assault, ‘blood libel,’ and cartoons demonizing Jews,” the summary
said.
It was not clear from the report how its authors assessed
an “increase” in anti-Semitism. There was no overall quantification
of the phenomenon, and individual country reports, while listing
instances of official and societal anti-Semitism, did not compare
rates to previous years’ reports.
The emphasis on anti-Semitism reflects a policy initiated by Hannah
Rosenthal, the current special envoy on anti-Semitism. Rosenthal has
pressed for the incorporation of anti-Semitism monitoring into the
department’s overall human rights reports, arguing that it increases
awareness of the issue among US diplomats.
The George W. Bush administration, which expanded monitoring of anti-
Semitism by creating the post of an envoy to combat anti- Semitism,
kept its reports on the issue separate.
Countries singled out for special notice on anti-Semitism included:
• Venezuela, where President Hugo Chavez described Israel’s treatment
of the Palestinians as “genocide” and called Zionism racism, and an
opinion piece in a government-owned newspaper described Norwegian
mass killer Anders Breivik as a “Sabbath goy.”
• Ukraine, where there were several instances of vandalism targeting
Jewish buildings and cemeteries, as well as incitement by
ultranationalist figures.
• Hungary, where the rise of an anti-Semitic political party was
noted.
• Egypt, where anti-Semitic cartoons and articles persisted in
government- run and opposition media after the revolution in early
2011 that ousted the regime of Hosni Mubarak.
• Iran, where the report said that “the government’s anti-Semitic
rhetoric, along with a perception among radical Muslims that all
Jewish citizens of the country supported Zionism and the State of
Israel, continued to create a hostile atmosphere for Jews.” The
report also said that President Mahmoud Ahmadinejad “continued to
question regularly the existence and the scope of the Holocaust and
publicly called for the destruction of Israel, which created a more
hostile environment for the Jewish community.”
• The Palestinian areas, where the report noted an instance of a
Hamas imam in the Gaza Strip calling for the death of Jews, as well
as a documentary on Palestinian Authority TV that characterized
Jewish rites as “sin and filth.”
The country report on Israel said that “government policy contributed
to the generally free practice of religion, although government
discrimination against non-Jews and non-Orthodox streams of Judaism
continued.” It noted that Christian missionaries were turned away at
the airport in some instances and also noted the Interior Ministry’s
refusal to recognize some US converts to Judaism as Jews.
“A minority of Jews in the country observes the Orthodox tradition,
and the majority of Jewish citizens objected to exclusive Orthodox
control over fundamental aspects of their personal lives,” the report
said.
It noted the practice on some public buses of segregating men from
women.
The Foreign Ministry had yet to formulate a response to the report,
an official at the Israeli Embassy in Washington said Tuesday.
Recording instances of societal discrimination, the report listed
organized efforts to persuade Jewish businesses not to hire Arabs, as
well as attacks by extremist settlers on mosques.
It also noted extremist Muslim riots, including several instances in
which rioters at the mosques overlooking the Western Wall stoned
Jewish worshipers.
In the report’s executive summary of Iran, the State Department wrote
that “Religious freedom in Iran deteriorated further from an already
egregious situation. Government imprisonment, harassment,
intimidation and discrimination based on religious beliefs continued
during the year. Christian Pastor Youcef Nadarkhani remained jailed
and faced possible execution for practicing his faith, and sentences
of the seven Baha’i leaders were re-extended to the original 20 years
after having been reduced to 10 years in 2010.”
The report continued that the Islamic Republic’s “government arrested
the seven in 2009 for ‘espionage for Israel, insulting religious
sanctities and propaganda against the Islamic Republic.’ The
government created a threatening atmosphere for nearly all non-Shiite
religious groups, most notably for Baha’is, as well as for Sufi
Muslims, evangelical Christians, Jews, Sunni and Zoroastrians.
Shi’ites who did not share the government’s official religious views
also faced harassment and intimidation.”
Senator Mark Kirk (R-Illinois) has spearheaded the congressional
efforts to sanction Iran because of its human rights record, as well
as for the country’s uranium enrichment program.
He issued a micro-blog tweet on Monday that the “2011 Int’l Religious
Freedom Report details Iranian gov’s oppressive treatment of Baha’i
and other religious minorities."
The dramatic increase of the persecution of Christians in Iran was
cited in the report. "At least 300 arrests of Christians were
reported during the year. The status of some of these cases was not
known at year’s end. Authorities released some Christians almost
immediately, while they held others in secret locations without
access to attorneys," stated the report.
The summary section of the report on the clamp down of Christians
noted that, during the year, authorities also arrested several
members of “protected” Christian groups such as Armenian Apostolics
and Assyrians. (© 1995-2011, The Jerusalem Post 08/01/12)
Return to Top
MATERIAL REPRODUCED FOR EDUCATIONAL PURPOSES ONLY