Anti-Semitism in Belgium Reaches New Heightsby Isi LeiblerSeptember 24, 2013 http://wordfromjerusalem.com/?p=4816
I have devoted
numerous columns of late to the tsunami of anti-Semitism sweeping throughout
Western Europe, noting that aside from the frenziedly anti-Semitic Islamic
extremists, the principal perpetrators are left wing activists frequently led by
those purportedly promoting human rights.
Manfred
Gerstenfeld’s most recent book “Demonizing
Israel and the Jews” (click
here for link) documents evidence of the
depressingly high levels of European anti-Semitism, highlighting the frequent
employment of Holocaust inversion as a vehicle to incite Jew hatred. He notes
that opinion polls indicate that nearly half of all European adults – close to
150 million – are today convinced that Israelis behave like Nazis towards the
Palestinians.
This trend was
corroborated in a recent report (published by the Gladstone Institute) exposing
an outrageous situation in Belgium, the country of my birth and thus struck a
sensitive personal chord. Had my parents not immigrated to Australia on the eve
of the war, they could have suffered the same fate as many members of my family
who were amongst the 50% of the prewar Belgian Jewish community deported with
the active assistance of the state bureaucracy and collaborators, and murdered
in Auschwitz.
The report
described an extraordinary Belgian primer for teachers of “Holocaust
Remembrance” which appeared on the official central Flanders educational website
database. Endorsed and funded by the Ministry of Education, the template
designed for teachers of 6-12 year olds shamelessly promoted hatred of Israel
and anti-Semitism by employing the crudest forms of Holocaust
inversion.
It even
reproduced a cartoon (click here to see it) which had initially appeared in 2009 at the
notorious Teheran Holocaust Denial conference, depicting a Jewish concentration
camp inmate impaled on barbed wire in the form of a swastika. Entitled “Never
Again”, it was accompanied by a caricature of an Arab in the same position
titled “Over Again”. The message conveyed is crystal clear – Israelis,
descendants of Jews who were murdered during the Holocaust, are treating the
Arabs in the same manner as the Nazis treated their forbears.
The caricature
was produced by Carlos Latuff, a Brazilian of Lebanese origin, notorious for his
creations of other obscene anti-Israeli caricatures bracketing Israelis with
Nazis. One of his most outrageous recent works was an ugly distortion of the
well-known poignant image of the young Jewish boy during the Warsaw Ghetto
Uprising with his caption: “I am a Palestinian”. He has also depicted the
Israeli Prime Minister as a vampire with blood dripping from his
fangs.
There were
other ‘lessons’ on the Belgian website presenting Israelis as bloodthirsty
murderers. One included a “play” in which children would adopt the role of
Palestinians or Hamas supporters and represent the good people whilst those
assuming the roles of Israelis would epitomize the evil tyrants.
The leading
Antwerp Jewish monthly, Joods
Actueel, described this “history lesson”
as a perversion and accused the authors of transforming educational material
“into an instrument to infect youngsters with hatred of Israel and
anti-Semitism”. It is utterly unconscionable and evil for the Belgian Ministry
of Education to endorse a website designed as a schoolteacher’s guide to the
Holocaust, which effectively promotes the same hatred that paved the way for the
Shoa.
Such behavior
is in breach of the resolutions adopted condemning and defining anti-Semitism at
the OSCE - to which Belgium is a signatory.
The protests
generated following media exposure of this abomination obliged the Belgian
authorities to withdraw some of the offending material from the website. But
this episode is merely a symptom of the problem. The reality is that frenzied
hatred against Israel has today become an endemic component of political
discourse in Brussels, the official capital of Europe and headquarters of
NATO.
This must be
viewed in the broader context of anti-Semitism in Belgium. There are
approximately 40,000 Jews in Belgium, more than half residing in
Antwerp.
The Muslim
population has significantly increased and now represents a powerful electoral
force. In the capital, Brussels, where the most popular baby name is Mohammed,
Moslems today comprise 30% of the electorate. It is predicted that by 2020 they
will amount to 10% of the entire population. They are the major new element
contributing towards the exponential growth and saturation of society with rabid
anti-Semitism.
Hatred of Jews
is usually but not exclusively manifested as anti-Israelism. The Jewish
community has been under increasing pressure and last year, anti-Semitic
incidents, including desecration and vandalism of Jewish institutions as well as
violence directed against Jews, rose steeply by 30%.
The anti-Jewish
climate and violence against Jews is particularly intense in Antwerp where 50%
of schoolchildren choose Islamic studies. But there are also reports of some
Jewish schoolchildren in Brussels experiencing such excessive levels of
anti-Semitic harassment and intimidation that they were obliged to leave their
state school.
A few months
ago there was extensive media exposure in Belgium highlighting the inaction and
cynicism of the Antwerp police in relation to a violent anti-Semitic incident in
which thugs assaulted their neighbors (one of whom was hospitalized), called
them “stinking Jews” and threatened them with “finishing what the Nazi
started”.
According to
the JTA, last week the leading Belgian daily De Standaard, resurrected the medieval anti-Semitic blood libel
alleging that Israeli settlers poison Palestinian water wells.
These trends
are also reflected at the political level. Two years ago, Belgian Justice
Minister Stefaan De Clerck of the ruling Christian Democratic Party even
supported an amnesty for Nazi collaborators suggesting that the country should
"maybe also forget because this is in the past". Karel de Grucht, Belgium’s
former Foreign Minister and European Commissioner for Trade, is regarded as a
avid anti-Semite.
It is not
surprising that in a climate in which Jews are treated like pariahs, a large
proportion of the community is sadly resigned to the fact that there is no
future for a meaningful Jewish life for their children in Belgium. Increasing
numbers, especially younger people, have or are planning to settle in
Israel.
Yet the Belgian
Jewish communal umbrella body, from which the more committed Jewish and Zionist
Antwerp Jews have seceded, has sought to defuse hostility against Jews by
groveling to the political establishment and distancing itself from Israel. At
one stage it even honored a politician who had equated Zionism with
racism.
Admittedly, the
burgeoning levels of anti-Semitism and the application of double standards
against Israel are not unique to Belgium and prevail in varying degrees in most
European countries.
But it is the
ultimate in hypocrisy for a country whose former leaders were responsible for
the genocide in which millions of Congolese were murdered, to engage in
Holocaust inversion. In particular to behave in this manner and yet remain
silent at the cruel ongoing civil war of barbaric proportions with over 120,000
deaths, taking place only a few minutes drive from Israeli borders.
The writer’s website can be viewed at www.wordfromjerusalem.comHe may be contacted at ileibler@leibler.com This column was originally published in the Jerusalem Post and Israel Hayom Some of my recent articles: Putin’s Russia Now a Force in the Middle East (September 17, 2013) America’s Isolationism and its Implications for Israel (September 11, 2013) A Friendlier Australian Government (September 8, 2013) Responding to the Syrian Nightmare (August 29, 2013) If you wish to forward this email please use the 'Forward to a Friend' button at the end of this email. Comments are welcome on this article please click here. If you are receiving this email from a secondary source and wish to receive my weekly column then please click here to visit my website where you can sign up |
Wednesday, September 25, 2013
Anti-Semitism in Belgium Reaches New Heights
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