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  • Victory to Come When Russian Empire ’Ceases to Exist’ : Ukraine Parliament Quotes Nazi Collaborator - Europe - Haaretz.com
    https://www.haaretz.com/world-news/europe/2023-01-02/ty-article/.premium/victory-to-come-when-russia-ceases-to-exist-ukraine-parliament-quotes-nazi-collaborator/00000185-71dc-de47-afdf-f3fdb3410000

    Quoting Ukrainian ultra-nationalist and antisemite Stepan Bandera, the Ukrainian parliament on Monday declared that “the complete and supreme victory of Ukrainian nationalism will be when the Russian Empire ceases to exist.”

    “Currently, the struggle with the Russian Empire continues,” the Verkhovna Rada posted on its official Twitter account, stating that Ukrainian Army Chief of Staff Valerii Zaluzhnyi was “well aware” of “these instructions of Stepan Bandera.”

    While Bandera spent most of World War II in a German concentration camp, his followers in the far-right Organization of Ukrainian Nationalists (OUN) and its paramilitary wing, the Ukrainian Insurgent Army (UPA), engaged in a campaign of ethnic cleansing, killing tens of thousands of Poles and Jews.

  • Les voix des Français musulmans, un atout indispensable pour Macron
    Publié le 08 avril 2022
    https://www.courrierinternational.com/article/vu-d-israel-les-voix-des-francais-musulmans-un-atout-indispen

    Plus de deux millions de Français musulmans avaient voté pour le candidat En marche en 2017 selon un sondage OpinionWay. Son quinquennat, considéré comme strict sur les questions liées à l’islam, ne lui garantit pas un tel succès cette année, estime le journal israélien “Ha’Aretz”.

  • Turkey might pay for its support for Ukraine – in Syria
    Zvi Bar’el | Feb. 21, 2022 | Haaretz.com
    https://www.haaretz.com/world-news/europe/.premium-the-cost-of-supporting-ukraine-may-be-paid-in-syria-1.10623639

    Russia is using Syria to send hints to Erdogan that they can’t step on Moscow’s toes in Ukraine, but Turkey is not the only country getting such warnings

    Last Thursday, Russian Deputy Foreign Minister Mikhail Bogdanov had a “revelation.” Russia suddenly remembered that it is a partner to the diplomatic process in Syria, and in an impressive display of political consideration, Bogdanov declared that Russia sees the participation of the Syrian Kurds in the diplomatic process as an essential element in preventing separatism and building a unified Syria.

    The Syrian Kurds, who maintain a de facto autonomy in northern Syria, have been courting Russia for a long time, primarily due to fears that U.S. forces will withdraw from Syria. Senior Russian officials have met with the leaders of the Kurdish Autonomous Administration, but so far they have refrained from pressing for them to be included in the diplomatic process.

    Moscow’s rationale was understandable. In Russia’s delicate relations with Turkey, any mention of the Syrian Kurds, who are labeled a terrorist organization by Ankara, in the same breath as a diplomatic solution causes Turkey to roil. Russian recognition of a Kurdish movement or organization as a legitimate component in negotiations over a new Syrian constitution, and thus to changes in the structure of the regime, will be seen by Turkey as recognition of a terrorist organization, and could undermine its ability to mount military operations against such a group.

    But when Turkey sends military assistance to Ukraine, equips it with advanced combat UAVs, and sends its advisors to Kyiv, that is the time to remind the Turks that “Kyiv is here.” In other words, in Damascus and in Ankara as well. If Turkey proudly treads on Russia’s toes in Ukraine and displays support for Western policy, then the time has come for Russia to brandish a threat that will hit Turkey where it hurts.

    A diplomatic solution in Syria is still a far off dream. The sixth rounds of talks held this month between representatives of the Syrian opposition and the Syrian regime, with the mediation of the United Nations envoy Geir Pedersen, ended with a laconic announcement about “optimism,” but with no results worthy of reporting. An ocean stands not only between the regime and the opposition, but between the ranks of the opposition itself.

    The reports of an intention to change the composition of the opposition’s negotiating team and the structure of the Syrian Constitutional Committee, which convened in Doha, shows that the opposition still has a long way to go, and that Assad can remain calm. While Syrian Foreign Minister Faisal Mekdad speaks of “amendments to the constitution passed in 2012,” the opposition demands a new constitution, equality in political status and the removal of Assad, as if nothing has changed in Syria since the beginning of the civil war 11 years ago. As if some Arab countries had not renewed their diplomatic ties with Damascus, as if European countries had not abandoned their opposition to Assad’s continued rule and as if Russia were willing to rid itself of the Syrian leader who will ensure their continued entrenchment in the country for decades.

    Turkey is not the only country getting warnings about Syria to hint at involvement in Ukraine. In January, Russian jets posted at the Khmeimim Air Base in Latakia conducted a joint aerial patrol with the Syrian Air Force, in which they flew along the border of the Golan Heights. Israel was quick to touch base with its Russian contacts in Syria and Moscow, but the official Russian announcement was that the patrols would continue and would now become part of routine cooperation between the Syrian and Russian air forces. Two weeks earlier, a Russian general declared that Russia’s Tu-22MS bombers stationed at the base last May could strike any target across the Mediterranean Sea.

    Russia is not yet preventing Israel from conducting airstrikes against Iranian targets, but the message was clear: If Israel plans to assist Ukraine with arms, Israel’s freedom of operation in Syria could be restricted, or even ended. Russia’s Foreign Ministry spokesman Maria Zakharova reacted to recent Israeli strikes with strong words: “They are a crude violation of Syria’s sovereignty and may trigger a sharp escalation of tensions… such actions pose serious risks to international passenger flights.”

    Israel issued a statement that it banned the transfer of arms it had sold to the Baltic states to Ukraine. The most recent attacks conducted by Israel in Syria may show that Russia has calmed down and that Israel does not intend to renounce the Syrian aerial arena in favor of assistance to Ukraine. To be on the safe side, Russia has announced that it has brought an advanced Lancet-3 kamikaze drone to conduct operations against terrorists in Syria. The use of drones by Russia is nothing new, but the range and weight of explosives that the Lancet-3 can carry will require extreme caution and further coordination with the Russian airbase.

    Russia’s military messages to Israel are also directed at Washington, whose planes operate in northern Syria. In the past two years, there have been reports of a series of near-misses between American and Russian jets in the skies of Syria. In one incident, there was a report of a mutual engagement without any casualties. In the past, the saying was that the United States is a power that can fight one war on one front, and that when it finds itself on several fronts – such as in Afghanistan, Iraq and the war on ISIS – it starts to get lost. Russia, it transpires, is capable of managing several fronts in parallel. But this description is not entirely accurate. Russia is currently waging one battle: To restore its historic status. All the other fronts, such as Ukraine, Syria and Libya, are just beads on the same string.

    #IsraelRussie
    #Syrie #Turquie

  • Chile’s Jewish leaders are using antisemitism to bash a pro-Palestinian leftist. Again
    Claudio Mandler - Jun. 27, 2021 12:28 PM
    https://www.haaretz.com/world-news/.premium-chile-s-jewish-leaders-using-antisemitism-to-bash-a-pro-palestinia

    Presidential candidate Daniel Jadue aims for a more just society in Chile and justice for Palestinians. But the Jewish community’s leadership is falsely branding him an antisemite - just as it did with Salvador Allende
    Claudio Mandler | Jun. 27, 2021 | 12:28 PM | 1

    It’s hardly surprising that institutions that equate all criticism of Israeli policies with antisemitism are labeling Daniel Jadue, the leftist candidate for the presidency of Chile who’s part of the country’s Palestinian community, as antisemitic. It’s a common accusation against politicians who criticize Israel in many places around the world.

    Therefore the claim that Jadue expressed antisemitic views on account of his Palestinian background and pro-Palestinian views, as suggested in a recent Haaretz article (A Grandson of Palestinian Immigrants Could Be Chile’s Next President, and These Jews Are Worried) was predictable, as was the fact the Simon Wiesenthal Center named him in their top 10 list of global antisemites for 2020, an exercise in delegitimization.

    But despite being expected, this claim, the official line of the leadership of the Jewish community in Chile, cannot be allowed to stand without being challenged. That has to start with asking the leaders of Chile’s Jewish community to justify the antisemitism slur, and to ask whether this is actually their real objection to Jadue’s candidacy.

    Outwardly, on Israel-Palestine, the leadership of the Jewish community in Chile presents itself as “pro-peace.” It has repeatedly asked the large local Palestinian community not to “import” the Israeli-Palestinian conflict to Chile. But those same Jewish community leaders didn’t feel any qualms about “importing” the conflict when it was amongst the first to publicly congratulate President Trump when he defied Palestinian rights and moved the U.S. embassy to Jerusalem.

    Chile’s Jewish community considers itself Zionist, to the point of declaring that there are no Jews who are not Zionists. The community’s interpretation of Zionism means an endless willingness to justify or “clarify” any news about Israel: Any criticism from Jews towards Israeli policies in general, and those in the occupied territories in particular, is branded as “Jewish self-hatred.”

    This isn’t the first time that the institutional Jewish community in Chile has expressed animosity towards a prominent leader on the left. Salvador Allende, the socialist president of Chile between 1970 and 1973, was also branded an antisemite. Just as with Jadue, Chile’s Jewish community leadership talked up antisemitism rather than address their more fundamental opposition to left-wing economic policies.

    Many Jewish families “escaped” from Chile after he became president, frightened by the “horrors of communism”. But the only horror came on September 11, 1973, when Allende was overthrown by a bloody civil-military coup, which established the 17-year Pinochet dictatorship, killing, torturing, exiling thousands of people.

    I am part of a proud group of Jews on the left in Chile who identify with the social and political struggles that the candidacy of Daniel Jadue represents. We are convinced that the attacks on him and the bad faith accusations against him are fueled by opposition to his political and economic policies, under the guise of concern for Chilean Jews.

    We are very happy that at last Chile is leaving behind the dark ages of Pinochet’s dictatorship. We are delighted that, more than 30 years since the end of the authoritarian regime, Chile will be writing a new Constitution to enshrine in law the human and civil rights of Chile’s people, in accordance with the results of a referendum several months ago.

    We are heartened by the presidential program that Jadue presented last week, as the first act of his candidacy: a diverse, inclusive Chile, without discrimination of any kind.

    Daniel Jadue aims for a more just society, a better Chile for all Chileans. As Jews, as Chileans, we are very proud to back him as our candidate.

    Claudio Mandler was born in Chile, grew up in Jerusalem, served in the IDF’s Nahal infantry brigade, and returned to Chile as an emissary for the Hashomer Hatzair movement in 2005. He is a tourist guide and audiovisual editor who co-directed ‘Los caminos de la ausencia,’ a documentary film about the military dictatorship and human rights in Chile

    #Chili

  • Kuwait police disperse ’riot’ by Egyptians stranded by virus - News Wire - Haaretz.com
    #Covid-19#migrant#migration#Koweit#coince#egyptien#emeute

    https://www.haaretz.com/world-news/wires/1.8818196

    DUBAI, United Arab Emirates (AP) — Police in Kuwait dispersed what they described as a riot by stranded Egyptians unable to return home amid the coronavirus pandemic, authorities said early Monday, the first reported sign of unrest from the region’s vast population of foreign workers who have lost their jobs over the crisis.

  • Mexico returns Central Americans, empties migrant centers - News Wire - Haaretz.com
    #Covid-19#Mexique#centrederetention#migrant#migration#expulsion
    https://www.haaretz.com/world-news/wires/1.8801278

    MEXICO CITY (AP) — Mexico has nearly emptied the 65 migrant detention centers it has across the country by returning 3,653 people to Guatemala, El Salvador and Honduras, the National Migration Institute said Sunday, adding the move should help avoid COVID-19 outbreaks in the once-crowded facilities.

  • Mexico ordered to guarantee coronavirus health care to migrants - News Wire - Haaretz.com
    #Covid-19#migrant#migration#Mexique#sante#protection

    https://www.haaretz.com/world-news/wires/1.8779700

    MEXICO CITY, April 17 (Thomson Reuters Foundation) - A judge ordered the Mexican government to extend its coronavirus protections to migrants, ruling that health care be guaranteed to detainees and temporary residence permits given to those especially vulnerable to the disease.

  • Germany’s pro-Israel left has a new target in the crosshairs : Jews - World News - Haaretz.com
    https://www.haaretz.com/world-news/.premium-germany-s-pro-israel-left-has-a-new-target-in-the-crosshairs-jews-

    Donc : #gauche_radicale (sic) anti nationaliste mais pour la nation sioniste remède de (absolument) tous les maux sur terre, ce qui justifie (absolument) l’alliance avec des néolibéraux et la guerre contre.... des juifs.

    #Délire #absurdité

    I met Thomas, an ardent young German, more than a decade ago at a radical-left demonstration in Berlin protesting the commemorative celebrations of the anniversary of Germany’s reunification. Because the official event was packed and rife with security that year, I preferred to go to the protest rally, which also sounded more interesting. It was billed as an anti-nationalist demonstration warning against the dangers of patriotic discourse about “national unity.” But when I got there, I was surprised to see that many of the protesters were waving Israeli flags. Thomas was one of them. He ran through the street draped in the blue-and-white flag. The presence of the Israeli flag puzzled me – after all, for decades the German state he was demonstrating against had been one of Israel’s biggest supporters. Thomas explained: “I am anti-nationalist and I hate every flag, other than the Israeli flag, because Israel is the answer to fascism.” He then joined the other demonstrators in roaring, “Grandpa, Grandma, stop whining – you’re criminals, not victims.”

    That was my introduction to the political phenomenon known as Antideutsche – anti-Germans. It started in the late 1980s as an exotic offshoot of the Maoist left, whose members denied the very legitimacy of a German nation after Nazism, under the slogan, “Germany, never again.” But for the past two decades, Antideutsche has had one primary focus: an unrestrained attack on anyone who is critical, even a bit, of Israeli policy. According to their amazingly simplistic approach, anti-Semitism is the source of all evil, Israel is the answer to anti-Semitism, and thus constitutes absolute good. Hence, at demonstrations and in Facebook posts of this left-wing group, there have even been calls to drop a nuclear bomb on Gaza – that is, calls for genocide.

    The absurdity doesn’t end there. Even a call for regulation of Germany’s financial markets constitutes anti-Semitism in the eyes of the Antideutsche, because they believe it hints at a conspiracy of “Jewish bankers” and “international Zionism.” Intellectuals in this group also assail women’s meditation gatherings, where participants hold hands and connect with the Great Mother, defining them as pagan rites aimed against Jewish monotheism.

    The Hebrew-language Wikipedia terms the Antideutsche an “anti-nationalist communist movement.” But it’s hard to define them as communists, much less anti-nationalists. Antideutsche people don’t come only from the left; many come from the neoliberal economic right and some are even willing to stand with the extreme-right AfD party, because it supports Israel.

    All this sounds like a description of a bizarre ideological cult. Indeed, the Antideutsche number a few thousand activists at most. But in the current global political climate, the marginal becomes central and the central, marginal. As a result, in recent years, the worldview espoused by these people has become a phenomenon that transcends the anecdotal. It wields considerable influence in civil society and on the editorial boards of the most important newspapers in Germany, and now also in Austria and Switzerland. More particularly, it has become increasingly evident in Berlin, where there is an especially large concentration of Antideutsche. Thomas, the enthusiastic demonstrator, has since become an academic and an editor of an influential cultural column in a German paper.

    Antideutsche sympathizers are now the driving force behind journalistic and social-media attacks on institutions in Berlin, notably those dealing with Jewish history and even anti-Semitism research. Thus, the Jewish Museum Berlin became the object of a particularly ugly offensive. The institution’s director, Peter Schaefer, a Jewish studies scholar, was vilified by pro-Israel activists to the point where he was compelled to resign last June. In the wake of the museum’s sharing on Twitter of a story that implied support for the BDS movement, it was claimed that Schaefer personally supports BDS and is therefore anti-Semitic.

    Subsequently, the denunciations focused on another senior official of the institution, Yasemin Shooman, who was accused of having dared to compare anti-Semitic attacks to attacks on Muslim migrants. For his part, Thomas Thiel, a senior editor at the newspaper Frankfurter Allgemeine Zeitung, wrote an opinion piece alleging that Shooman had turned the museum, which features exhibitions focusing on Jewish history and the Holocaust, into an active center of “political Islam.”

    In fact, intellectual and academic discourse in Germany today is consistently skewed toward the Israeli right. When the subject is Israel, the most distinguished media and academic platforms publish items that look like they could have been culled from the Israeli right-wing site Mida. Even the Center for Research on Anti-Semitism, one of the most important institutions of its kind in Germany, has been caught up in a public storm and accused of anti-Semitism.

    The Antideutsche want everything having to do with anti-Semitism to be subjected to their uniform and dogmatic line. Paradoxically, ideas and opinions that can be voiced in Israeli academia with no special problem, foment a huge ruckus in Berlin. Incensed Germans, some of them descendants of Nazis, don’t hesitate to attack Jewish and Israeli left-wingers. Scholars who have devoted their lives to Jewish studies tread carefully for fear they will say something that is not consistent with this absurd conception of reality.

  • Israeli student beaten on Paris Metro train after he was heard speaking Hebrew - Europe - Haaretz.com
    https://www.haaretz.com/world-news/europe/israeli-student-beaten-on-paris-metro-train-after-he-was-heard-speaking-heb

    “This new attack tends to confirm that anti-Zionism is anti-Semitic in nature,” the group said in its statement.

    Antisémitisme certainement, mais anti-sionisme qu’est-ce qu’ils en savent ?

  • From now on, every Palestinian is an anti-Semite - Europe - Haaretz.com

    L’excellent article de Gideon Levy sur la résolution Maillard, “désormais chaque Palestinien est un antisémite”

    https://www.haaretz.com/world-news/europe/.premium-from-now-on-every-palestinian-is-an-anti-semite-1.8230347

    ❝The plague is spreading. Under cover of the (just) war against anti-Semitism, Europe and the United States silence every voice daring to criticize Israel. Under cover of this war, they are undermining their freedom of speech. Incredibly, this new phenomenon is not triggering any protest, as one would expect. Laws labeling anti-Zionism as anti-Semitism and the anti-occupation movement as anti-Semitic, are passed with overwhelming majorities. Now they are playing into the hands of Israel and the Jewish establishment, but they are liable to ignite anti-Semitism when questions arise about the extent of their meddling.

    Last week, the phenomenon hit France, cradle of the revolution. The French National Assembly passed by a sweeping majority a bill that adopts the definition of anti-Semitism issued by the International Holocaust Remembrance Alliance, which equates anti-Zionism with anti-Semitism. Liberty? Equality? Fraternity? Not when it involves Israel. Here, these values are rendered mute.
    Haaretz Weekly Episode 51Haaretz

    French parliament member Sylvain Maillard formulated the bill. He is another friend of Israel’s who reportedly participated in a meeting with settler wheeler-dealer Yossi Dagan, head of the Samaria regional council, some months ago. “Criticizing the very existence of Israel as a collective composed of Jewish citizens is tantamount to hatred towards the Jewish community as a whole; just like collectively holding Jews accountable for the policies of the Israeli authorities is an expression of anti-Semitism,” the law’s introduction states. The cat is out of the bag: It is forbidden to raise doubts about Zionism, one of the only ideologies in the world whose righteousness cannot be questioned by the nations of the free world.

    First, the language. Israel “as a collective composed of Jewish citizens.” The nation-state law was also accepted in the National Assembly in Paris. If Israel is a collective of Jewish citizens, what are the Palestinian citizens? And what are the subjects living under occupation? The 154 parliamentarians who raised their hands in support of the decision cannot evade these questions. Liberté, égalité, fraternité – only for the Jews? And what are they offering the six million Palestinians, citizens and subjects of the occupation, who live under “the collective of Jewish citizens”? Second-rate liberty, equality, fraternity? From now on no one is even allowed to ask these questions. Anyone who asks is an anti-Semite.

    “Anti-Zionism is a legitimate position in Jewish history, and it also has a long history in Israel,” a petition signed in vain by 129 Jewish and Israeli professors and intellectuals against passage of the law, stated. The petition’s signatories mentioned that there were many anti-Zionist Holocaust survivors. Now they, too, are anti-Semites.

    From now on, every Palestinian and every Arab, except for Ayoub Kara, is an anti-Semite. Even every Jew and every Israeli who supports a solution of one democratic and egalitarian state, precisely in the spirt of the French revolution, is an anti-Semite. So too anyone for whom Zionism is a colonialist movement – is that not a legitimate position? – is an anti-Semite.

    For generations of Palestinians, Zionism is the essence of their existence; it expelled them from their country, deprived them of their lands, dishonored them, ruined their lives, and kills and torments them to this very day, without the end being in sight. Are they forbidden from being anti-Zionists? Are they able to not hate Zionism? Will France try them for the transgression of anti-Semitism? They are not fighting Zionism because they are anti-Semites. They are anti-Zionist only because Zionism destroyed their lives.
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    And what are the protesters of the fence around the cage of Gaza? Are they anti-Semites? Are they not freedom fighters? And what about people of conscience around the world who identify with them? From now on they are all anti-Semites, and that is outlawed in France. And if denying the right of Jewish self-determination is anti-Semitism, how will the French National Assembly refer to Israel’s denial of the Palestinians’ rights? Why does it not pass a law about that? Only because the Palestinians and justice don’t have a powerful lobby in France.

  • A Million People Are Jailed at China’s Gulags. I Managed to Escape. Here’s What Really Goes on Inside
    https://www.haaretz.com/world-news/.premium.MAGAZINE-a-million-people-are-jailed-at-china-s-gulags-i-escaped-h

    Rape, torture and human experiments. Sayragul Sauytbay offers firsthand testimony from a Xinjiang ’reeducation’ camp Twenty prisoners live in one small room. They are handcuffed, their heads shaved, every move is monitored by ceiling cameras. A bucket in the corner of the room is their toilet. The daily routine begins at 6 A.M. They are learning Chinese, memorizing propaganda songs and confessing to invented sins. They range in age from teenagers to elderly. Their meals are meager : cloudy (...)

    #CCTV #vidéo-surveillance #Islam #surveillance #viol #prison

  • Distorting the Definition of Antisemitism to Shield Israel from All Criticism – LobeLog
    https://lobelog.com/distorting-the-definition-of-antisemitism-to-shield-israel-from-all-critici

    Two major techniques facilitate such allegations. The first relates one’s claim very illusively to some antisemitic imagery. The fact that 2,000 years of hostility and hatred toward Jews have created a storehouse of anti-Jewish imagery so rich – and at times contradictory – means that nearly any claim can be linked to at least one of those images.

    Through manipulation of these images, along with a little imagination, one could identify any form of criticism as antisemitic . This kind of logic is deployed by supporters of Israel’s occupation and nationalistic government in order to delegitimize anyone who dares criticize Israeli policies.

    The second technique draws on the definition of antisemitism formulated by the International Holocaust Remembrance Alliance. Founded in 1998 (under a different name), the IHRA is a political body with considerable political power, uniting government representatives and Holocaust scholars from 33 countries, nearly all of them in the West. The IHRA aims to spread and institutionalize teaching and research on the Holocaust, commemorate the Holocaust, and struggle against antisemitism.

    The IHRA agreed on a definition of antisemitism in 2016, along with a list of examples, based on previous definitions. It has since become a kind of “soft law” that is binding in many institutions and even states across the world. The problem is that the IHRA definition deals obsessively — more than with any other topic — with the degree of antisemitism in criticism of Israel, making it far more difficult to identify real instances of antisemitism, while casting a cloud of suspicion over nearly all criticism of Israel. Meanwhile, the burden of proof lies with critics of Israel, who are constantly asked to prove that they are not anti-Semites.

    Ces deux « techniques » seraient réunies dans un article récent publié dans le Haaretz https://www.haaretz.com/world-news/europe/.premium-daniel-blatman-s-anti-semitic-attack-1.7613216

    #distorsion #définition #antisémitisme

  • Le directeur du musée juif de Berlin démissionne après une polémique sur l’antisémitisme
    Mis à jour le 15/06/2019
    https://www.francetvinfo.fr/monde/europe/allemagne/le-directeur-du-musee-juif-de-berlin-demissionne-apres-une-polemique-su

    Le directeur du musée juif de Berlin, Peter Schäfer, a démissionné, vendredi 14 juin, sur fond de polémique. En cause : un tweet controversé de son établissement recommandant la lecture d’un article critique de la décision, en mai, du Parlement allemand de considérer comme « antisémites » les méthodes du mouvement BDS (Boycott Désinvestissement Sanctions). Peter Schäfer a remis sa démission à la ministre de la Culture allemande, Monika Grütters, « pour éviter de nouveaux préjudices au musée juif de Berlin », a indiqué ce dernier.

    #BDS

    • Berlin Jewish Museum Director Resigns After Tweet Supporting BDS Freedom of Speech

      Peter Schäfer steps down days after sharing of petition calling on German government not to adopt motion defining anti-Israel boycotts as anti-Semitic
      Noa Landau - Jun 14, 2019 8:48 PM
      https://www.haaretz.com/world-news/europe/berlin-jewish-museum-director-resigns-after-tweet-supporting-bds-freedom-of

      The director of Berlin’s Jewish Museum has resigned, the museum announced Friday, days after it was criticized for endorsing a petition against a parliamentary motion defining anti-Israel boycotts as anti-Semitic and banning the boycott movement from using public buildings.

      The resignation of museum Director Peter Schäfer comes after Israeli Ambassador to Germany Jeremy Issacharoff called the museum’s sharing of the petition “shameful.”

      The petition, asserting that “boycotts are a legitimate and nonviolent tool of resistance,” was signed by 240 Jewish intellectuals.

      The signatories, among them Avraham Burg and Eva Illouz, called on the German government not to adopt the motion, to protect freedom of speech and continue funding of Israeli and Palestinian organizations “that peacefully challenge the Israeli occupation, expose severe violations of international law and strengthen civil society. These organizations defend the principles and values at the heart of liberal democracy and rule of law, in Germany and elsewhere. More than ever, they need financial support and political backing.”

      An Israeli guide at the Berlin museum told Haaretz he planned to resign in protest of “the crude interventions by the Israeli government and Germany in the museum’s work.”

      Professor Emeritus Yaacov Shavit, former head of the department of History of the Jewish People at Tel Aviv University, told Haaretz that “this whole story is nothing more than a cause to displace Prof. Sheffer, a researcher of international renown of the Second Temple period, Mishna, and Talmud.”

      “Community leaders in Berlin needed to be grateful that someone like him agreed to serve as manager of the museum. This foolish act by community leaders is outrageous and bothersome,” he added.

      Last year, it was reported that Israeli Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu demanded from Chancellor Angela Merkel that Germany stop funding the museum because it had held an exhibition about Jerusalem, “that presents a Muslim-Palestinian perspective.” Merkel was asked to halt funding to other organizations as well, on grounds that they were anti-Israel, among them the Berlin International Film Festival, pro-Palestinian Christian organizations, and the Israeli news website +972, which receives funding from the Heinrich Böll Foundation.

      Netanyahu did not deny the report and his bureau confirmed that he had raised “with various leaders the issue of funding Palestinian and Israeli groups and nonprofit organizations that depict the Israel Defense Forces as war criminals, support Palestinian terrorism and call for boycotting the State of Israel.”

      The Bundestag’s motion last month marked the first time a European parliament had officially defined the BDS movement as anti-Semitic. The motion, which is a call to the government and isn’t legally binding, won broad multiparty support from Merkel’s Christian Democratic Union, the Social Democrats and the Free Democratic Party. Some members of the Greens Party also supported the motion, though others abstained at the last minute. The motion stated that the BDS movement’s “Don’t Buy” stickers on Israeli products evoke the Nazi slogan “Don’t buy from Jews.”

  • Auschwitz is rewriting Holocaust history, one tweet at a time - World News - Haaretz.com
    https://www.haaretz.com/world-news/.premium-auschwitz-is-rewriting-holocaust-history-one-tweet-at-a-time-1.693

    “Polish anti-Semitism was a serious problem then and still is today,” I fired back, in a comment to the Museum’s tweet, noting reports that the law has actually caused a spike in Jew-hatred in Poland. “Acknowledging it is acknowledging the Polish Jews in my family who were murdered. Don’t you dare try to rewrite history.”

    ""The people running the @AuschwitzMuseum are promoting a narrative that Polish anti-Semitism did not contribute to the Holocaust, erasing the reality that denying Polish complicity in violence against Jews contributes to anti-Semitism today," I declared to my meager 1,600 followers. Then, I was blocked.

    This experience – of the naked politicization of Holocaust memory at the ground zero of Jewish extermination – has led me to fear the current political situation in Poland could compromise Auschwitz’s historical preservation. Could the Auschwitz Museum regress back to the spirit of the times of its founding by Polish parliamentary decree in 1947, when it was established as a “Monument to the Martyrology of the Polish Nation and other Nations,” with Jews out of sight and mind?

    Polish Prime Minister Mateusz Morawiecki is a right-wing nationalist who has stated that Jews were also “perpetrators” of the Holocaust and has been accused of being a Holocaust denier.) He also has an unfortunate habit of complaining about “greedy Jews.”