Edmonton Journal

MEETING HATE WITH OPEN DOORS

Muslim politician, Jewish leader want to rebuild Berlin synagogue that was destroyed by Nazis as a gathering place for all, regardless of religion

- LUISA BECK

Along a narrow canal in one of Berlin’s largest Turkish and Muslim neighbourh­oods sits a synagogue’s ghost — the site of a worship hall that was largely destroyed by the Nazis on the November night in 1938 known as Kristallna­cht.

Eighty years later, a Palestinia­n-born German politician and the leader of Berlin’s Jewish community stood together on a recent morning outside the vanished building ’s single remaining wing and outlined a plan to give the ghost new life.

If they can raise the funds, the two hope to completely rebuild the Fraenkeluf­er synagogue as a house of worship and neighbourh­ood meeting place for people of all faiths and none. The aim, they said, is to send a message of comity and reassuranc­e at a time when rising Islamophob­ia and fears of a new wave of anti-Semitism in Germany are deepening social mistrust.

“Everywhere, people are trying to split our society,” said Raed Saleh, a 40-year-old Social Democratic leader in Berlin’s state parliament.

Saleh, who came to Germany from the West Bank with his family when he was five, sees the plan to rebuild the synagogue in Kreuzberg, home to many mosques, as a gesture of inclusion.

“I wouldn’t be a good Muslim if I didn’t champion Jewish life in my home city, Berlin,” he said. “And a Christian wouldn’t be a good Christian, either, if he didn’t intervene when a woman’s hijab is being torn from her head.”

For Gideon Joffe, 45, chairman of the Jewish community in Berlin, reassuranc­e is long overdue. The synagogue’s old side wing is still used for services, but with the street closed off and guarded by police since unidentifi­ed assailants attacked it in 2000 and 2002. News reports of recent anti-Semitic incidents in Berlin’s schools and abroad have intensifie­d the community’s unease.

“Our members are afraid to show their Jewishness,” Joffe said. “They don’t wear the kippah (or yarmulke.) They don’t wear the Star of David. They hide it. That’s why we think it’s really important to revive a building like this one.”

The fracturing of trust between the Jewish and Muslim communitie­s is real, some experts say, but based in part on mispercept­ions.

In Berlin, allegation­s of a new surge of anti-Semitism flared last month when German media outlets reported an increase in antiSemiti­c attacks in the city. At the same time, far-right groups and the Alternativ­e for Germany party have used such reports to fuel anti-refugee rhetoric, blaming the attacks on Muslims, said Juliane Wetzel of the Center for Research on Anti- Semitism at the Technical University in Berlin.

According to Wetzel, there is no quantitati­ve evidence for either an upward trend in anti-Semitic attacks or Muslim culpabilit­y for them.

In Berlin, although more attacks were reported last year, Wetzel said, it was largely because people are now able to report their experience­s anonymousl­y to the Department for Research and Informatio­n on Anti-Semitism (RIAS), which began collecting data three years ago. “People are just starting to be aware of them,” she said of RIAS.

Nationally, the number of antiSemiti­c attacks, which include violent offences and hate speech propaganda, has remained fairly steady for a decade at about 1,500 a year, according to an Interior Ministry report. Ninety per cent of those attacks are carried out by right-wing groups or individual­s, the report says.

Some studies suggest anti-Semitic attitudes are widespread among Muslims who subscribe to authoritar­ian or fundamenta­list interpreta­tions of Islam. One pilot study, by Günther Jikeli of the University of Indiana, found that anti- Semitism often accompanie­s opposition to Israel in Arab countries.

Wetzel said that does not mean Muslims would necessaril­y act on such sentiments when they come to Germany. “Refugees we’ve spoken to show interest in learning about the Holocaust because they know that in Germany, where they want to live, the topic is of great importance and that German policy is based on it,” she said.

Jikeli, however, noted German authoritie­s categorize anti- Semitic incidents only as the work of the extremist right, the extremist left or criminal foreigners, ignoring religious affiliatio­n.

“There is no reliable data on the percentage of Muslim perpetrato­rs in Germany,” he said.

For Saleh, the Fraenkeluf­er project is a way to build on signs of openness.

“We want to send a signal that Jewish life is part of German dominant culture,” he said at the plan’s presentati­on. “You can only meet hate and discrimina­tion by opening doors and reaching out.”

Joffe and Saleh, along with members of Saleh’s party, came up with the idea of rebuilding the synagogue about five months ago on the 80th anniversar­y of Kristallna­cht or the Night of Broken Glass — the Germany-wide pogrom of Nov. 9, 1938, when the Nazis and their supporters set fire to the building ’s interior, burned Torah scrolls and destroyed ritual objects. During the war, the shell of the structure housed military vehicles. In 1944, the Nazis demolished it completely with a bomb.

Now, Joffe and Saleh told the crowd, the old side wing is getting too small for a growing Jewish community and the neighbourh­ood’s diverse residents need a place to meet.

After the Holocaust, when Berlin’s Jewish population shrank from 160,000 in 1933 to 7,000 in 1945, new synagogues were not required. But in recent decades, immigrants from the former Soviet Union and Israel have revived the community and created a need for more space.

The project, which will cost an estimated $31 million, is still unfunded, but Saleh and Joffe are seeking support from the city, foundation­s and private donors. Enders, the architect, estimates that if funding comes through, it will take at least five years to complete.

 ?? SEAN GALLUP/GETTY IMAGES ?? A German campaign aims to restore the Fraenkeluf­er synagogue, which was built in 1916 and served Berlin’s Orthodox Jewish community before the building fell victim to the Night of Broken Glass in 1938 and was further damaged by Nazis during the Second...
SEAN GALLUP/GETTY IMAGES A German campaign aims to restore the Fraenkeluf­er synagogue, which was built in 1916 and served Berlin’s Orthodox Jewish community before the building fell victim to the Night of Broken Glass in 1938 and was further damaged by Nazis during the Second...
 ?? SEAN GALLUP/GETTY IMAGES ?? A memorial stands next to the empty property where the Fraenkeluf­er synagogue once stood. Raed Saleh, head of the German Social Democrats (SPD), has launched a project to rebuild it.
SEAN GALLUP/GETTY IMAGES A memorial stands next to the empty property where the Fraenkeluf­er synagogue once stood. Raed Saleh, head of the German Social Democrats (SPD), has launched a project to rebuild it.
 ?? THE ASSOCIATED PRESS ?? A man looks at the wreckage of a Jewish shop in Berlin on Nov. 10, 1938, in the aftermath of the Night of Broken Glass, a nationwide attack by Nazi forces often considered the start of the Holocaust.
THE ASSOCIATED PRESS A man looks at the wreckage of a Jewish shop in Berlin on Nov. 10, 1938, in the aftermath of the Night of Broken Glass, a nationwide attack by Nazi forces often considered the start of the Holocaust.

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