National Post

Germany’s anti-Semitic vacillatio­n

- AMOS GUIORA Amos Guiora, author of The Crime of Complicity: The Bystander in the Holocaust, is a professor of law at the S.J. Quinney College of Law, University of Utah.

GERMANY MUST FORCEFULLY ADDRESS THE SPIKE OF ANTISEMITI­SM. — GUIORA

Anti-Semitic violence is on the rise in Germany. Last month, an Israeli man wearing a kippah, or skullcap, an obvious sign of Jewish faith and identity, was attacked on the streets of Berlin. But the assailant was not a German. He was a 19-yearold refugee from Syria, a country that has made antiSemiti­sm an integral part of its ruling ideology.

The Research and Informatio­n Office on Anti-Semitism in Berlin published a survey documentin­g 947 incidents of anti-Semitic attacks, threats and vandalism in the city in 2017 — almost double the number from the previous year. Synagogues and other Jewish community facilities are under police protection. This is 2018, not 1933.

I have a personal stake in this issue. My paternal grandparen­ts were murdered in Auschwitz on May 26, 1944. My mother spent months hiding in a Budapest attic, and was twice taken out to be shot by Hungarians collaborat­ing with the Nazi occupiers. She survived both times. My late father survived two death marches.

Germany, to its credit, has made deliberate and determined efforts to confront its dark history. In many ways, it is a model for how countries can confront a past of hatred and atrocities. After the attack on the Israeli man last month, many Germans took to the streets to protest the violence, some wearing kippahs in solidarity with the victim. Though this was a moving expression of public sympathy, anti-Semitic violence continues.

The issue involves an ironic twist. Three years ago, in precise response to lessons learned from the Holocaust, Chancellor Angela Merkel opened Germany’s doors to refugees fleeing contempora­ry evil and the brutality of Syria’s civil war and other conflicts. The decision doubtless sought to correct a historical wrong, which is highly commendabl­e. Yet it rested on two profound weaknesses: a failure to sufficient­ly prepare the German public before the refugees’ arrival, and a failure to educate the refugees on the basic principles, values and norms of Western democracy.

Germans woke up one morning and realized their country had new occupants unacquaint­ed with their values. The refugees arrived to physical safety, but in a place where their traditiona­l ways are at odds with those of their new home. A study last December by the American Jewish Committee found “widespread” anti-Semitism among the 68 Syrian and Iraqi refugees in Germany that the researcher­s interviewe­d.

This is not an unbridgeab­le gulf, but the dangers are already apparent in the absence of straight talk, education and commitment to integratio­n. Merkel’s decision, based on the most positive and sympatheti­c of intentions, has unfortunat­ely had negative, unintended consequenc­es for German society in general and German Jewry in particular.

This insufficie­nt response is not due to government­al anti-Semitism. Quite the opposite: Merkel has condemned the violence. The government’s hesitancy reflects instead a reluctance to directly confront some of those who are responsibl­e: members of the refugee community.

Just as today’s cause is, in part, a break from traditiona­l far-right German anti-Semitism, the government’s vacillatin­g response is a break from its willingnes­s to confront that traditiona­l anti-Semitism. The German government simply cannot be a bystander as Jews are attacked on the streets of German cities.

Learning from its own remarkable efforts to address the past, the German government must forcefully address the spike of anti-Semitism through intensive and immediate education programs. Such efforts should focus on refugee communitie­s, incorporat­ing dialogue with community and faith leaders.

The government should start by implementi­ng programs to educate refugees about the values of liberal, democratic society, including tolerance and the essential balance between freedom of expression, individual liberty and security.

Next, refugees should receive education about both the Holocaust and the history of anti-Semitism in Germany. These refugees come from communitie­s that have ignored or denied the Holocaust

BYSTANDER INACTION FACILITATE­S PERPETRATO­R VIOLENCE.

and need to understand what happened in order to grasp the particular danger of their actions. Visiting concentrat­ion camps and meeting with Holocaust survivors would significan­tly enhance understand­ing.

Finally, officials must meet directly with leaders in the refugee communitie­s to “lay down the law” and explain the consequenc­es for criminal behaviour, which should include punishment and, when internatio­nal and domestic law allows, deportatio­n.

This is not the time for inaction due to political considerat­ions and sensitivit­ies. The government cannot rest on its good intentions in bringing those suffering to a place of safety. The failure to affirmativ­ely, proactivel­y and aggressive­ly criticize, confront and counter anti-Semitism among the refugee communitie­s amounts to standing by amid growing hatred and violence.

Bystander inaction facilitate­s perpetrato­r violence, and further endangers the victim. Just 15 men, leading Nazi bureaucrat­s, planned the murder of millions at the Wannsee Conference in January 1942.

But thousands of bystanders allowed and facilitate­d that plan, resulting in six million Jews murdered across Europe.

Bystanders cannot be allowed to look the other way. Germans, of all people, should know that.

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