Waterloo Region Record

Crack down on racism, Israeli sports minister asks

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JERUSALEM — Israel’s sports minister asked her Italian counterpar­t on Wednesday to crack down on racism in soccer after Lazio supporters plastered stickers at a stadium with images of Holocaust victim and diarist Anne Frank wearing a jersey of city rival Roma.

Miri Regev’s office said a letter dispatched to Luca Lotti called the display “despicable” and accused thousands of Lazio fans of openly identifyin­g with neo-Nazi symbols. She wrote that calling Roma players “Jews” inferred they were a “scourge to be avoided.”

The Italian soccer federation has said a passage from Frank’s diary will be read aloud at all soccer matches in Italy this week. It said it would also be combined with a minute’s silence before Serie A, B and C matches to promote Holocaust remembranc­e.

Lazio supporters plastered the stickers during Sunday’s match against Cagliari in the Stadio Olimpico in Rome. The stickers show a well-known photo of a smiling Anne with a superimpos­ed red Roma jersey.

The Anne Frank House issued a statement on Tuesday.

“We are shocked by these antiJewish expression­s which are extremely painful to those who have experience­d the consequenc­es of the persecutio­n of the Jews,” it said.

Anne Frank became a tragic symbol for all Holocaust victims because of the diary she wrote while in hiding from the Nazis in Amsterdam with her family from 1942-1944.

 ?? MATTEO BAZZI, THE ASSOCIATED PRESS ?? Inter captain Mauro Icardi signs Anne Frank’s diary for a child, prior to an Italian Serie A soccer match against Sampdoria in Milan, Italy, on Tuesday.
MATTEO BAZZI, THE ASSOCIATED PRESS Inter captain Mauro Icardi signs Anne Frank’s diary for a child, prior to an Italian Serie A soccer match against Sampdoria in Milan, Italy, on Tuesday.

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