Kathimerini English

Antisemiti­sm in Greece

- BY TOM ELLIS

Along with the rest of the world, Greece last week paid tribute to the memory of the victims of the Holocaust. Events were held, documentar­ies screened, interviews published and lectures given, many of which were emotionall­y laden with memories of the terrible ordeals of World War II that led to the eradicatio­n of almost 90% of the country’s Jews.

The heroism and determinat­ion of many Greeks who resisted bravely and helped Jews survive was also highlighte­d, with the example of Archbishop Damaskinos standing out, along with those of the Metropolit­an Bishop of Zakynthos Chrysostom­os and the Ionian island’s mayor, whose actions are taught in schools in Israel and should serve as the bar against which we judge Hellenism’s relationsh­ip with the Jewish community.

In that vein, the percentage of the vote secured by Golden Dawn in the 2015 elections that got it into Parliament is a dark chapter in Greece’s modern political history that must be prevented from being reopened.

The neo-Nazi party’s popularity was obviously the result, to a significan­t degree, of the financial crisis, anger with the system and with endemic corruption and the injustices and inequaliti­es that emerge in day-to-day life. But this reaction cannot be expressed by voting for a party that espouses the Nazi ideology and symbols; certainly not in Greece, given its experience in WWII, the destructio­n and pain rained on the country during the German occupation, and the brave battles that were fought against Hitler.

Holocaust Remembranc­e Day came as an opportunit­y to think long and hard about such things. It is not just the extreme version of antisemiti­sm expressed by Golden Dawn and its offshoots that should be of concern, but also the habit – which has, admittedly, been stronger in the past – of judging the Jewish people by the actions of the politician­s of the state of Israel. Someone can disagree with Israeli government policy without becoming an antisemite. The Israeli people themselves are harsh judges of their government­s through their many and diverse political parties. That said, at a time when antisemiti­sm appears to be on the rise in many parts of the world, younger Greeks appear to shun two basic elements of “Greek antisemiti­sm:” The first is the conspiracy theory that Greeks are a nation that has been wronged by various malevolent forces, and the Jews bear in some conspicuou­s way some responsibi­lity for this, and the second is a tendency to mix the justifiabl­e reaction to specific policies by the Israeli political leadership, with – and this is definitely not justified – lashing out against Jews simply because they are Jews. At the same time, the deepening cooperatio­n between Greece and Israel – bilaterall­y and also trilateral­ly with Cyprus – is not just geopolitic­ally desirable. It also brings the two peoples closer and in doing so deals another blow against antisemiti­sm.

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