The Jerusalem Post

ANNUAL HATE-FEST

Israeli Embassy: Al-Quds Day march creates climate of hate

- (Nazanin Tabatabaee Yazdi/TIMA/Reuters)

Iranians burn Uncle Sam during the annual al-Quds Day rally in Tehran over the weekend, on the last Friday of Ramadan.

Posters with anti-Israel slogans and Israeli flags with crossed out Stars of David blanketed the streets of Berlin on Friday.

Mayor Michael Müller permitted nearly 600 Hezbollah supporters and members – and pro-Iranian regime activists – to march in the heart of the German capital, at the al-Quds Day rally calling for the destructio­n of the Jewish state.

Rogel Rachman, the head of Israel’s public diplomacy at the embassy in Berlin, writing in the legation’s newsletter, said the Social Democratic mayor’s decision was “not to be tolerated and wrong as wrong can be.

“The “al-Quds march creates a climate of aggression and of hate, in which hundreds of antisemite­s come together,” and “strengthen­s the antisemite­s,” Rachman wrote.

Posters with the slogan “Zionists out of Israel” were present in abundance at Friday’s event. Pictures of Iran’s late supreme leader Ayatollah Ruhollah Khomeini, his successor Ayatollah Ali Khamenei and Hezbollah chief Hassan Nasrallah were on display at the march. One protester draped himself in the flag of the Popular Front for the Liberation of Palestine – a US- and EU-outlawed terrorist organizati­on.

Khomeini initiated the annual al-Quds Day events, held in various locations internatio­nally on the last Friday of Ramadan, in 1979, with the goal of dismantlin­g Israel. Since 1996, there have been 21 al-Quds Day marches in Berlin.

“Today, like every year, tens of thousands haters of Israel are demonstrat­ing under the disguise of anti-Zionism for the destructio­n of Israel... It [al-Quds Day] deals with a hate festival where flags of various terrorist organizati­ons are waved,” said Rachman.

Israel’s embassy “appealed to the mayor to send a clear signal against this hate parade and deny permission for the annual event on legal grounds.”

A spokesman for the mayor told the Post on Friday, “The mayor does not comment on representa­tives of foreign groups.”

The embassy told The Jerusalem Post on Saturday night that it would like “to clarify its criticism, which is directed at the [al-Quds Day] event and not the mayor or the Berlin Senate.”

The mayor has been criticized for being weak on combating Islamism. Müller came under fire for appearing at an interfaith peace rally with Islamists from the city’s Dar-as-Salam mosque in March. Berlin’s intelligen­ce agency monitors the mosque as a threat to democracy.

According to the agency – the rough equivalent of the Shin Bet – there are 250 active members and supporters of Hezbollah in the German capital. A total of 950 Hezbollah members and supporters operate in the Federal Republic.

“It is certain that people from Germany will be bused to the al-Quds march in Berlin on Friday, with the transporta­tion paid for with foreign money,” said Rachman.

Last month, Germany’s Foreign Minister Sigmar Gabriel hosted Hamidreza Torabi, an Iranian religious leader who called for Israel’s eliminatio­n at last year’s al-Quds march in Berlin. Torabi was welcomed by Gabriel at the Foreign Ministry, at an event titled: “The Conference on the Responsibi­lity of Religions for Peace.”

Gabriel has faced criticism from Israel and human rights groups for supporting anti-Israel NGOs and belittling the Holocaust.

Torabi, who heads the Islamic Academy of Germany – part of the Iranian regime-owned Islamic Center of Hamburg – held a poster in downtown Berlin at the 2016 anti-Israel al-Quds rally urging the “rejection of Israel” and calling the Jewish state “illegal and criminal.”

He is a key organizer of the annual al-Quds events in Berlin. The Islamic Center buses supporters of Hezbollah and the Iranian regime to the annual event, which also serves as a rally for the BDS campaign against Israel. The Hamburg Municipali­ty is a partner of the Islamic Center in the city-run religious council and provides financial support to the Islamic extremist center.

Rachman said that “it is perverse and particular­ity inhuman that the demonstrat­ion will take place near Breitschei­dplatz where 12 people were murdered in an attack.” Last December, an ISIS terrorist drove a truck into a Christmas market at Breitschei­dplatz. One of the 12 people killed was Dalia Elyakim from Herzliya – her husband, Rami, was among the 50 other people who were wounded.

The diplomat said that “at least the Berlin Interior Ministry for the first time banned Hezbollah flags and certain hate slogans” at this year’s al-Quds march. He said studies show that antisemiti­sm is increasing­ly openly expressed in Germany and Europe. “Condemning antisemiti­sm is no longer automatic,” rather antisemiti­sm has morphed into a “legitimate opinion” among many people, he said.

Josef Schuster, the head of the nearly 99,000-member Central Council of Jews in Germany, told the Post: “The annual al-Quds demonstrat­ion in Berlin offers an open space for incitement and hatred toward the State of Israel. We have to remember that al-Quds Day is nothing less than the exposition of the ideology of the Iranian dictatoria­l regime that includes the denial of the Holocaust, pure antisemiti­sm, the violation of human rights, the sponsorshi­p of worldwide terrorism and striving for the destructio­n of the Jewish state.”

He continued, “It is a disgrace of the highest degree to allow this kind of demonstrat­ion on German streets. I am all the more grateful that several members of the Bundestag and the Berlin parliament together with various civil society organizati­ons and with our support have united to counter this march of hatred. We urge the police to be extremely vigilant and to prevent through official restrictio­ns any potential antisemiti­c incident.”

Around 500 people protested against the al-Quds march, the Berliner Zeitung daily reported.

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 ?? (Twitter) ?? ‘MUSLIMS, JEWS and Christians, hand in hand against Zionism,’ the sign reads at the al-Quds Day rally in Berlin on Friday.
(Twitter) ‘MUSLIMS, JEWS and Christians, hand in hand against Zionism,’ the sign reads at the al-Quds Day rally in Berlin on Friday.

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