The Jerusalem Post

Guide at Anne Frank Center compares Israeli treatment of Palestinia­ns to Nazis

- • By TOBY AXELROD

BERLIN (JTA) – The Anne Frank Center in Berlin has distanced itself from the statement of a freelance guide who compared the suffering of Jews under the Nazis to that of Palestinia­ns under Israeli “occupation” today.

At issue was a profile of Nesreen Hajjaj, a 24-year-old Berliner of Palestinia­n background, in the July 19 online English version of Al-Arabiya. Hajjaj is one of 25 freelance guides who introduces visitors to the exhibition at the Anne Frank Zentrum Berlin.

Hajjaj told the interviewe­r that “many things that happened to the Jews during the Nazi rule are happening to the Palestinia­ns now. Jewish people were kicked out of their homes and denied an education. Today, Palestinia­n lands and houses are being conquered,” she told the online publicatio­n.

She said she had been called an “infidel and a hypocrite” on social media for taking the job with the center.

Her answer to critics: “We must be open-minded toward different people, especially if you live within their societies.”

Patrick Siegele, director of the Anne Frank Zentrum, told JTA that Hajjaj’s comparison as stated in the Al-Arabiya article was “incorrect and painful... and does not reflect the official position of the Anne Frank Zentrum. Furthermor­e, the Anne Frank Zentrum distances itself from this position.”

He said his staff would discuss the issue with Hajjaj and others who bring guests through the exhibit in central Berlin, which deals with the history of Anne Frank and the Holocaust, as well as current antisemiti­sm and other forms of discrimina­tion.

Elke Gryglewski, too, recently had to speak with guides at the House of the Wannsee Conference in Berlin, where she is director of education. The memorial is located in the villa where chief Nazis coordinate­d plans in 1942 to exterminat­e European Jewry.

After one guide compared the United States under President Donald Trump to the Third Reich and another compared certain welfare regulation­s in Germany today to Nazi discrimina­tion against Jews, Gryglewski told her staff: “I don’t want comparison­s in the exhibition, whether with Palestine, which is highly controvers­ial, but also in general. Comparison­s are not helpful and, in general, people don’t get the point.

“But if [the comparison] comes from visitors, we do have to react by going into the difference­s,” she stressed. Even if there are some “structural similariti­es” between historical events, “in general there are more difference­s.”

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