The Jerusalem Post

Request to wear kippa rattles Anne Frank House

An employee asked to wear one, waited six months for answer • ‘I hadn’t expected this to be an issue’

- • By CNAAN LIPHSHIZ

AMSTERDAM (JTA) – When Barry Vingerling asked his employers at the Anne Frank House whether it was okay for him to start coming to work wearing a kippa, he did it mostly as a courtesy.

“I hadn’t expected this to be an issue,” Vingerling, 25, told the Dutch-Jewish Nieuw Israelieti­sch Weekblad newspaper in an interview. “I work at the house of Anne Frank who had to hide because of her identity. Should I have to hide mine in that same house?”

His bosses’ answer to this question appeared to be “yes.” Suggesting at first that he wear a hat on top of his skullcap, they dithered for six months on whether to allow it before Vingerling forced their hand by wearing a kippa without permission.

In a statement, the Anne Frank House said it did not have a policy on the wearing of religious symbols by employees and that it needed a few months to hammer one out. They finally announced last week that they would allow employees to wear religious symbols to work.

Vingerling’s predicamen­t may have had a happy ending. But the fuss nonetheles­s illustrate­s how Jews in Western Europe are affected by a debate usually focused on Muslims, immigratio­n and religious tolerance.

In the Netherland­s, a 2015 law made it illegal to wear face-covering clothes in schools and hospitals, government buildings and on public transporta­tion. Belgium has had an even stricter policy since 2011, as does France, aimed at the Muslim nikab, or face veil.

In 2016, local authoritie­s in France banned the wearing of a full-body bathing suit, popularly known as the “burkini,” favored by some devout Muslim women. Those bans divided French society – and its Jewish community – in an acrimoniou­s debate.

Supporters of the ban, including Moshe Sebbag, the head rabbi of the Grand Synagogue of Paris, said the burkini was a “political statement.” But opponents said the ban was a dangerous encroachme­nt on religious liberties that could affect French Jews, as well as Muslims and Christians. BACK IN Amsterdam, the kippa issue pitted two key institutio­ns preserving the memory of Anne Frank against each other.

The Anne Frank Fonds in Basel, a foundation set up by Anne Frank’s father, Otto, and which holds the copyright for her diary, criticized the Anne Frank House for its handling of the affair.

“Otto Frank always wanted to establish in the former annex a meeting place for young people from all over the world... to talk about peace, the future and living together,” Yves Kugelamann, a spokesman for the Anne Frank Fonds in Basel, told JTA when queried about Vingerling’s case. “This should be respected and acknowledg­ed.”

At the Anne Frank Fonds, Kugelamann added, “Everybody is allowed to show his religious, cultural, etcetera background.” He also said his organizati­on “can’t comment [on] other organizati­ons’ policy,” but religious tolerance is how the Frank family “lived in the open-minded Jewish environmen­t in Frankfurt,” where Anne was born, “and how the children where educated.”

The two groups have clashed before on a number of issues, including on how to balance Anne Frank’s particular­istic Jewish identity with some of her universal values.

Separately, the Anne Frank Fonds in Basel is also facing criticism for a different reason – its newly announced cooperatio­n with a controvers­ial organizati­on that funds left-leaning and Arab-rights organizati­ons in Israel, in addition to doing general civil society work.

The Anne Frank Fonds said earlier this month that it would contribute some of its proceeds to the New Israel Fund. The nonprofit funds groups in Israel like Breaking the Silence, made up of veterans who report, mostly anonymousl­y, what they say are violations of the Israeli army’s own policies, and Adalah, an Israeli-Arab rights organizati­on that frequently criticizes the government. NIF is also critical of Israel’s plans to deport tens of thousands of African asylum-seekers, which led Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu to accuse it of working for the “erasure of the Jewish character of Israel.”

In announcing the partnershi­p, the Anne Frank Fonds wrote, “The New Israel Fund is the leading organizati­on promoting democracy and equality in Israel [and this] partnershi­p with NIF is designed to strengthen Israeli civil society.”

Caroline Glick, a right-leaning journalist and columnist for The Jerusalem Post, criticized the deal in a column for Maariv on Friday, stating the NIF “seeks to make Israel a country devoid of singular Jewish characteri­stics,” whereas Frank herself was both a Dutch patriot and a proud Jew.

Kugelmann declined to say how much money the Anne Frank Fonds will give to the New Israel Fund, or whether his group will agree to fund all of the organizati­ons receiving funding from the organizati­on, including Adalah and Breaking the Silence.

“We make sure that money is given in the idea and under the conditions of Anne Frank Fonds, mainly social help, education, women and children rights,” he said. The Baselbased group has “to approve [each recipient] organizati­on. The New Israel Fund proposes projects, [then] we decide” together, he told JTA.

 ??  ??
 ?? (Cris Toala Olivares/Reuters) ?? VISITORS WAIT to enter the Anne Frank House in Amsterdam last October.
(Cris Toala Olivares/Reuters) VISITORS WAIT to enter the Anne Frank House in Amsterdam last October.

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from Israel