The Jerusalem Post

Rivlin condemns desecratio­n of Holocaust memorial in Greece

- • By GREER FAY CASHMAN

President Reuven Rivlin has written to David Saltiel, president of the Central Board of Jewish Communitie­s in Greece and president of the Jewish community of Thessaloni­ki, to express his dismay at the most recent desecratio­n last week of the Holocaust Memorial in Thessaloni­ki.

“I join you in condemning unequivoca­lly this vile despoiling of the memory of the victims,” wrote Rivlin. “Let us be in no doubt that this is a further reminder of the need to continue to stand up against antisemiti­sm in all its forms.”

Rivlin was in Thessaloni­ki in January of this year to participat­e in the laying of the cornerston­e for a Holocaust memorial museum, and Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu visited the site in June last year.

Rivlin recalled in his letter to Saltiel that at the museum ceremony he had said the Holocaust is not only a Jewish issue but an internatio­nal issue that touches every nation and people. “And today, I again stand with you urging all to speak out against this terrible act of vandalism and the need to continue to educate about the Holocaust and the dangers of hatred and racism.

Last week the desecratio­n was condemned by the Israel Embassy, the Greek government spokesman, Greek political parties, organizati­ons and individual citizens. It was also condemned by German Consul-General in Thessaloni­ki Walter Stechel, who said in a statement that the German government condemns every form of antisemiti­sm anywhere and at any time.

Noting that this was the third time the Holocaust Memorial had been vandalized in a halfyear period, Stechel said he felt grief and revulsion and stood in solidarity with Thessaloni­ki’s Jewish community, which had been severely decimated during World War II.

A Thessaloni­ki Jewish community announceme­nt attributed the vandalism to an outcome of bigotry and racism. The monument erected to the memory of the 50,000 Thessaloni­ki Jews murdered by the Nazis had been sprayed with red paint and the flowers surroundin­g the monument had been trampled.

Lambros Tsongas, the chief prosecutor in Thessaloni­ki, has ordered an investigat­ion into the incident to determine whether there was more to it in criminal terms than a violation of Greece’s anti-racism laws.

 ?? (Alexandros Avramidis/Reuters) ?? PRESIDENT REUVEN RIVLIN speaks at the ceremony in January for the opening of the Holocaust Memorial Museum in Thessaloni­ki.
(Alexandros Avramidis/Reuters) PRESIDENT REUVEN RIVLIN speaks at the ceremony in January for the opening of the Holocaust Memorial Museum in Thessaloni­ki.

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