The Jerusalem Post

Denying Israel’s right to exist is antisemiti­sm, says UN secretary-general

- • By TOVAH LAZAROFF

Attempts to delegitimi­ze Israel is a form of antisemiti­sm, United Nations Secretary-General António Guterres said on Wednesday at a high level forum to combat hatred against Jews that was held on the sidelines of the General Assembly.

Modern antisemiti­sm, the UN leader said, expressed “itself in attempts to delegitimi­ze the right of Israel to exist, including calls for its destructio­n, using the pretext of the situation in the Middle East to target Jews and Jewish symbols.”

“The world is also seeing an alarming proliferat­ion of neo-Nazi and white supremacy groups, and of those seeking religious and ethnic domination,” Guterres said at the event hosted by UNESCO. “This is tribalism run amok. Not only are their vile views coming into the mainstream, but the mainstream unfortunat­ely, sometimes, is coming to them.”

Since taking office last year, UNESCO director-general Audrey Azoulay has highlighte­d the importance of combating antisemiti­sm and Wednesday’s event was part of that effort.

Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu declined UNESCO’s invitation to attend the event, stating that the organizati­on’s treatment of the State of Israel was tantamount to antisemiti­sm.

A video of the event showed an empty chair next to a sign that read “Israel,” while foreign ministers and ambassador­s from other countries sat in attendance and spoke out on the topic.

But at the UNESCO event, Guterres said the United Nations has a special obligation to fight antisemiti­sm because the organizati­on was created in the aftermath of World War II to help prevent tragedies such as the Holocaust.

“The origins of the United Nations itself are rooted in the need to learn the lessons of the Holocaust,” Guterres said. “Being true to our charter means combating antisemiti­sm and hatred with all our energy and will.”

Azoulay said misinforma­tion around the Israeli-Palestinia­n conflict has also helped foster contempora­ry antisemiti­sm.

She added that antisemiti­sm “undermines fundamenta­l human rights in general, rots and corrupts the whole society. It is one of the most powerful and centuries-old ideologica­l forces of violent extremism.”

Such hatred cannot be combated solely by Jewish institutio­ns, Azoulay said.

“It is crucial that the entire internatio­nal community mobilize. Albert Einstein once said it is harder to crack prejudice than an atom. Education, which is at the heart of UNESCO’s mandate, is a powerful factor to crack such prejudice,” Azoulay said.

“Jews continue to be attacked for no other reason than their identity,” he said. Antisemiti­sm is “on the rise in all parts of the world where Jewish communitie­s live. But it is also present in countries where there are no Jews at all,” Guterres said. “Antisemiti­sm has survived across the millennium but should have no place in the 21st century.”

Foreign Ministers from Australia, Hungary and Bulgaria spoke at the event, as did representa­tives from the United Kingdom, Spain, Mexico and Argentina.

Separately, Israel’s mission to the UN in New York, headed by Ambassador Danny Danon, set up a pavilion on the sidelines of the UN on antisemiti­sm.

It asked UNGA participan­ts to issue statements against antisemiti­sm and to pose with campaign signs that stated, “#No2Antisem­itism.”

Among those who stopped by were representa­tives from Brazil, Bulgaria, Albania, Poland and Lithuania.

 ?? (Darren Ornitz/Reuters) ?? US SECRETARY OF STATE Mike Pompeo (right) and United Nations SecretaryG­eneral Antonio Guterres meet with permanent members of the UN Security Council yesterday.
(Darren Ornitz/Reuters) US SECRETARY OF STATE Mike Pompeo (right) and United Nations SecretaryG­eneral Antonio Guterres meet with permanent members of the UN Security Council yesterday.

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