The Jerusalem Post

Ocasio-Cortez compares migrant caravan to Jews fleeing Nazi Europe

- • By RON KAMPEAS

WASHINGTON (JTA) – Alexandria Ocasio-Cortez is just one of 435 members of the incoming US House of Representa­tives, but her youth, surprise primary win in her Bronx-area district, socialism and, above all, outspokenn­ess have attracted outsize attention.

So when Ocasio-Cortez, 29, likened the crisis at the US border with Mexico to Jewish refugees that the United States turned away before World War II, the reactions came thick and fast.

“Asking to be considered a refugee & applying for status isn’t a crime,” Ocasio-Cortez wrote on Twitter on Sunday after US border agents repelled Central American migrants with tear gas. “It wasn’t for Jewish families fleeing Germany. It wasn’t for targeted families fleeing Rwanda. It wasn’t for communitie­s fleeing war-torn Syria. And it isn’t for those fleeing violence in Central America.”

Attached to her tweet was a now viral Reuters photo of a mother fleeing the tear gas clutching two toddlers, one in diapers.

A number of conservati­ves seized upon the tweet to suggest that Ocasio-Cortez was likening the migrants that President Donald Trump has labeled as “invaders” to the six million Jews who perished in the Nazi Holocaust.

“New York Democratic Rep.-elect Alexandria Ocasio-Cortez on Sunday compared members of the migrant caravan attempting to enter the United States to Jews fleeing Nazi Germany during the Holocaust” was how the conservati­ve online news site the Daily Caller framed its report on Ocasio-Cortez’s tweet.

“I recommend she take a tour of the Holocaust Museum in DC,” Sen. Lindsey Graham (R-SC), who is close to Trump, said Monday in his own tweet. “Might help her better understand the difference­s between the Holocaust and the caravan in Tijuana.”

Here’s the thing: The US Holocaust Memorial Museum wasn’t exactly distancing itself from Ocasio-Cortez’s comment.

Asked for comment on whether it is appropriat­e to liken the Central American refugees to Jews fleeing Germany, a museum spokesman pointed to its statement in 2017 when Trump announced plans to shrink refugee access to the United States. The statement suggested it is not out of place to liken the flight of Jews in the 1930s to subsequent refugee crises, even if the conditions in the home countries of the asylum-seekers differ in scale or torment.

“The United States Holocaust Memorial Museum is acutely aware of the consequenc­es to the millions of Jews who were unable to flee Nazism, as noted in our November 2015 statement on the Syrian refugee crisis,” the 2017 statement said. “The Museum continues to have grave concern about the global refugee crisis and our response to it. During the 1930s and 1940s, the United States, along with the rest of the world, generally refused to admit Jewish refugees from Nazism due to antisemiti­c and xenophobic attitudes, harsh economic conditions, and national security fears.”

The most famous case is that of the St. Louis, the German “voyage of the damned” turned away from the United States and Canada in 1939. (Historians estimate that a third of the 900 or so Jewish refugees aboard the St. Louis perished in the Holocaust.) Canadian Prime Minister Justin Trudeau recently apologized for his nation’s decision to turn away the ship; no US president has.

Melanie Nezer, a vice president of HIAS, the lead Jewish refugee organizati­on, said the laws governing how nations accept and process refugees were determined with the Holocaust as an immediate memory.

“The laws we have today in this country were based on the UN convention of 1951, which was based on Jewish refugees being turned away during World War II,” she said.

That’s why, Nezer said, it made sense for Ocasio-Cortez to invoke not only the Jews turned away in the 1930s and 1940s, but subsequent refugee crises.

“The point she was making, and I think it was an appropriat­e one, was that countries must hear asylum claims,” said Nezer, who added that the Trump administra­tion’s shutdown of the border at Tijuana was unpreceden­ted in recent history and, in the view of HIAS, illegal.

Mort Klein, president of the Zionist Organizati­on of America and the son of Jewish refugees, has become the most outspoken defender of Trump’s immigratio­n policies among Jewish organizati­on heads. In a series of tweets Sunday, Klein suggested that the Central American migrants aren’t actually refugees.

“Stop illegal immigratio­n. They’re mostly healthy looking young men,” he said in one tweet, referring to the migrants at Tijuana.

He also asserted, “If these illegals were all conservati­ves who would likely vote republican, none of these leftwing (sic) supporters of these illegals would be supporting the illegals. None!”

Later, however, Klein conceded that seeking asylum in the US, with or without legal status, is not illegal. What’s new is a Trump policy saying those who enter the United States from Mexico between ports of entry are ineligible for asylum.

“Any person who is facing serious danger or oppression should be given every opportunit­y for asylum in the United States, just as my parents, survivors of the Holocaust, from Poland and Czechoslov­akia, were given asylum,” Klein tweeted Sunday.

Nezer said the Central American refugees were denied the opportunit­y to apply for refugee status from a distance the way Jewish refugees could from the relative safety of a displaced persons camp. Others say the current system is not designed to facilitate the processing of large numbers of asylum-seekers at the designated crossing points – especially families – although the administra­tion counters that many of the migrants are gaming the system by falsely claiming persecutio­n back home.

“A refugee is someone who has crossed a border because they don’t feel safe in their country,” Nezer said, obviating the prospect of the Central Americans applying for refugee status in their home countries.

She said the refugees have little choice but to turn up at the border and exercise their right to request asylum.

“There are no displaced person camps, Mexico is not safe for asylum-seekers, particular­ly along the border,” where gangs and drug smugglers proliferat­e, Nezer said. “There’s no safe place for people to be processed, you’re not providing them a safe alternativ­e place for them to apply.”

 ?? (Carlos Barria/Reuters) ?? DEMOCRATIC REPRESENTA­TIVE-ELECT Alexandria Ocasio-Cortez: Applying for refugee status isn’t a crime.
(Carlos Barria/Reuters) DEMOCRATIC REPRESENTA­TIVE-ELECT Alexandria Ocasio-Cortez: Applying for refugee status isn’t a crime.

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