The Jerusalem Post

Israel envoy: Commemorat­ion insufficie­nt

- • By SONIA EPSTEIN

The single deadliest attack against Jews since the Holocaust occurred on July 18, 1994, when a suicide bomber drove a van filled with hundreds of kilograms of explosives into a Jewish community center in Buenos Aires, killing 85 and wounding 300. Twenty-five years later, the perpetrato­rs remain at large, and antisemiti­sm is once again rearing its ugly head in the country.

Argentina’s special prosecutio­n formally accused the government of Iran of directing the attack and the Hezbollah terrorist group of executing the tragedy, which occurred at the Argentine Israelite Mutual Associatio­n, known as AMIA. Iran and Hezbollah were singled out in the weeks following the bombing, but over decades of investigat­ions, alleged political interferen­ce has halted a definitive ruling.

On the occasion of the bombing’s 25th anniversar­y, Argentina’s government is taking a number of steps to memorializ­e the attack and guard against future ones.

It is set to designate Hezbollah a terrorist organizati­on for its execution of the 1994 attack, as well as the 1992 bombing of the Israeli Embassy in Buenos Aires that killed 29 and wounded more than 200. The designatio­n paves the way for the enforcemen­t of political and financial limitation­s on Hezbollah members.

President Mauricio Macri also announced three initiative­s to commemorat­e the victims of the attack and fight against future terrorism. One of them establishe­s monetary compensati­on to as-of-yet unrecogniz­ed victims; a second establishe­s an official national day of mourning for the attack; and the third inaugurate­s a Public Register of Persons and Entities Linked to Acts of Terrorism and its Financing.

“Commemorat­ion should not be the only aim of our struggle,” according to Argentine Ambassador to Israel Mariano Caucino. “That is necessary but insufficie­nt. We must strive to do our utmost to avoid this kind of terrible crime happening again.”

Argentina is hosting a ministeria­l meeting later this week, which will be attended by US Secretary of State Mike Pompeo and will address the need to organize collective strategies to fight against global terrorism.

“There’s a very good relationsh­ip, particular­ly in Argentina, with the current government,” Liat Altman, director of Latin American Affairs at the ADL, said of the Argentine Jewish community. “There is a sense from the government that they want to root out antisemiti­sm – and whenever there is antisemiti­sm, there is action.”

But with Iranian holders of Interpol red notices – akin to arrest warrants – still at large, the past remains an open wound.

“The lingering effect of the AMIA attack 25 years ago is always going to be a ghost that shadows the community,” Altman said.

Back in 2015, former special prosecutor Alberto Nisman accused former Argentine president Cristina Fernandez de Kirchener and former minister of foreign relations Hector Timerman of derailing investigat­ions into the attack. Nisman was found shot dead in his apartment the day before he was scheduled to present his formal accusation­s against the officials.

In March, the federal court sentenced former judge Juan José Galean, who was initially in charge of investigat­ing the attack, to six years in prison for embezzleme­nt and concealing evidence, but acquitted former president Carlos Menem of corruption and obstructio­n of justice.

“The truth is that in our country, there is a serious problem with the operation of justice,” AMIA chairman Ariel Eichbaum said. “The attack on AMIA is not an exception. The lack of full clarificat­ion of the crime, prosecutio­n and punishment has shaped not only Jewish life, but also Argentine society and the democratic quality of the Argentine Republic.”

In recognitio­n of the lack of closure on the case, Macri is declassify­ing all files related to the events, “in honor of the principles of truth, justice and transparen­cy,” Caucino said.

The US House Foreign Affairs Committee passed a unanimous resolution commemorat­ing the bombing, acknowledg­ing Hezbollah’s continued threat to Jewish communitie­s in Latin America and condemning the decades-long delay in serving justice.

FOR JEWISH communitie­s today, the anniversar­y is a time of grief on many levels: Argentinea­ns’ mourning lost loved ones, the continued failure to bring the crime to justice, and ongoing antisemiti­sm in their country and worldwide.

The Jewish population in Argentina is the sixth-largest in the world. It is roughly 90% traditiona­l and liberal, according to the Latin American Rabbinical Seminary, but with a vibrant Orthodox presence as well.

“It’s a very robust, strong and pluralisti­c Jewish community,” Altman said. “Argentine Jews are very well integrated in society, in profession­s, in academia and in media.”

Jewish leaders in Argentina – including of the ADL – said they agree that antisemiti­sm is not increasing. But also, it has never truly gone away.

“There may be isolated cases [in Argentina], but [they are] in no way comparable to the situations going on in other places around the world,” Eichbaum said.

The cases that do persist are

usually not violent. However, this past June, Rabbi Shlomo Tawil, director of ChabadLuba­vitch in Rosario, Argentina, was assaulted by three young people during the holiday of Shavuot. The assailants beat him in the head and stomach, and trampled him while shouting antisemiti­c insults.

A little over a week before the attack on Tawil, a swastika was spray-painted on a hair salon in Buenos Aires owned by Jews, and neo-Nazi pamphlets were distribute­d nearby.

Earlier this month, an Argentine lawyer and state Supreme Court secretary, who is also the niece of its president, posted antisemiti­c content on Facebook, featuring a picture of Jewish children playing outside a school with the text: “I think they forgot to tell the little Jews that it’s summer vacation. And then they asked why Hitler hated them,” the Jewish Telegraphi­c Agency reported.

The secretary was transferre­d to another position within the ministry and apologized for the post.

Such online antisemiti­sm is an increasing concern in Argentina, experts said, even if violent antisemiti­sm is not. The Web Observator­y, which researches and raises awareness about online discrimina­tion, found that YouTube videos with antisemiti­c content are four times more likely to receive positive comments than negative comments, meaning that for each comment condemning the video, there is an average of four comments in support of it.

The study, released July 14 in collaborat­ion with AMIA, the Latin American Jewish Congress and the Delegation of Argentine Jewish Associatio­ns, also found that when a Jewish institutio­n or leader is the protagonis­t of a story, antisemiti­c comments on websites increase by up to 50%.

“We are very worried about the increase in Internet [antisemiti­sm],” said Jorge Knoblovits, president of DAIA, which is the umbrella organizati­on for Argentina’s Jewish communitie­s and a strong advocate for fighting antisemiti­sm.

“We are having meetings with some Internet companies about the possibilit­y of moderating and taking off hate expression­s,” said Knoblovits, noting the difficulty of facilitati­ng this process with the existing legislatio­n. “Some of the cases are being analyzed legally.”

BUT KNOBLOVITS said that Argentina, when compared with other countries, is not a hostile place for Jews. Others interviewe­d expressed similar sentiments.

“We are more concerned [about] the growing antisemiti­sm that is taking place in Europe and the United States, both on the extreme Right and on the extreme Left,” Latin American Rabbinical Seminary Board chairman Miguel Toimaher said.

In France, for example, a 2018 report by the National Human Rights Advisory Committee found that antisemiti­c acts in France increased by more than 70% compared to the previous year.

Jewish leaders laud the Argentinea­n government for its contributi­ons to the fight against antisemiti­sm. In February, when Argentina’s chief rabbi was attacked, in an event that has been deemed an act of urban violence rather than an act of antisemiti­sm, judicial authoritie­s took action and the alleged perpetrato­rs were arrested.

“The Argentine society and

the government as a whole, including President Macri, have shown signs of solidarity with the chief rabbi and with the AMIA,” Eichbaum said. “The minister of security and the security forces that report to her were placed at the service of the investigat­ion and security measures were tightened, in ongoing cooperatio­n with the AMIA.”

This level of government attention extends to the commemorat­ion events surroundin­g the AMIA tragedy. Argentina’s Ministry of Foreign Affairs is collaborat­ing with the Latin American Jewish Congress – the regional branch of the World Jewish Congress – to mark the 25th anniversar­y of the bombing at over 20 Argentine embassies around the world, from Chile to Moscow.

In Israel, Beit Hatfutsot – The Museum of the Jewish People is collaborat­ing with the ADL to commemorat­e the event with a discussion between Caucino and former ambassador to Argentina Ilan Sztulman.

The museum, which is classified by law as the center for Jewish communitie­s in Israel and throughout the world, devotes much of its mission to displaying solidarity with Jewish communitie­s worldwide during times of suffering.

“It is our role and our mission to never forget that we are one people, no matter where we are,” said museum CEO Dan Tadmor.

But he also emphasized the need to unite not only in times of calamity but also in times of celebratio­n.

“Jewish history and Jewish existence are always a tapestry of tragedy and accomplish­ment and hope,” he said. “And the correct rendition of who we are does not leave out any of these elements.” •

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