The Jerusalem Post

Consensus that antisemiti­sm is a global problem, not just a Jewish one

- • By GREER FAY CASHMAN

Antisemiti­sm is not just a Jewish problem, but a global problem that poses a threat not only to the Jewish people but to democracy.

This was the consensus on Monday at a conference on antisemiti­sm that was held at the initiative of President Reuven Rivlin, the Diaspora Affairs Ministry, Gesher and the Foreign Affairs Ministry at the President’s Residence, in advance of the 81st anniversar­y of Kristallna­cht: the “night of the broken glass,” which falls at the end of this week.

The conference was attended by special envoys, coordinato­rs and diplomats representi­ng the US, UK, the European Commission and Israel.

The key speakers were Elan

Carr, US Special Envoy for Monitoring and Combating Antisemiti­sm; Katherina von Schnurbein, European Coordinato­r on Combating Antisemiti­sm; Lord Eric Pickles, UK Special Envoy for Post Holocaust Issues; Dr. Felix Klein, a career diplomat who is Germany’s first Federal Commission­er to Combat Antisemiti­sm; and Frederic Poitier, France’s Special Representa­tive on Racism, Antisemiti­sm and Discrimina­tion.

In addition to agreeing that antisemiti­sm is a global problem, participan­ts also concurred on the evils of social media, underscori­ng that it is one of the most pernicious tools for spreading antisemiti­sm in particular and racial hatred in general.

While acknowledg­ing that it is a wonderful platform for acquiring and disseminat­ing knowledge, participan­ts made the point that it is also the most widely used means for promoting hatred of others.

This has prompted the European Commission to introduce special legislatio­n that makes antisemiti­c content and other racial incitement online a criminal offense, for which platform providers are punished if the offensive material is not removed within 24 hours.

According to von Schnurbein, the next step will be to introduce similar but more severe legislatio­n with regard to terrorism, giving platform providers only one hour to get rid of material that incites terrorism.

Pickles and his European colleagues seemed less concerned than Carr over what is happening on college campuses.

“America’s college campus has become a place of staggering antisemiti­sm,” said Carr, who warned that unless such antisemiti­c inoculatio­n was eradicated at its core, there was a danger that brainwashe­d future leaders of society would be antisemite­s.

Carr later told The Jerusalem Post that he has met many radical “foaming at the mouth” antisemite­s on campus, but they’re not the ones he’s worried about. The greatest challenge is to win over and change the large component of middle Americans and make them philo-Israel, while simultaneo­usly combating radical hate on campus, he said.

Rivlin said that antisemiti­c incitement soon spreads to violence and murder.

He refused to differenti­ate between antisemiti­sm and anti-Israelism, saying that the latter is the modern form of antisemiti­sm and that one can’t profess to admire Israel while hating Jews. It is difficult to believe, Rivlin declared, that 81 years after Kristallna­cht, Jews are afraid to wear a kippah in the street and Jewish university students have to hide their religious identities on campus for fear of the far Right, the far Left and radical Islam.

All spheres of law enforcemen­t must be used as tools to eradicate hate crimes, he insisted, adding that it is not normal to protect Jews with guards or behind gates and walls.

“Security does not solve the problem of antisemiti­sm,” Rivlin said.

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