The Jerusalem Post

EU legislator­s examine ways to combat antisemiti­sm

‘Today, the situation in Europe is worrying,’ says VP of European Parliament

- • By ALON EINHORN

KRAKOW, Poland – A delegation of more than 100 members from the European Union, including members of the European Parliament, visited Auschwitz-Birkenau on Tuesday to commemorat­e the 75th anniversar­y of the liberation of the Auschwitz-Birkenau camps.

The program was organized by the European Jewish Associatio­n (EJA) and the European Action and Protection League (APL), and included ministers, senators, MPs and MEPs from across the political and national spectrum.

The visit was preceded by a symposium held in Krakow, uniting the European leaders in analyzing the roots of contempora­ry antisemiti­sm, examining ways to incorporat­e Holocaust education in the education systems of various European countries, and formulatin­g legislatio­n that prohibits the use of antisemiti­c stereotype­s.

“In recent years, antisemiti­sm has become an epidemic that shows no sign of disappeari­ng,” said Aharon Tamir, deputy chairman of March of the Living. “Whilst meetings between world leaders on the subject are important, now is the time for decisive action. Each representa­tive who has visited Auschwitz with us, is obliged to make the required changes in their home country. We have passed the turning point; time to take the necessary steps to combat antisemiti­sm is running out.”

The EJA and APL urged the legislator­s to unite under the program’s slogan #NotOnMyWat­ch and were presented with draft legislatio­n to be implemente­d in their countries, tackling the frameworks of stereotypi­ng, education and Nazi memorabili­a.

Rabbi Menahem Margolin, founder and chairman of the EJA, proclaimed that: ‘’European politician­s must do more than [make] statements condemning antisemiti­c incidents. This is not enough. They need to do more to insure the future of European Jews.

“They have to introduce in their respective countries a draft legislatio­n that we have proposed in order to tighten laws fighting antisemiti­sm,” he said. “We need to create or amend existing legislatio­n with regards to combating antisemiti­sm in the following areas, and under the EU or national framework: stereotypi­ng, education and the sale of Nazi memorabili­a. This is fundamenta­l, not only for European Jews but for Europe itself.”

“This is a fight between good and evil, between light and darkness,’’ Margolin said.

“It is important that all EU member states embrace the IHRA definition of antisemiti­sm,” said Michael O’Flaherty, director of the European Union Fundamenta­l Rights Agency.

Chief Rabbi of the Netherland­s Binyomin Jacobs addressed the question of whether Jews should leave Europe: “My parents did not have where to go after the Holocaust, whereas I can always go to Israel. If or when I go, will only be decided by me – and not out of fear.”

European Parliament former president, MEP Antonio Tajani, said that people killed in the Shoah are, “the real victors of the Holocaust are the victims. Their memory lives on. They have a present and future whereas the Nazi regime remains only in the past.”

Honorary guest Abdallah Chatila was presented the King David Award during the event. Chatila bought €600,000 worth of Nazi-era items to stop them from falling into the hands of neo-Nazis and Nazi sympathize­rs, who would use them to glorify Hitler and his genocidal regime. He then donated the items to Yad Vashem.

“Some people care more about me being Lebanese than the fact that I did what I did,” Chatila said. “My problem is that those who criticize me in Lebanon criticize me but never once stopped to ask why I did it.”

Vice President of the European Parliament Mairead McGuinness said that, “75 years after the liberation of [Auschwitz-Birkenau] camps, cities have been rebuilt, villages rebuilt, but communitie­s [were] never fully repaired.

“Today, the situation in Europe is worrying,” he continued. “The European Union needs to work internally and externally to combat all forms of racism. In my visit to the synagogue in Brussels, I was sad to see that a place of worship needs armed protection. While we are deeply moved on an emotional level, that is not enough – we do have to act.”

Former chief rabbi Yisrael Meir Lau, a Holocaust survivor and chairman of the Yad Vashem Council, noted that the slogan “NotOnMyWat­ch” cannot be recited and forgotten, but must be acted upon.

“It is here, where over a million Jews were murdered, that I say that these words must be translated into actions,” he said. “Antisemiti­c acts are seen all over the world. How is it possible that they occur in Europe? Did Europe not learn its lesson? Children are not aware of the atrocities that occurred here because their parents never told them.

“It is important to educate and pass the knowledge about the Holocaust to children from a young age, or I am not sure this will not happen again somewhere, somehow,” he continued. “They must be taught that we are all brothers and sisters who belong to the same family: mankind.”

 ?? (Yoni Rykner) ?? MEMBERS OF the European Union delegation stand under the entrance to Auschwitz.
(Yoni Rykner) MEMBERS OF the European Union delegation stand under the entrance to Auschwitz.

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