The Jerusalem Post

Never again! How quickly we forget

- • By PAUL PACKER

On January 27, the king and queen of Belgium, along with the country’s recently elected prime minister, Sophie Wilmès – the first Jewish woman to hold the position – visited the Auschwitz-Birkenau concentrat­ion camp to commemorat­e the 75th anniversar­y of its liberation. Less than a month later, the Belgian city of Aalst held its annual Carnival parade, featuring grossly antisemiti­c imagery in the name of humor.

Alongside participan­ts satirizing issues such as climate change and Brexit were numerous marchers displaying antisemiti­c tropes, including marchers dressed as ants wearing shtreimels (the traditiona­l headgear of many hassidim), and others donning oversized prosthetic noses or SS uniforms.

Last year, the Aalst parade was widely condemned for featuring similar content, and Prime Minister Wilmès has herself said the parade’s antisemiti­c imagery “damage[s] our values and the reputation of our country.” But local government officials ignored calls to cancel the event this year, insisting that the parade represents unity, humor and free expression.

Sadly, the Aalst parade was not the only European Carnival celebratio­n to feature offensive imagery this week. A similar parade in Campo de Criptana, Spain, included performers dressed as Jewish Holocaust victims and Nazis, flanked by a float carrying chimneys (presumably representi­ng Nazi crematoria). The Spanish presentati­on, though intended to honor Holocaust victims, neverthele­ss dangerousl­y trivialize­d their suffering and the Holocaust itself.

As the chairman of the United States Commission for the Preservati­on of America’s Heritage Abroad, I work to protect and preserve the heritage of Americans and their ancestors. The antisemiti­sm on display at the Aalst parade is not only false heritage, it is an affront to all that we do at the commission, and it represents a societal regression to the pre-war 1930s.

UNESCO was correct last December when it removed the parade from its Intangible Cultural Heritage list. However, the Belgian government must do more to ensure that future events are not marred by antisemiti­c imagery.

Although the Aalst parade is unusual in that it featured such blatant antisemiti­sm in a public forum, the images displayed at the parade promulgate the widespread and deeply ingrained belief that Jews use their wealth to control world events.

According to recent polling from the Anti-Defamation League, a shocking 35% of Western Europeans believe that Jews have too much power in the business world, and 28% believe they have too much control over global affairs. Half of all Belgians believe that the country’s Jews are more loyal to Israel than to Belgium.

While Europe’s leaders promised “never again” at the Auschwitz-Birkenau memorial, 39% of Western Europeans believe “Jews still talk too much about what happened to them in the Holocaust.”

And last year, Germany saw a 70% spike in antisemiti­c violence.

IN THE face of these numbers and events such as the Aalst parade, we must ask our European allies: What are you doing to fix this? Do you traffic in empty promises, or will you take concrete steps to address both blatant and subterrane­an antisemiti­sm to ensure that modern Europe is a safe and welcoming haven for Jews everywhere?

Here in the United States, the Trump administra­tion has decisively moved to stem the rising tide of antisemiti­c hate and ensure that “never forget” and “never again” are not just words, but actions. In December, President Trump expanded Title VI protection­s for Jewish Americans and broadened our definition of antisemiti­sm to include statements and actions that unfairly target Israel.

During my time with the administra­tion, I have traveled to numerous countries and worked successful­ly with their government­s to preserve Jewish heritage as a bulwark against those who would erase the past.

When I look at disturbing displays like those at the Aalst parade, I don’t just see modern-day antisemiti­sm; I see a societal willingnes­s to ignore religiousl­y motivated hate, akin to that shown in the Weimar Republic and elsewhere throughout pre-war Europe. The promise of “never forget” means that we must remember the Nazis’ violence against Jews, and also those non-violent tactics which enabled the Holocaust.

We must keep in mind that hatred toward Jews quickly morphs into hatred toward other minority groups. Hate has no borders, and those with antisemiti­c beliefs can easily target other vulnerable people. If we turn a blind eye to antisemiti­c tropes today, there’s no telling what we might permit tomorrow, and soon, violence is at hand.

Indeed, antisemiti­c beliefs similar to those widespread in Western Europe are responsibl­e in part for motivating some of the worst mass violence against Jews in recent years. The Pittsburgh Tree of Life Synagogue shooter shared Holocaust-denial memes, and posted about Jews exercising control over major world events, like immigratio­n.

The Poway shooter published a manifesto espousing the white genocide conspiracy theory, and one of the Jersey City shooters was connected to the Black Hebrew Israelites, many sects of which have been designated hate groups for their antisemiti­c beliefs and practices.

Antisemiti­c tropes and stereotype­s do not always lead directly to murder, but there is an inescapabl­e correlatio­n between their perpetuati­on and violence targeting Jews. It is for this reason most of all that the internatio­nal community, as well as leaders throughout Belgium, both national and local, must not afford antisemiti­sm any public forum, whether in the name of free expression, humor or any other excuse used to justify hate.

Only by taking decisive and immediate action can we fulfill the promise of “never again.”

The writer is chairman of the United States Commission for the preservati­on of America’s Heritage Abroad.

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