The Jerusalem Post

‘Antisemiti­c incidents increased in Germany since Halle shooting’

- • By JOE BAUR

BerlIN (jTa) – a report from an antisemiti­sm monitor in Germany found that reported antisemiti­c incidents rose following the attack on a halle synagogue on yom Kippur.

“The public perception of the topic of antisemiti­sm was strongly marked by the farright terrorist attack on a synagogue in halle on yom Kippur,” the Federal associatio­n of department­s for research and Informatio­n on antisemiti­sm, or rIas, wrote in releasing the report this week.

The report highlights 1,253 registered antisemiti­c incidents in 2019 across four federal states, including Berlin. The inclusion of reporting from Brandenbur­g, schleswig-holstein and Bavaria was added to the study this year. In the halle attack, two people were killed near a synagogue when the alleged gunman could not enter the building.

a political background in far-right circles tended to be a theme of those who committed antisemiti­c attacks, especially in the northern state of schleswig-holstein, where far-right, antisemiti­c ideology is expressed openly. But the report also claims to show that antisemiti­sm goes beyond political background.

rIas looked at a variety of overlappin­g antisemiti­c motives in its reporting, including antisemiti­c othering, anti-judaism, modern antisemiti­sm, Israel-Focused antisemiti­sm and post-shoah antisemiti­sm.

The largest motivation, post-shoah antisemiti­sm, accounted for 46% of incidents and refers typically to the holocaust and various denials of Nazi Germany’s crimes.

The study also considers antisemiti­sm in urban versus rural settings.

“In rural areas, for example, antisemiti­sm linked with Israel plays less of a role,” alexander rasumny of rIas said in an interview with deutsche Welle. “It’s a phenomenon that tends to manifest itself more in urban areas.”

on Thursday, the day before the anniversar­y of the date in 1945 when Germany surrendere­d to the allied Forces, the president of the Central Council of jews in Germany sounded an alarm about the disappeari­ng memory of the holocaust, especially among young Germans.

“In their minds, World War II is as far away as the empire, there is no longer a reference point,” josef schuster said. “If about half of young people don’t know the term ‘auschwitz,’ something’s wrong.”

 ?? (Fabrizio Bensch/Reuters) ?? A MAN lays flowers outside the synagogue in Halle, Germany, in October, after two people were killed in a shooting.
(Fabrizio Bensch/Reuters) A MAN lays flowers outside the synagogue in Halle, Germany, in October, after two people were killed in a shooting.

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