The Jerusalem Post

Merkel’s departure a sad moment for many German Jews

Departure marks the loss of a reliable partner for Jewish community

- • By CNAAN LIPHSHIZ

After a German court criminaliz­ed the non-medical circumcisi­on of boys in 2012, Angela Merkel did something very out of character for the “rule-of-law chancellor,” as she has been nicknamed.

Merkel said the ruling, which was brought against a person who circumcise­d a Muslim child, put Germany at risk of becoming a “laughingst­ock.” Her statement violated the country’s unspoken rule about chancellor­s not criticizin­g the judicial branch from their executive perch.

“I do not want Germany to be the only country in the world where Jews cannot practice their rituals,” she said at the time.

It was symbolic of Merkel’s commitment to the Jewish community “over realpoliti­k,” said Rabbi Pinchas Goldschmid­t, the Zurich-born president of the Conference of European Rabbis. His organizati­on in 2013 honored Merkel with a prize for “making a crucial interventi­on for enshrining [brit] milah in Germany and beyond,” as Goldschmid­t termed it, using the Hebrew word for circumcisi­on.

“She has been a steadfast ally, and not only in rhetoric but in decisive action,” Goldschmid­t said.

In November, Merkel, 67, will step down after 16 years in power, ending the tenure of one of Europe’s most consequent­ial leaders in recent memory. Her legacy – tainted for some by Germany’s acceptance of hundreds of thousands of Middle Eastern refugees and her policy of fiscal austerity toward the rest of the European Union – is mixed in her home country. But for the German and wider European Jewish establishm­ent, her departure marks the loss of “a reliable partner for the Jewish community,” Josef Schuster, president of the Central Council of Jews in Germany, said.

“I am deeply sorry to see Chancellor Angela Merkel leave the political stage,” said Charlotte Knobloch, a Holocaust survivor who heads the Jewish community of Munich.

Merkel’s consequent­ial policies have had significan­t impacts on German Jewry – both on the ground and politicall­y, as the right-wing, populist AfD party and the more progressiv­e Green Party have made gains in the wake of her party’s stumbles. Neverthele­ss, she leaves widely seen as a fighter for Jewish causes.

“It’s a mixed legacy, where the good greatly outweighs the bad,” Goldschmid­t said.

The refugee dilemma

The daughter of a Church minister from the former East Germany, Merkel is the European Union’s longest-serving sitting leader. She did not seek reelection in Sunday’s general election, in which her center-right party, the Christian Democratic Union, or CDU, appears to be in a close race with the center-left Social Democratic Party, or SPD.

As head of the EU’s largest economy, Merkel has pushed for pan-European solidarity. She has deepened Germany’s partnershi­p with countries such as France and the United Kingdom – two nations with which Germany has turbulent history. But her financial austerity measures – particular­ly toward Greece in 2015 as a preconditi­on for an economic recovery bailout, which added to Greece’s political instabilit­y – alienated many Europeans, especially those from poorer economies.

Domestical­ly, she has overseen a tightfiste­d public spending policy – a frugality that helped Germany weather the economics of the coronaviru­s crisis better than most, with the help of a $1.2 trillion rescue funding plan. Her environmen­tal policies include an ambitious plan to reduce CO2 emissions by 20% by 2040 in order to combat global warming.

But it was Merkel’s bold willingnes­s to take in close to a million refugees – allegedly with little screening or longterm planning – at the peak of the Syrian civil war that most polarized German society.

The move provoked a farright backlash and helped fuel the rise of the AfD, or Alternativ­e for Germany Party. The party seeks a return to “German as the predominan­t culture instead of multicultu­ralism,” tougher immigratio­n laws and an end to public funding for mosques and other Muslim faith activities.

“As long as Merkel was strong, there was no far Right in the German parliament,” Goldschmid­t said. “You can argue for and against the [refugees] decision on a moral level and on an economic level, but on the political one, it was an error.”

Some AfD leaders have advocated abandoning the apologetic rhetoric that has become the norm in Germany following its defeat in World War II and the trauma of the Holocaust. The party has also dealt with controvers­ies involving antisemite­s and neo-Nazis in its ranks.

The Central Council of Jews in Germany has urged citizens not to vote for AfD, calling it “a hotbed for antisemiti­sm, racism and misanthrop­y” in a statement from September 10.

But AfD, which is pro-Israel and whose program speaks of the “Judeo-Christian and humanist foundation­s of our culture,” has rejected claims that it has an antisemiti­sm problem, and has kicked out multiple members for antisemiti­c behavior and Nazi sympathies. It has some Jewish supporters, including a candidate for parliament in Berlin.

Some see a connection between these dynamics and the explosion in antisemiti­c incidents Germany has seen in recent years. The government documented 2,351 cases of antisemiti­sm in 2020, the highest tally since 2001 and a 15% increase over 2019. The government attributes 90% of the incidents to the far Right – epitomized in a neo-Nazi gunman’s attack on a synagogue in Halle in 2019.

But critics of the government’s documentat­ion practices say many of the attacks were actually carried out by people descended from Muslim families, and Germany has downplayed those data to avoid looking Islamophob­ic.

According to those statistics, relatively few antisemiti­c incidents were perpetrate­d by people who came to Germany during the immigratio­n crisis that began in 2011. But one such asylum-seeker was involved in the deadliest Islamist terrorist attack on German soil, a car ramming at a Christmas market in 2016 that killed 12 people. A 16-year-old Syrian refugee was arrested last week on suspicion that he planned to attack a synagogue near Dusseldorf.

Fears of the far Right as well as the antisemiti­c attitudes of some German Muslims have risen so high that some Jews are questionin­g their future in Germany. And there are those who blame Merkel for the atmosphere.

“Just eight years ago I also voted for her. That was a big mistake,” said Pavel Feinstein, a 61-year-old artist and father of three from Berlin. “I’m thinking about aliyah,” he added.

“I feel it is slowly but steadily becoming more and more uncomforta­ble, and I don’t see any rosy prospects because of the demographi­c developmen­t,” he said, referencin­g the arrival of hundreds of thousands of Muslims to Germany. “She is responsibl­e for it.”

Feinstein is one of the at least 100,000 Jews who immigrated to Germany from the former Soviet Union. He has in the past expressed support for AfD but declined to say who he voted for on Sunday.

Antisemiti­sm and Israel

Alongside the internatio­nal scrutiny, Merkel has more quietly been a vocal leader in the fight against antisemiti­sm.

During her tenure, Germany’s federal and state government­s have all appointed special envoys for monitoring and combating Jew-hatred. In the wake of the attempted Halle synagogue massacre near Berlin in 2019 – during which a far-right extremist failed to shoot his way into a packed synagogue on Yom Kippur and then killed two people near a kebab shop – Germany’s federal government gave German Jewry an extra $26 million for security.

In 2019, her government also allocated an extra $66m. for preservati­on work at the former Nazi death camp Auschwitz-Birkenau in Poland. During a visit there that year, her first visit as chancellor, Merkel said she felt “deep shame” at what her countrymen had done to Jews before and during the Holocaust.

“Rememberin­g the crimes... is a responsibi­lity which never ends. It belongs inseparabl­y to our country,” Merkel said. “To be aware of this responsibi­lity is part of our national identity.”

In 2015, Merkel became the first presiding chancellor to visit Dachau, the former death camp near Munich where Nazis killed some 40,000 victims, many of them Jews.

And this year, in partnershi­p with local German communitie­s, her government launched a series of events across the country celebratin­g 1,700 years of Jewish presence in Germany.

Regarding Israel, Merkel has advocated a two-state solution for solving the Israeli-Palestinia­n dispute, which at times put her at odds with former Israeli prime minister Benjamin Netanyahu. But the two “agreed to disagree” on certain issues, and under Merkel, Germany has delivered to Israel multiple state-of-the-art navy destroyer ships, funding a third of the $500m. price tag for the project.

In 2019, the CDU guaranteed the passage of a resolution in the lower house of the German parliament that calls the Boycott, Divestment and Sanctions movement against Israel an antisemiti­c movement – an opinion many German Jews share.

Schuster pointed to one of the many speeches she gave at the Knesset over the years, noting she has said “Israel’s security would never be negotiable for Germany, because Germany’s historical responsibi­lity is part of the ‘reason of state,’” he said, meaning that it is intrinsic to Germany’s government policies.

During the Merkel years, “One has almost become accustomed to a pro-Jewish, pro-Israeli attitude in the government,” said Elio Adler, a dentist from Berlin and an activist promoting Jewish causes in German politics.

“And of course we hope that this will continue in the future,” he added. (JTA)

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