The Jerusalem Post

Moldova: 14% polled ‘really don’t like Jews’

- • By MICHAEL STARR

Large portions of Moldovans polled in a European Jewish Associatio­n (EJA) survey had negative sentiments about Jews, the organizati­on said in the release of its findings on Thursday.

According to the survey, around 14% of the 923 Moldovans polled “really don’t like” Jews, and 19% had negative perception­s of the Jewish people.

The survey participan­ts also expressed that they believed Jews engaged in a manipulati­on of society. 36% of respondent­s said that they felt Jews use dishonest means to achieve their aims, and 32% said that Jews exploit non-Jews. Exploitati­on allegedly came in part from evoking the Holocaust, with 36% of participan­ts expressing that Jews seek to gain advantage from the World War II genocide, and 37% saying that Jews talk too much about the event.

“The Moldova survey on antisemiti­sm is part of our ongoing efforts to properly map the situation affecting Jews across the continent,” said EJA chairman rabbi Menachem Margolin.“It is sadly clear that – despite some government efforts – deep-rooted antisemiti­sm persists in Moldova. There can be no rational explanatio­n as to why a community that represents such a tiny fraction of the overall population bears the brunt of such an alarmingly high number of stereotype­s and tropes.”

The EJA said that the land-locked nation of

about 2.5 million people only had around 1,900 Jews, representi­ng only 0.7% of all Moldova’s citizens.

According to Margolin, while the government had taken action by adopting the Internatio­nal Holocaust Remembranc­e Alliance’s working definition of antisemiti­sm and by changing the penal code to include the promotion of fascist, racist ideologies as well as public denials of the Holocaust as punishable by law, further change needed to be implemente­d in classrooms to ensure that the next generation would not perpetuate antisemiti­c sentiments.

“The Moldovan government has a tough road ahead in eradicatin­g these old antisemiti­c attitudes that have no place in any modern country, especially one that seeks to join the European Union,” said Margolin.

 ?? (Vladislav Culiomza/Reuters) ?? A MOLDOVAN FLAG files on State Flag Day in Chisinau, Moldova.
(Vladislav Culiomza/Reuters) A MOLDOVAN FLAG files on State Flag Day in Chisinau, Moldova.

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