Hungary’s Orban visits Jerusalem Jewish shrine
JERUSALEM: Hungarian Prime Minister Viktor Orban yesterday ended a brief but controversial trip to Israel with a visit to a major Jewish shrine in Israeliannexed east Jerusalem.
Wearing a dark hat in accordance with Jewish practice which says that men must not go bare-headed, Orban arrived at the Western Wall – the holiest place at which Jews are allowed to pray – accompanied by its rabbi Shmuel Rabinowitz.
He placed a note in a crack between the wall’s massive stones in keeping with the tradition of slipping written prayers or requests in between the stones that Jews believe were a supporting wall of their biblical second temple.
The Hungarian premier, who arrived on Wednesday evening, has been accused of fanning anti-Jewish sentiment back home.
“Europe’s Most Extreme Nationalist Leader Visits the Jewish People’s Nation-State,” the left-leaning Haaretz daily said in an analysis published Friday, in reference to a contentious law passed Thursday by the Israeli parliament.
The government of Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu, seen as the most right-wing in the country’s history, pushed hard for the law which defines Israel as the nation state of the Jewish people.
Israeli Arab lawmakers and Palestinians called the law ‘racist’ and said it legalised ‘apartheid’.
Orban and Netanyahu greeted each other warmly when they met in Jerusalem on Thursday.
“I can assure the prime minister that Hungary has a policy of zero tolerance towards antiSemitism,” Orban said.
His host defended the visitor against accusations of stoking anti-Semitism.
“I heard you speak as a true friend of Israel about the need to combat anti-Semitism,” Netanyahu said, noting that Hungary has spent millions of dollars renovating synagogues.
Orban, who described Netanyahu and himself as “a Jewish patriot and a Hungarian patriot”, lauded cooperation between the two nations. — AFP