The Jewish Chronicle

GERMANY’S HATE SCULPTURES

- BY DANIEL SUGARMAN

CAMPAIGNER­S IN Germany are calling for the removal of an antisemiti­c sculpture ahead of the 500th anniversar­y of the Christian Reformatio­n next year.

The Judensau, or “Jewish pig”, is on the façade of Wittenburg’s main church.

It shows Jews suckling at the teats of a sow, while another lifts the tail of the animal to look up its backside.

Sister Joela Krüger, a member of the Evangelica­l Sisterhood of Mary, a Lutheran group, is leading the campaign for the removal of the sculpture. She told website Christiani­ty Today: “The Judensau grieves people because our Lord is blasphemed. And also the Jews and Israel are blasphemed by showing such a sculpture.

“We don’t want to distance ourselves from Luther’s wrongs, but to identify, grieve, and ask for forgivenes­s.”

Wittenburg was the birthplace of the Protestant Reformatio­n, which was initiated in 1517 by Martin Luther, an inhabitant of the town.

The Judensau was installed in 1305, but Luther discusses it in one of his antisemiti­c works, Vom Schem Ham

phoras, in which he suggests that Jews sourced their holiest name for God — their “Shem Hamphoras” — from the backside of a pig.

The words “Rabini Schem Hamephoras” were added above the sculpture after Luther’s death.

However, Max Privorozki, a local German-Jewish leader, told Christiani­ty Today that the sculpture should not be removed, saying it “represents a testimony of medieval thinking and Christian architectu­ral tradition.

“There is no doubt that the Judensau sculpture is unseemly, obscene, insulting, offensive, libelous, a portrayal of hate speech and antisemiti­sm and that it defames Jewish people and their faith. However, it should be seen within the context of the time period in which it was made.”

A plaque was added beneath the sculpture in 1988, quoting the beginning of psalm 130 in Hebrew (“From the Depths I cry to You”), as well as the following inscriptio­n:

“The true name of God, the maligned Schem Hamphoras, which Jews long before Christiani­ty regarded as almost unutterabl­y holy, died with six million Jews under the sign of the cross.”

Rabbi Pinchas Goldschmid­t, Chief Rabbi of Moscow and President of the Conference of European Rabbis, said: “Removing statues can be, on the one hand, symbolic. On the other hand, it might not be enough.

“The question is, to what extent the Protestant churches have gone through their history, liturgy, statements and religious texts to distance themselves from teachings which have elements of antisemiti­sm.”

 ??  ?? Wittenburg’s antisemiti­c Judensau
Wittenburg’s antisemiti­c Judensau

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from United Kingdom