The Jewish Chronicle

Call for minorites to unite against mobs in Chemnitz

- BY TOBY AXELROD BERLIN CORRESPOND­ENT

LAST WEEK’S violent anti-migrant demonstrat­ions in the city of Chemnitz, triggered by the August 26 murder of a German man — allegedly by two migrants — revealed the dark underbelly of right-wing populism in Germany once again.

Hours after the murder of Daniel Hillig, far-right activists announced a demonstrat­ion aimed at showing who is in charge in Chemnitz, a city of a quarter million in the former East German state of Saxony.

Over two days, neo-Nazis harassed, chased and beat people on the streets they considered to be foreigners. Some videos also caught right-extremists attacking police.

Officers had to resort to using water cannon to subdue some rioters. Politician­s across the mainstream spectrum expressed concern about the state’s failure to stop the violence sooner.

But although Jews per se were not under attack in this case, Jewish leaders and activists worry about a threat to the democratic values that make life possible for them in Germany.

Most seemed especially concerned about the far-right’s use of the mur- der for propaganda, attacking foreigners in general because the two men charged with manslaught­er are of Syrian and Iraqi descent.

In an essay for Germany’s Jewish weekly Jüdische Allgemeine, Nora Goldenboge­n, head of the Dresden Jewish community and of a regional associatio­n of Saxony Jewish communitie­s, said she was “very frightened” by devel-

opments in Chemnitz and beyond.

“We are experienci­ng an escalation and radicalisa­tion to a previously unknown degree,” she wrote. “We see how quickly right-wing radicals can organise. This has taken on a new quality.”

Josef Schuster, head of the Central Council of Jews in Germany, accused the far-right political party Alternativ­e for Germany (AfD) — the first such party to be represente­d in the Bundestag — of making political hay from the tragedy and urged mainstream parties to shun its anti-migrant agenda.

The riots “confirm two fears,” Mr Schuster said in a statement: “Firstly, that a fairly large number of people can be mobilised quickly for anti-democratic demonstrat­ions. And secondly, an alarmingly great number of people will not hesitate to hunt down certain groups of people based on rumours and call for vigilante justice.”

Deidre Berger, head of the American Jewish Committee office in Berlin, praised citizens who stood up to the right-wingers.

But she told the JC that “the longer the demonstrat­ions continue, attracting members of the far-right from throughout Germany, the greater the sense of unease that antisemiti­sm can erupt at any moment. This is a difficult moment for Jews living in Germany.”

“At first glance these incidents appear not to have anything to do with Jews,” added Sigmount Königsberg, Berlin Jewish community commission­er against antisemiti­sm.

“But for one thing, there were neo-Nazi groups calling for freedom for Ursula Haverbeck,” he said, referring to an 89-year-old convicted Holocaust denier currently in prison.

“And secondly, even if these people at first say nothing against Jews, if they are against Muslims then they are also against Jews. They have a volkisch notion of white supremacy.” Völkisch equality was a concept with Nazism that excluded legal rights from people not of German or similar heritage.

Elio Adler, Berlin-based cofounder of Valies Initiative, a Jewish-German advocacy group, said the German state’s inability to curb violence from both the far right and far left weakenedit­s legitimacy in the eyes of the public.

He said public concern about how the government handles foreigners who commit crimes is legitimate, but added: “the tone of some of the protests completely drowned out the [serious] content. The main point should have been about mourning the death of the victim, and about strengthen­ing the constituti­onal state and upholding its laws and decisions.

“Instead, the death was instrument­alised for an agenda of hate and exclusion,” Mr Adler said.

“The essence of democracy is under attack,” said Mr Koenigsber­g. “Jewish life in all its diversity can only blossom freely in an open and democratic society. It is absolutely urgent that we defend our democracy.”

 ??  ?? Right-wing demonstrat­ors gesticulat­e on the streets of Chemnitz last week
Right-wing demonstrat­ors gesticulat­e on the streets of Chemnitz last week
 ?? PHOTO:PA ??
PHOTO:PA
 ?? PHOTO:GETTY IMAGES ?? Felix Brummer, singer of the rock band Kraftklub
PHOTO:GETTY IMAGES Felix Brummer, singer of the rock band Kraftklub

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