The Jewish Chronicle

Mirvis hits out at China over Uighur horror

- BY ALEKS PHILLIPS

► CHIEF RABBI Ephraim Mirvis has spoken out against the Chinese government’s treatment of the Uighur Muslims.

Writing in the Guardian on Tuesday, Rabbi Mirvis said that having heard accounts of persecutio­n from Uighur Muslims, “and reflecting upon the deep pain of Jewish persecutio­n throughout the ages, I feel compelled to speak out”.

He continued: “Can it be true that, in our modern, sophistica­ted world, men and women are still beaten if they refuse to renounce their faith?

“That women are forced to abort their unborn children and are then sterilised to prevent them from becoming pregnant again?

“That forced imprisonme­nt, the separation of children from their parents and a culture of intimidati­on and fear have become the norm?

“Sadly, the weight of evidence of this persecutio­n of the Uighur Muslim minority in China is overwhelmi­ng.

Satellite images, leaked documents and survivor testimonie­s all paint a devastatin­g picture affecting well over one million people, which, for the most part, the world continues to ignore.”

Chief Rabbi Mirvis noted his own experience­s campaignin­g against the treatment of Jews in the Soviet Union during the 1980s, and remarked that change eventually did come.

“The freedoms we enjoy, coupled with a perception that nothing we do will help, often create a culture of apathy,” he wrote. “Time and again, history has taught us that it is precisely such apathy that permits hatred to flourish. The Talmud teaches that: ‘We are not expected to complete the task, but neither are we free to desist from it’.”

The Chief Rabbi called for an “urgent, independen­t and unfettered investigat­ion” into the treatment of Uighur Muslims, and urged readers to write to companies linked to the use of Uighurs for forced labour.

The Chinese state has reportedly incarcerat­ed as many as a million of its Uighur citizens – a Muslim minority which lives mostly in the Xinjiang province in northweste­rn China – in “re-education camps”.

The Chinese government has also been accused of a programme of forced sterilisat­ion against Uighur women, which it denies.

Previously, Board of Deputies president Marie van der Zyl has spoken out against their treatment, and in a letter to the Chinese ambassador to the UK cited “similariti­es” between the treatment of Uighurs and Nazi persecutio­n.

 ?? PHOTOS: GETTY IMAGES, YOUTUBE ?? Felt ‘compelled to speak out’: Chief Rabbi
PHOTOS: GETTY IMAGES, YOUTUBE Felt ‘compelled to speak out’: Chief Rabbi
 ??  ?? Uighurs being loaded onto trains
Uighurs being loaded onto trains

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