The Palm Beach Post

Ugly, anti-Semitic graffiti scrawled on Wiesel home

- Kit Gillet ©2018 The New York Times

BUCHAREST, ROMANIA — The graffiti in a northweste­rn town in Romania — ugly, obscene and anti-Semitic — was clearly meant to shock.

It was scrawled late Friday evening on the outside wall of the childhood home of a man who had been imprisoned in a Nazi concentrat­ion camp and spent the rest of his life preaching against hate: Nobel laureate Elie Wiesel.

The building in Sighetu Marmatiei, Romania, is now a protected historical monument and museum. The graffiti read in part, “Nazi Jew lying in hell with Hitler” and “Public toilet, anti-Semite pedophile.”

When the act of vandalism was discovered, it drew condemnati­on from Israel, and one lawmaker in Romania said it could be an important test of a new anti-Semitism law there.

Romanian police have begun an investigat­ion and were analyzing images from surveillan­ce camera footage in the area, authoritie­s said. In a communiqué Saturday, the county council said that there were suspects.

The act of vandalism occurred months after Romania’s Parliament passed a law in June to prevent and combat episodes of anti-Semitism. The law imposes prison sentences of between three months and 10 years for those found guilty of promoting anti-Semitic ideas, concepts and doctrines in the public sphere, including the distributi­on of anti-Semitic materials and the creation of anti-Semitic organizati­ons.

This built on an earlier law, passed in 2002, that made the public denial of the Holocaust punishable by up to five years in prison, with the same punishment for the disseminat­ion, sale or manufactur­e of fascist, racist or xenophobic symbols.

“While Romania had legislatio­n on preventing Holocaust denial or xenophobia, there was no distinct mention of anti-Semitism until now,” said Silviu Vexler, the member of Parliament who introduced the recent bill.

He said this recent episode could be an important test, “since it’s the first case to fall under the provisions of the law.”

Romania, which was allied with Nazi Germany from 1940 to 1944, had a prewar Jewish population of about 800,000. Today that number is thought to be fewer than 11,000. A 2004 report by an internatio­nal commission led by Wiesel estimated that during the war years, 280,000 to 380,000 Jews died in Romania or in areas under its control.

In a statement Saturday, the Romanian Ministry of Foreign Affairs expressed its regret over the vandalism at Wiesel’s childhood home, and condemned “any anti-Semitic gestures and any behavior or expression that promotes intoleranc­e and xenophobia.”

Wiesel died in 2016 in Manhattan at the age of 87, and spent most of his adult life in the United States. He was born in Sighetu Marmatiei in 1928. At the age of 15, he was deported to Auschwitz, along with his family and other Jews from the area. His mother and youngest sister died in the camp.

Wiesel, who became an eloquent witness for the 6 million Jews slaughtere­d in World War II, wrote several dozen books on the Holocaust, including the memoir “Night,” which remained a best-seller decades after it was first published. He was awarded the Nobel Prize for Peace in 1986.

In a statement published on the website of the Elie Wiesel National Institute for the Study of the Holocaust in Romania, Alexandru Florian, the institute’s director general, described the graffiti as a “grotesque act.”

It “is not just an attack on Elie Wiesel’s memory,” he said, “but on all the victims of the Holocaust.”

Vexler, the lawmaker, said he believed that in the past a case like this would have been prosecuted under a statute for destructio­n of property, which was likely to have led to a fine. Under the new law, the culprits could receive stiffer punishment.

But Maximillia­n Marco Katz, the founding director of MCA Romania, the Center for Monitoring and Combating Anti-Semitism, was not so confident that those responsibl­e would be brought to justice.

“Besides the political declaratio­ns that we hear, especially in the internatio­nal arena, actually on the ground we don’t see action being taken against anti-Semitism,” he said.

“Basically, each case we’ve brought to the attention of the prosecutio­n in Romania has been dismissed. In Romania today, you have Holocaust deniers and anti-Semites that are speaking freely — and nothing is done against them.”

Cases took years, he added, even when people clearly violated the ban on anti-Semitism and Holocaust denial.

 ?? JIM WILSON / THE NEW YORK TIMES 1981 ?? Elie Wiesel survived a Nazi concentrat­ion camp and later wrote several dozen books on the Holocaust. Obscene, anti-Semitic graffiti was scrawled on the outside wall of his childhood home in Romania earlier this month.
JIM WILSON / THE NEW YORK TIMES 1981 Elie Wiesel survived a Nazi concentrat­ion camp and later wrote several dozen books on the Holocaust. Obscene, anti-Semitic graffiti was scrawled on the outside wall of his childhood home in Romania earlier this month.

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