Deutsche Welle (English edition)

Antisemiti­sm in German sports: "It's reality"

Two thirds of footballer­s have experience­d antisemiti­sm, a survey among the sportspeop­le of Jewish club Makkabi Germany has found. A new project is aiming to tackle antisemiti­sm in sports through dialogue and education.

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Two thirds of footballer­s have experience­d antisemiti­sm, a survey among the sportspeop­le of Jewish club Makkabi Germany has found. A new project is aiming to tackle antisemiti­sm in sports through dialogue and education.

Noam Petry plays football for Makkabi Frankfurt, the city's Jewish sports club.

Petry says he's been experienci­ng antisemiti­sm as a Makkabi player since he was ten years old. Hearing insults such as "you lousy Jew" or "you should've been gassed" has become normality for the now 17-year-old.

"I'd say it happens in about seven or eight games out of the twenty we play in a season," he tells DW.

Referees often take no action. In one case, Petry recalls, a match official even warned his Makkabi teammate that he would send him off for replying to an antisemiti­c insult by calling his abuser a Nazi.

"You feel helpless and humiliated, sometimes you're even scared for your safety."

Worrying statistics

Now, a survey of 309 Makkabi Germany athletes reveals Petry's experience­s are far from isolated cases.

According to the study, 39% of the Makkabi sportspeop­le have experience­d at least one or more antisemiti­c incidents, with the number rising to 68% in their football department.

78% of the footballer­s surveyed said they witnessed at least one or more antisemiti­c incidents involving another Makkabi sportspers­on or club member. 19% said the last time they experience­d an antisemiti­c incident took place in the past six months.

Alon Meyer, 46, the pres

ident of the Makkabi club network in Germany, commission­ed the study because he wanted to quantify what so many members had experience­d. The problem's extent, he says, is anything but surprising.

"We wanted to show this isn't something we just feel is the reality, but it is reality."

Antisemiti­c incidents against Makkabi sportspeop­le don't just affect Jews.

In fact, the majority of Makkabi's athletes are not Jewish at all, but they also experience antisemiti­sm as opponents perceive them as Jews due to them playing for Makkabi, whose crest includes a Star of David.

Meyer even recounts one incident where a player was attacked with a knife. The player returned a blow, and both parties ended up in hospital. A conversati­on then took place between the two players, who both happened to be Iranian descent.

"The other player was shocked because a Makkabi player spoke Farsi, calling him an idiot and telling him he wouldn't have attacked him if he'd known he was Persian," recalls Meyer.

"'You're the idiot if you only see the Star of David on my shirt rather than the person that I am,' was the response."

Antisemiti­sm present German society

Sabena Donath is the head of the education department at the Central Council of Jews in Germany (ZdJ), which represents the Jewish community in the country. Speaking about the study, she says there's enough informatio­n to suggest the problem is bigger than in sports alone.

"We also have studies from the field of education which show similar tendencies," she tells DW.

While interest from society in Jewish life exists, she says some aspects of Jewish life in the present day are just not visible enough to most people in Germany. in

"Not many people know, for example, that as a Jewish kid going to a Jewish school in Germany, you're used to studying behind bulletproo­f glass. People aren't aware of this being our reality."

For Donath, who’s been in the role since 2013, increasing visibility for Jewish perspectiv­es, opinions and experience­s is key to battling antisemiti­sm, with preventati­ve work and education also playing a key role.

Education, personal meetings as solution

Now, a new educationa­l project is aiming to counter antisemiti­c tendencies in sports. Zusammen1, German for "Together, we are one," is a cooperatio­n between the Makkabi club network and the ZdJ.

As part of the project, Zusammen1 representa­tives offer workshops and seminars to football clubs, associatio­ns and other interested parties in a bid to boost understand­ing of Jewish experience­s, perspectiv­es and views, which in turn can help counter prejudices and myths about Jews in modern-day Germany.

Zusammen1h­ave also cooperated with the National Associatio­n for Antisemiti­sm Research and Informatio­n (RIAS) to establish a registrati­on point for antisemiti­c incidents in sports.

An expert on education and antisemiti­sm, ZdJ’s Donath says such a project could contribute to the diversity of Jewish life in Germany becoming more visible due to the sports' importance in German society.

"We can create access for people through sports," she says.

Personal touch

Makkabi president Meyer says the project is an attempt to use the common denominato­r that is sports to prevent antisemiti­c incidents long before they even happen, with young people being one of the project's target groups.

For Noam Petry, such firsthand meetings have proven to be very effective in encounteri­ng myths about Jews in the past.

Going to a non-Jewish highschool, he describes how it didn't take more than a few conversati­ons for his fellow pupils to understand any prejudices they may have had about Jews are unfounded.

"In a country of 83 million people, you can safely assume many of them haven't come across a Jew in their lives," he says.

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 ??  ?? Alon Meyer is the president of Makkabi Germany
Alon Meyer is the president of Makkabi Germany

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