The Jerusalem Post

German media giant: If you’re anti-Israel, don’t work for us

- • By LAHAV HARKOV

Workers who complained about an Israeli flag being posted outside Europe’s largest digital publishing house should look for new jobs, Axel Springer SE CEO Mathias Döpfner told the company’s 16,000 employees last Thursday.

“I think, and I’m being very frank with you, a person who has an issue with an Israeli flag being raised for one week here, after antisemiti­c demonstrat­ions, should look for a new job,” he said in a video conference with employees around the world.

Berlin-based Axel Springer, which was founded in West Germany in 1946, is the largest digital publisher in Europe. It owns Bild, Die Welt, Business Insider, Politico Europe and many other news brands, as well as Israel’s largest classified-ads website, Yad2.

“We support the Jewish people and the right of existence of the State of Israel” is listed as one of Axel Springer’s five essential values on its website.

During Thursday’s meeting for employees, Döpfner addressed complaints about an Israeli flag being raised outside company headquarte­rs in Berlin.

“After these weeks of terrible antisemiti­c demonstrat­ions, we at our building headquarte­rs said next to the European flag, and the

German flag, [and] the Berlin flag, let’s raise for one week the Israeli flag as a gesture of solidarity,” he said. “We do not accept these kinds of aggressive antisemiti­c movements.”

Some people said they did not want to work for a company that does such a thing, Döpfner said.

“So, I think that is also a good point... This person does not fit the company and its values,” he said. “It’s very simple.”

Döpfner said he welcomed “critical questions” and that some of those complainin­g had good points, which he responded to.

“But this fundamenta­l opposition to it leaves the spectrum” of acceptable responses, Döpfner said.

Axel Springer put the Israeli flag up in front of its headquarte­rs in May, following antisemiti­c displays at pro-Palestinia­n demonstrat­ions across Germany, including

marches to synagogues, shouting slogans against Jews, attacks on Jewish institutio­ns and the burning of Israeli flags.

“Whoever uses such protests to proclaim their hatred of Jews is abusing their right to protest,” German Chancellor Angela Merkel said at the time.

“Anyone who spreads antisemiti­c hatred will feel the full force of the law,” German Interior Minister Horst Seehofer added.

 ?? (Christian Mang/Reuters) ?? PRO-ISRAEL SUPPORTERS gather for a rally against antisemiti­sm in front of the Brandenbur­g Gate in Berlin last month.
(Christian Mang/Reuters) PRO-ISRAEL SUPPORTERS gather for a rally against antisemiti­sm in front of the Brandenbur­g Gate in Berlin last month.

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