The Jewish Chronicle

Antisemiti­sm in Austria is beyond my worst fears

- “I’m astonished.”

IT IS a “blunt lie” to claim there is no place in Austria’s Freedom Party for antisemiti­sm, after its leader confirmed his opposition to kosher slaughter, Israeli-Austrian novelist Doron Rabinovici has said.

Vice Chancellor Heinz-Christian Strache said on Facebook this week that kosher slaughter should be banned unless the animal is first anaestheti­sed.

The far-right leader said shechita stands in conflict with animal rights. Animals are “worthy of protection,” he wrote, and should not be “tortured”.

His statement came after a regional party politician proposed creating a register for customers who wish to buy kosher and halal meat.

Mr Rabinovici said: “Only when it comes to Jews and Muslims does [animal welfare] become a real issue — and that’s suspicious.”

The Freedom Party leader’s opposition to kosher slaughter contradict­s his government’s policy: Gernot Blümel, the minister representi­ng the chancellor’s office, said “for so long as Sebastian Kurz is Chancellor, our fellow Jewish citizens can be sure that their basic rights and freedoms won’t be restricted.”

Mr Rabinovici—the author of The Search for M. and Elsewhere — believes the Chancellor is sincere in his opposition to antisemiti­sm, having truly taken on the lessons of Austria’s history, and acknowledg­es that certain forms of antisemiti­sm were not addressed in the past.

But, Mr Rabinovici added, Mr Kurz does not see that “playing this card of anti-Muslim sentiment strengthen­s prejudice” in the country.

“Why are these reassuranc­es restricted to Jews,” he asked.

The controvers­y surroundin­g shechita came amid several other recent antisemiti­c incidents in Austria.

This week a 23-year-old kippahwear­ing man was attacked in Vienna walking home from synagogue while, in another Facebook post, Mr Strache condemned what he termed “the Social Democratic Party’s Silberstei­nesque smear campaign” — a reference to the party’s former political consultant, Tal Silberstei­n.

The actions of the far-right in the current government had gone “far beyond my worst expectatio­ns and fears” in terms of their attacks on institutio­ns and the independen­t media, Mr Rabinovici said.

But he said the picture is more mixed for the Jewish community.

“Jews in Austria have the feeling that their situation is much more precarious because the Jewish community finds itself on the outside of the national consensus [because of their boycott of the Freedom Party].

“The Freedom Party says that antisemiti­sm has no place in their party. We’re happy that they say this, even though it’s a blunt lie, because it’s better than if they were to say, ‘antisemiti­sm is a core element within our party’, which would be much truer.”

“If you speak out against kosher slaughter as Vice-Chancellor, then you are not protecting us against antisemiti­c feelings — you are inciting them. If you bring up George Soros—fantasisin­g that he is responsibl­e for the refugee crisis — it is as if you copied the Protocols of the Elders of Zion.

 ?? PHOTO: YOUTUBE ?? Doron Rabinovici
PHOTO: YOUTUBE Doron Rabinovici

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