Boston Herald

Israel: Putin apologizes for foreign minister’s Holocaust remarks

- By Associated Press

Israeli Prime Minister Naftali Bennett said he accepted an apology from Russian President Vladimir Putin on Thursday for controvers­ial remarks about the Holocaust made by Moscow’s top diplomat.

The two leaders talked over the phone, after which an Israeli statement said Putin had apologized. However, the Russian statement about the call made no mention of an apology. Instead, it said they emphasized the importance of marking the Nazi defeat in World War II, which Russia celebrates on Monday.

Bennett emerged as a potential mediator between Russia and Ukraine shortly after Moscow’s invasion. But that role was thrown into doubt this week when Russian Foreign Minister

Sergey Lavrov made comments about the Holocaust that were deeply offensive to Jews.

Asked in an interview with an Italian news channel about Russian claims that it invaded Ukraine to “denazify” the country, Lavrov said that Ukraine could still have Nazi elements even though its president, Volodymyr Zelenskyy, is Jewish.

“In my opinion, Hitler also had Jewish origins, so it doesn’t mean absolutely anything. For some time we have heard from the Jewish people that the biggest antisemite­s were Jewish,” he said, speaking to the station in Russian, dubbed over by an Italian translatio­n.

Israeli Foreign Minister Yair Lapid, who has harshly criticized Russia over the invasion, called Lavrov’s statement “unforgivab­le and scandalous and a horrible historical error.”

“The Jews did not murder themselves in the Holocaust,” said Lapid, the son of a Holocaust survivor. “The lowest level of racism against Jews is to blame Jews themselves for antisemiti­sm.”

He demanded that Russia apologize, and Israel summoned the Russian ambassador in protest.

Bennett, who has been more measured in his criticism of Russia’s invasion, also condemned Lavrov’s comments.

On Thursday, he said Putin had apologized.

“The Prime Minister accepted President Putin’s apology for Lavrov’s remarks and thanked him for clarifying the President’s attitude towards the Jewish people and the memory of the Holocaust,” Bennett’s office said in a statement.

Evoking Russia’s deeply

rooted narrative of suffering and heroism in World War II, Putin has portrayed the war in Ukraine as a struggle against Nazis, even though it has a democratic­ally elected government and a Jewish president whose relatives were killed in the Holocaust.

Meanwhile, heavy fighting raged Thursday at the shattered steel plant in Mariupol as Russian forces sought to finish off

the city’s last-ditch defenders and complete the capture of the strategica­lly vital Ukrainian port.

The bloody battle came amid growing suspicions that President Vladimir Putin wants to present the Russian people with a major battlefiel­d success — or announce an escalation of the war — in time for Victory Day on Monday. That is the biggest patriotic holiday on the Russian calendar,

marking the Soviet Union’s triumph over Nazi Germany.

Some 2,000 Ukrainian fighters, by Russia’s most recent estimate, were holed up in the tunnels and bunkers under the sprawling Azovstal steelworks in Mariupol, the last pocket of resistance in a city largely reduced to rubble over the past two months. A few hundred civilians were also believed trapped there.

 ?? AP ?? DRY RUN: Russian navy cadets answer a greeting at a rehearsal for the Victory Day military parade in Sevastopol, Crimea, on Thursday. The parade will take place in Sevastopol on May 9 to celebrate the 77th anniversar­y of victory in World War II.
AP DRY RUN: Russian navy cadets answer a greeting at a rehearsal for the Victory Day military parade in Sevastopol, Crimea, on Thursday. The parade will take place in Sevastopol on May 9 to celebrate the 77th anniversar­y of victory in World War II.
 ?? AP FILE ?? CALMING COMMENT: Israeli Prime Minister Naftali Bennett speaks during a weekly cabinet meeting in Jerusalem on Sunday,. Bennett says he accepted an apology from Russian President Vladimir Putin for controvers­ial remarks about the Holocaust made by Moscow’s top diplomat.
AP FILE CALMING COMMENT: Israeli Prime Minister Naftali Bennett speaks during a weekly cabinet meeting in Jerusalem on Sunday,. Bennett says he accepted an apology from Russian President Vladimir Putin for controvers­ial remarks about the Holocaust made by Moscow’s top diplomat.

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