The
Boston Globe - 04.28.2002
The
Boston Globe
A Wave
of Jew-Bashing in Europe
By
Jeff Jacoby
HE
ROCKS have been lifted all over Europe, and the snakes of Jew-hatred are
slithering free.
In
Belgium, thugs beat up the chief rabbi, kicking him in the face and
calling him ''a dirty Jew.'' Two synagogues in Brussels were firebombed;
a third, in Charleroi, was sprayed with automatic weapons fire.
In
Britain, the cover of the New Statesman, a left-wing magazine, depicted
a large Star of David stabbing the Union Jack. Oxford professor Tom
Paulin, a noted poet, told an Egyptian interviewer that American Jews
who move to the West Bank and Gaza ''should be shot dead.'' A Jewish
yeshiva student reading the Psalms was stabbed 27 times on a London bus.
Anti-Semitism, wrote a columnist in The Spectator, ''has become
respectable ... at London dinner tables.'' She quoted one member of the
House of Lords: ''The Jews have been asking for it and now, thank God,
we can say what we think at last.''
In Italy,
the daily paper La Stampa published a Page 1 cartoon: A tank emblazoned
with a Jewish star points its gun at the baby Jesus, who pleads,
''Surely they don't want to kill me again?'' In Corriere Della Sera,
another cartoon showed Jesus trapped in his tomb, unable to rise,
because Ariel Sharon, with rifle in hand, is sitting on the sepulchre.
In
Germany, a rabbinical student was beaten up in downtown Berlin and a
grenade was thrown into a Jewish cemetery. Thousands of neo-Nazis held a
rally, marching near a synagogue on the Jewish sabbath. Graffiti
appeared on a synagogue in the western town of Herford: ''Six million
were not enough.''
In
Ukraine, skinheads attacked Jewish worshippers and smashed the windows
of Kiev's main synagogue. Ukrainian police denied that the attack was
anti-Jewish.
In
Greece, Jewish graves were desecrated in Ioannina and vandals hurled
paint at the Holocaust memorial in Salonica. In Holland, an anti-Israel
demonstration featured swastikas, photos of Hitler, and chants of ''Sieg
Heil'' and ''Jews into the sea.'' In Slovakia, the Jewish cemetery of
Kosice was invaded and 135 tombstones destroyed.
But
nowhere have the flames of anti-Semitism burned more furiously than in
France.
In Lyon,
a car was rammed into a synagogue and set on fire. In Montpellier, the
Jewish religious center was firebombed; so were synagogues in Strasbourg
and Marseille; so was a Jewish school in Creteil. A Jewish sports club
in Toulouse was attacked with Molotov cocktails, and on the statue of
Alfred Dreyfus in Paris, the words ''Dirty Jew'' were painted. In Bondy,
15 men beat up members of a Jewish football team with sticks and metal
bars. The bus that takes Jewish children to school in Aubervilliers has
been attacked three times in the last 14 months. According to the
police, metropolitan Paris has seen 10 to 12 anti-Jewish incidents per
day since Easter.
Walls in
Jewish neighborhoods have been defaced with slogans proclaiming ''Jews
to the gas chambers'' and ''Death to the Jews.'' The weekly journal Le
Nouvel Observateur published an appalling libel: It said Israeli
soldiers rape Palestinian women, so that their relatives will kill them
to preserve ''family honor.'' The French ambassador to Great Britain was
not sacked - and did not apologize - when it was learned that he had
told guests at a London dinner that the world's troubles were the fault
of ''that shitty little country, Israel.''
''At the
start of the 21st century,'' writes Pierre-Andre Taguieff, a well-known
social scientist, in a new book, ''we are discovering that Jews are once
again select targets of violence.... Hatred of the Jews has returned to
France.''
But of
course, it never left. Not France; not Europe. Anti-Semitism, the oldest
bigotry known to man, has been a part of European society since time
immemorial. In the aftermath of the Holocaust, open Jew-hatred became
unfashionable; but fashions change, and Europe is reverting to type.
To be
sure, some Europeans are shocked by the re-emergence of Jew-hatred all
over their continent. But the more common reaction has been complacency.
''Stop saying that there is anti-Semitism in France,'' President Jacques
Chirac told a Jewish editor in January. ''There is no anti-Semitism in
France.'' The European media have been vicious in condemning Israel's
self-defense against Palestinian terrorism in the West Bank; they have
been far less agitated about anti-Jewish terror in their own backyard.
They are
making a grievous mistake. For if today the violence and vitriol are
aimed at the Jews, tomorrow they will be aimed at the Christians.
A
timeless lesson of history is that it rarely ends with the Jews.
Militant Islamist extremists were attacking and killing Jews long before
they attacked and killed Americans on Sept. 11. The Nazis' first set out
to incinerate the Jews; in the end, all of Europe was burned in the
fire.
Jews, it
is often said, are the canary in the coal mine of civilization. When
they become the objects of savagery and hate, it means the air has been
poisoned and an explosion is soon to come. If Europeans don't rise up
and turn against the Jew-haters, the Jew-haters will rise up and turn
against them.
Jeff
Jacoby's e-mail address is jacoby@globe.com.