By Mona Charen
Friday, April 27, 2018
Adam Armoush is, for the moment, the most famous Jewish
victim in the world — and he’s not even Jewish. He’s a 21-year-old Israeli Arab
who was visiting Berlin with his friends and decided to test their suspicions
that it was unsafe to don a kippah (skullcap) in public. Strolling down the
street in the Prenzlauer Berg, a gentrified neighborhood, Armoush was attacked
and beaten with a belt by a Syrian refugee who shouted “Yehudi!”
Anti-Semitic attacks have become increasingly common in
Germany and throughout Europe. The roster of homicides in France, for example,
includes the 2015 murder of four shoppers in a Paris kosher supermarket, the
2012 murder of seven, including three children, at a school in Toulouse, and
the stabbing and burning of an 85-year-old Holocaust survivor last month, to
cite just a few. Jews also suffer nearly daily threats and contempt from their
neighbors. Many French Jews have pulled their children from public schools due
to harassment from other students.
A 2013 survey by the European Union’s Fundamental Rights
Agency (FRA) asked Jews whether in the past year they had “personally witnessed
anyone being physically attacked because he or she is Jewish.” Among the
French, 9.7 percent said yes. Among Swedes, 6.7 percent said they had. In 2016,
majorities of Jews in a number of European countries including Germany, France,
and Sweden said they sometimes or always avoided displaying clothing or other
items that identified them as Jewish (the president of the Central Council of
Jews in Germany cautioned Jewish men this week to hide their kippot), and large
numbers say they’ve considered emigrating. In the past twelve years, more than
40,000 Jews have fled France. Most settle in Israel.
The response among European leaders has varied. Some
avoid the question or retreat to platitudes. Some police forces are reluctant
to label attacks as “hate crimes.” Jeremy Corbyn, leader of Britain’s Labour
party, is quite comfortable
with left-wing anti-Semitism, which tends to bleed easily into every other
kind. He defended the artist who painted a mural showing hook-nosed capitalists
playing Monopoly on the backs of naked workers. He also calls Hezbollah and
Hamas “friends.” France’s Emmanuel Macron has been much better. In January,
when an eight-year-old Jewish boy was attacked in Sarcelles, Emmanuel Macron
called it an “attack on our whole country.” Angela Merkel, addressing a crowd
of 5,000 who turned out to condemn bigotry, avowed that “anyone who hits
someone wearing a skullcap is hitting us all. Anyone who damages a Jewish
gravestone is disgracing our culture. Anyone who attacks a synagogue is
attacking the foundations of our free society.”
How can it be that only 70 years after the Holocaust,
Europe’s Jews do not feel safe? It’s ironic, but one reason is guilt. Eager to
live down their histories of colonialism and racism, Europe has welcomed
millions of immigrants from the Third World. That’s admirable, since many of
these migrants are grateful to receive asylum (and most never commit any crime,
far less a hate crime). But for the Jews, tormented more than any other group
in Europe’s history, this expiation comes at their expense. Many of the Muslim
immigrants arrive with anti-Semitic animus. A recent survey in the United
Kingdom found that 55 percent of Muslims harbored anti-Semitic attitudes,
compared with 12 percent of the overall population. Asked whether they agreed
that “Jews are responsible for most of the world’s wars,” 6 percent of Britons
said yes, while 26 percent of British Muslims agreed.
Most of the anti-Jewish violence in Europe is the work of
Muslim extremists. In France, for example, victims reported that 53 percent of
their attackers were “people with extremist Muslim views,” 18 percent were
“people with extremist left-wing views,” 4 percent were “people with extremist
right-wing views,” and 3 percent were “people with extremist Christian views.”
Some call attacks on Jews and synagogues “anti-Zionism”
and strain to find justifications arising from the Middle East conflict. But
Swedish Jews do not attack mosques in Malmo to protest Palestinian violence in
Gaza. Imagine if such an attack did occur and the perpetrators claimed it was
not anti-Muslim, but just “anti-Palestinian.”
The influx of immigrants has helped to spark the
resurgence of right-wing nationalism in Europe, which is also chilling for the
Jews. The Alternative for Germany is now the third largest party in Germany.
Marine Le Pen heads the National Front, France’s second largest party. Hungary
is led by an increasingly open fascist, Viktor Orban, and the Sweden Democrats
(who are the opposite of their name) received 14 percent of the seats in the
latest parliament.
Seventy-three years after the fall of the Third Reich and
27 years after the implosion of the Soviet Union, the Western world is
forgetting what can happen when the center does not hold. The Jews are now, as
they have always been, a bellwether.
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