Furor Grows Over Belgian Journalist’s Antisemitic Article

August 12, 2019

Journalist Dimitri Verhulst wrote in the Belgian daily, De Morgen, on July 27, that “Being Jewish is not a religion, no God would give creatures such an ugly nose.”

Belgian Jews have filed a police complaint after a Belgian journalist wrote in an opinion piece, “There is no promised land, only stolen land,” and commented on the stereotype of “Jewish noses.”
Journalist Dimitri Verhulst wrote in the Belgian daily, De Morgen, on July 27, that “Being Jewish is not a religion, no God would give creatures such an ugly nose.”
He misquoted French singer Serge Gainsbourg who said, “Being Jewish is not a religion. No religion makes you grow such a nose.” Gainsbourg was the child of Russian Jewish immigrants to France.
Verhulst also accused Israel of murdering 10,000 Palestinians since 2002.
De Morgen Editor-in-Chief, Bart Eeckhout, attempted to defend the actions of the paper, saying, “We clearly do not view the text as antisemitic. Otherwise we wouldn’t have published it. Neither did the author intend it as antisemitic,” JTA reported. “The op-ed surely is a harsh criticism on Israel’s politics toward the Palestinian people. It is written in a hard, sarcastic fashion and it foretells the current uproar, stating that any hard criticism on Israel will always be reinterpreted as antisemitism,” Eeckhout is quoted as saying.
Verhulst constantly uses sarcastic language during his article, questioning the Jews status as the “chosen” people and wrote “Because God has His favorites and they have their privileges, Palestinians were driven out of their homes in 1948 to make place for God’s favorites.”
The Simon Wiesenthal Center responded to the article by writing a direct letter to Eeckhout. The letter stated that, “The article blames the whole of the Jewish people collectively, making no distinction between Israel and Jewish people who live elsewhere, and furthermore it mocks their religion and equates being a Jew with creatures with ‘ugly noses.'”
The letter continued, “Manipulating and misquoting Serge Gainsbourg in saying ‘being a Jew is not a religion; there is not a single God who would give His creatures such an ugly nose’ is misleading and wrong. In his article, Verhulst not only serves the stereotype of Jews’ nose, propagated by Goebbels and Streicher in “Der Stürmer”, he deliberately distorted the irony in Gainsbourg’s quote in order to justify his own anti-Semitism.”
Eeckhout is also reminded that to blame all of the Jewish people for “real or imaginary wrongdoings committed by individuals or the State of Israel falls within the IHRA working definition of antisemitism,” and he is asked to retract the article and apologize.
The letter was signed by Menachem Margolin, European Jewish Association and Shimon Samuels, Simon Wiesenthal Center among other signatories including B’nai B’rith Europe, Commissioner Against Antisemitism of Jewish Community of Berlin and the Chief Rabbi of the Netherlands.

The article was published on the JPost

Additional Articles

Chief Rabbi Binyomin Jacobs spoke at a solemn and important event, marking the ascendancy of the late Cardinal and Archbishop of Utrecht Johannes de Jong

On 19th September in Utrecht, Chief Rabbi Binyomin Jacobs, Senior EJA Board Member and Chairman of the EJA Committee for combating antisemitism, spoke at a solemn and important event, marking the ascendancy of the late Cardinal and Archbishop of Utrecht Johannes de Jong as a Righteous amongst the Nations by Yad Vashem for resisting the Nazis and saving hundreds of Jewish families and children.

Present at the event were all Dutch Bishops, the Israeli Ambassador to the Kingdom of the Netherlands, two representatives of the King.

In his speech to those assembled, Chief Rabbi Jacobs recalled one particularly brave and visible moment of Cardinal de Jong’s resistance, linking it to a recent Torah Portion urging the Israelites, before entering the Land of Israel to “walk in his (G-d’s) ways”

In his powerful remarks Chief Rabbi Jacobs said:

“Last Shabbat we read in all synagogues in the world the Parshah כי תבוא in which we read, among other things, in chapter 28 sentence 9: והלכת בדרכיו -and you shall walk in His Ways.

The great philosopher, lawyer and physician Maimonides counts these words as one of the 613 do’s and don’ts known to Judaism and he explains that man should try as much as possible to resemble Gd. As the Midrash, the narrative literature, explains: “As the Lord is called gracious, so also shalt thou be merciful. As the Eternal is called merciful, so also shalt thou be merciful. And as the Eternal is called loving, so also shalt thou be loving.”

It is known that Maimonides never counts general commandments, such as “Thou shalt keep My commandments” or “Thou shalt sanctify thyself” in the number of the 613 commandments and prohibitions that the Torah prescribes. Only specific commandments count. And so the question arises, why is “and ye shall walk in His ways” an exception made here and an apparently general and overarching commission elevated to a specific individual commandment?

It is quite conceivable that a man lives exactly and meticulously as He, the Eternal, desires of him. He never commits a violation. And yet he does not, as it were, rise higher on the spiritual ladder. He remains on the spiritual plane where he stood. Teach us the Torah here: והלכת בדרכיו – there must be movement. How does a person get his spiritual level moving? By not merely fulfilling His commandments, but by being constantly aware that His ways must be walked. Every commandment has its specific assignment, its own way of carrying out, but growing, rising higher and higher, being in motion is an assignment in itself.

I can imagine that in the 1940s-1945s situation, many dutifully obeyed G-d’s laws, kept all commandments, and committed no transgression. But was there any movement? Were they willing to move the moment movement was required? “Thou shalt walk in His ways.” It is not enough to keep His commandments. His ways must be walked, there must be progress, spiritual ascent, movement.

During the horrible war period, according to the historian Prof. Presser, five percent of the Dutch were on the move, but it was a movement in the wrong direction because that five percent of our Dutch population was collaborating with the enemy, the Nazis. Ninety percent sat motionless and so let it happen. And only five percent moved in the right direction, walking in G-d’s Ways, at the risk of their own lives. The bishops, led by Archbishop de Jong, were part of that five percent, because on Sunday, August 3, 1941, it was pronounced from all the pulpits that membership of National Socialist umbrella organizations was not only prohibited, but would also entail exclusion from the sacraments.

The following happened prior to that Sunday:

In the night from Saturday to Sunday, August 3, 1940, the telephone rang in the Archbishop’s Palace. The Gestapo wanted to speak to the Archbishop immediately. Archbishop de Jong has Dr. Geerdinck announce that the men can come in half an hour. De Jong dresses in his official attire and the chandeliers are burning in the large room for guests.

When the bell rings at exactly four o’clock, Dr. Geerdinck opens, asks Himmler’s men to remove their coats and climbs the state staircase in front of them. Arriving at the door, he asks their names, knocks and leads the men inside. The Archbishop stands behind the table in his official garb and is silent. dr. Geerdinck announces: “Excellence. Obersturmführer Matzker and his adjutant”. De Jong bends down and remains silent. Geerdinck says: “setzen Sie sich”. Everyone sits down and everyone is silent.

Finally, the Obersturmführer takes out a narrow roll of paper and begins to read that the proclamation to ban membership of National Socialist umbrella organizations must not take place tomorrow morning. The Archbishop indicates that he has understood the message, whereupon his visitor says: “It is now four o’clock. All presbyteries can be reached by telephone. The proclamation in the church can be cancelled without difficulty.” The Archbishop mumbles that it is clear to him.

Then there is silence again, for a long time. Finally, Geerdinck says, “Gentlemen, have you fulfilled your assignment with this?”. They mumble yes, whereupon Geerdinck stands up and the visitors follow his example. A farewell is said, silently and without greeting.

The next Sunday morning, of course, the announcement went through everywhere. The words non possumus non loqui sound – “We cannot be silent”.

De Jong refused to simply continue to serve the Eternal as a faithful Catholic and to remain silent. He knew that especially as a church leader, movement, action was expected of him.

I regret that he could not be awarded the Yad Vashem award during his lifetime, but I am grateful that, thanks in part to the efforts of my good friend Dr. Hans Themans, we are finally gathered here today to show the world who and what de Jong used to be.

His Eminence Dr. Johannes Cardinal de Jong no longer needs the award, because he is rewarded daily for his willingness to risk his own life and to keep moving in the dark 1940s-45s, when 90% of our Dutch society motionless saw it and let it happen.

But this special meeting is of great importance to us, because alertness was, is and remains required. What happened then can happen again today and tomorrow. The war ended in our country on May 5, 1945, but anti-Semitism, today under the pseudonym anti-Zionism, has remained.”

Jewish groups alarmed as Greece poised to ban kosher slaughter

The Hellenic Council of State, the highest court, in Greece, ruled on Tuesday to ban halal and kosher slaughter, raising alarm among Jewish religious groups concerned about infringements on religious freedoms.
saw the court revoke the standing slaughter permit, which was provided through a ministerial decision that exempted ritual Jewish and Muslim slaughter practices from the general requirement to stun animals prior to killing them.
The ruling further called on Greek lawmakers to devise a way to meet the demands of animal rights advocates and the needs of Jews and Muslims who follow the laws about food in their traditions.

“The government should regulate the issue of slaughtering animals in the context of worship in such a way as to ensure both the protection of animals from any inconvenience during slaughter and the religious freedom of religious Muslims and Jews living in Greece,” Greek news site Protothema cited the ruling.

“We warned in December about the downstream consequences that the European Court of Justice ruling carried with it, and now we see the outcome,” Director-General of the European Jewish Association Rabbi Menachem Margolin told JTA.

Jewish freedom of religion is under direct attack. It started in Belgium, moved to Poland and Cyprus, and now it is Greece’s turn,” he warned.
Bans on ritual slaughter have been implemented in several countries across the region, including Sweden, Slovenia, Estonia, Denmark, and Finland.
The bans are part of a struggle across Europe between animal welfare activists and Muslim and Jewish community representatives.
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The European Court of Justice ruled last year that all member states had to “reconcile both animal welfare and freedom of religion.”
The EJC’s Dec. 17 ruling effectively upheld a 2017 decree by the Flemish government to ban ritual slaughter without stunning, as required by most interpretations of Jewish and Muslim law, but said that imposed stricter regulation on ritual slaughter were up to the states themselves. The ruling further urged member states to “adequately and proportionately consider freedom of religion” when making such rulings.
i24NEWS contributed to this report.
https://www.israelhayom.com/2021/10/28/jewish-groups-alarmed-as-greeces-top-court-rules-against-ritual-slaughter/

New Cooperation with the Jewish Community of Bratislava

The European Jewish Association is proud and delighted to welcome another organisation to our growing roster of partners and communities.
We have just concluded and signed a memorandum of understanding with the Jewish Community of Bratislava
Bratislava was in the past one of the most important centers of Jewish Life in Europe and has a very rich Jewish Heritage and amongst them: The Chatam Sofer Memorial and two Jewish Museums
When two dynamic and active Jewish organisations get together and agree to work closely with one another, beautiful and important things flow from this. We look forward to working for the betterment of Slovakian and European Jewry together.

בעקבות המאבק באנטישמיות: מועדון הכדורגל צ'לסי זכה באות "המלך דוד"

לארון הגביעים של מועדון הכדורגל של צ’לסי נוסף אתמול (שלישי) אות ייחודי שהוצב כבר הלילה בגאווה בין הגביעים על הישגי הקבוצה על כר הדשא.

היוזמה ארוכת הטווח מהווה חלק מעבודה מתמשכת של המועדון, באמצעות קמפיין Building Bridges של קרן צ’לסי.
יו”ר איגוד הארגונים היהודיות באירופה (EJA), הרב מנחם מרגולין, מציין: “ספורט מוציא את הטוב ביותר מאנשים, אך למרבה הצער הוא יכול גם להוציא את הגרוע ביותר. כמה מהדוגמאות הרעות ביותר של אנטישמיות מתבטאות לעתים קרובות ביציעי האצטדיונים השונים ברחבי העולם. צ’לסי לא היתה, כמובן, חריגה ממקרים אלו. אלא שבניגוד לאחרים, הם החליטו לעשות משהו בנידון”.
הרב מרגולין הדגיש כי “זה באמת מעורר השראה לראות לא רק את ההשקעה המשמעותית שנעשתה במאמץ הזה, אלא גם את המחוייבות האמיתית של צ’לסי להקשיב, לפעול ולעשות שינוי. מלמטה, מהיסוד, מחדר ההלבשה, יציע האוהדים ועד לאתר האינטרנט והרשתות החברתיות של המועדון אליהם נחשפים מיליוני אנשים. מועדון הכדורגל צ’לסי הוביל את הדרך. הם דוגמה ומופת לא רק עבור מועדוני כדורגל אחרים, אלא עבור כולם.
להעניק את הפרס הזה, בשם הארגונים היהודיים והקהילות הרבות שאנחנו מייצגים ברחבי אירופה, הוא המעט שאנו יכולים לעשות כדי להכיר בתנועה הזו לשינוי. הכוח הזה מעניק תקווה ליהודים מכל העולם שהלקחים שלמדנו מהשואה לעולם לא ישכחו, והאנטישמיות תגונה בכל מקום בו היא באה לידי ביטוי. בשם כל החברים והקהילות שלנו, אנו מוקירים ומודים לכל השותפים במועדון הכדורגל צ’לסי- הבעלים מר אברמוביץ’, היו”ר, הדירקטורים, הצוות והשחקנים על שהפכו את המאבק באנטישמיות למובן מאליו בדרך חד משמעית וחסרת הפחד”.

חבר חדש לארון הגביעים של צ’לסי (במרכז התמונה), צילום: דינה ארליך,

ברוס באק, יו”ר מועדון הכדורגל צ’לסי, שקיבל את הפרס מטעם המועדון אמר: “אנחנו גאים להיות הזוכים בפרס המלך דוד של איגוד הארגונים היהודיים באירופה (EJA). מאז שבעל המועדון שלנו, רומן אברמוביץ’, יזם את קמפיין Say No To Antisemitism בינואר 2018, אנו מחויבים לעבוד עם ארגונים יהודיים ברמה לאומית ובינלאומית כדי לסייע בסילוק האנטישמיות מהחברה. נמשיך לרתום את מגוון הפלטפורמות הגלובליות שלנו בצ’לסי כדי להגיד לא לאנטישמיות ולהיאבק בכל שאר צורות האפליה”.

מר עבדאללה שאטילה, איש העסקים הלבנוני שעלה לכותרות ברחבי העולם כשנענה לקריאת הרב מרגולין נגד סחר בפריטי מורשת נאציים ורכש מזכרות נאציות שנמכרו במכירות פומביות בגרמניה בשווי 600,000 אירו ותרם אותן ליד ושם – ומאז תמך ביוזמות רבות למאבק באנטישמיות, חתן פרס המלך דוד של EJA לשנת 2020, ציין בטקס המרגש על כר הדשא כי: “אנטישמיות מכוונת אמנם ליהודים אך מדביקה את החברה כולה. לבורות, שנאה ושנאת זרים אין מקום בעולם שבו הגבולות נעשים יותר ויותר חסרי משמעות, שבו הערכים הם אוניברסליים ושבו יש להוקיר זהויות שונות.
אני גאה להיות כאן הערב בצ’לסי, להיות חוליה מתמשכת בשרשרת המחויבים למאבק באנטישמיות. למועדון הכדורגל של צ’לסי יש קהל אוהדים עצום. הם יכלו כמובן לבחור במסלול הקל, אך הם החליטו באופן מעורר השראה להתמודד עם הנושא חזיתית”.
https://www.israelhayom.co.il/sport/world-soccer/article/5873477

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