“This is no longer my Netherlands” by Chief Rabbi Jacobs

July 24, 2024

I never watch movies on a plane, but this time I did. A film about the war. I don’t mean the war between Russia and Ukraine. Nor am I referring to the Israel-Gaza war. No, I just mean: ‘the’ war.

The film was about Sir Nicholas Winton who saved 669 children from Prague on the eve of the war by taking them to England with the permission of their parents.

Horrible images of poverty, persecution and misery. Parents saying goodbye to their children. I knew these images would seriously disrupt my sleep and yet I continued to watch. But when I heard that the Netherlands refused to issue transit visas, I turned off the screen: this was not my Netherlands…

Having barely landed at Schiphol, I rushed to Nijkerk. The Christian Israel Centre was heavily defaced by so-called climate activists. Israel’s ambassador would address the employees in solidarity. I was also asked to encourage them. I did that, of course, while I had the feeling that this couldn’t happen in my Netherlands…

These same climate fanatics are also against Christians, against gays, against marriage, against rape (unless it happens under the supervision of Hamas), against a gay parade if Jews are included, against gender naming…

It would not surprise me that, in addition to the ban on the flag of Israel, the singing of a Yiddish mamme will no longer be permitted. They will think this is discrimination or apartheid… everything must and will be gender neutral.

Back in my Netherlands, because that’s how I felt in my naivety, I peacefully walked to synagogue on Shabbat morning. Wonderful, back home after three weeks!

But the way back was less pleasant: a car drove up next to me at walking pace and took the liberty of intimidatingly photographing my guests and me from the car. I passed the license plate number on to the police.

And in my own street I was then welcomed with a loud volley of free Palestine by the youth of the local New Dutch citizenry.

Among the loudmouths there are also two boys with a black skin colour, who I know are insulted behind their back by their fellow white ‘believers’.

Apparently, I am the common enemy, even though I was allowed to provide spiritual support to the black mother of these two black boys. I increasingly get the feeling that, after living here for at least sixteen generations, this Netherlands is no longer my Netherlands…

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Annual Conference for European Jewish Leadership

The forthcoming EJA Annual Conference is scheduled to take place in Amsterdam on 3rd and 4th June 2024, under the theme ‘Shaping Together the Future of European Jewry”.

We have selected Amsterdam as the venue for our annual conference in response to the mounting challenges confronting Jewry, characterized by significant upticks in antisemitism and vitriolic antizionism.

After the Hamas pogrom, the numbers simply exploded to levels last seen in Nazi Germany in

1939. In Holland, the picture is terrible. We gather to show strength in numbers and prioritise protecting and respecting Jewish life front and centre.

We are delighted to announce that the conference is being organized in collaboration with esteemed partners, including the Israeli Ministry of Diaspora and Combatting Antisemitism, the CJO (the umbrella organization of Dutch Jewry), the Union of Hungarian Jewish communities, the Jewish community of Porto, the Consistoire of Paris, the federation of UK synagogues, Christians for Israel, and others.

Furthermore, the Annual Conference will be graced by the presence of prominent political figures from across Europe, Israel, and the Netherlands. The event is also poised to garner attention from national, international, and Jewish media outlets spanning the continent.

EJA meeting with World Chairman of Keren Hayesod, Mr. Sam Grundwerg

This morning the EJA had the pleasure to welcome a delegation led by the Mr. Sam Grundwerg, World Chairman of Keren Hayesod -UIA
We discussed in length about the different ideas and options for growth and divelopment of Jewish lives in Europe, about the chalenges Jews are facing and the rise of antisemitism.
We concluded with our shared hope of working together on all of these challenges in the upcoming year.

Austrian court overturns fine for showing Israeli flag

A court in Vienna has expunged a police fine against four activists who displayed Israeli flags while protesting against an event calling for the boycott of the Jewish state.
Vienna police fined four students €150 ($176) for waving an Israel flag at a protest in March 2019 against advocates of the Boycott, Divestment and Sanctions campaign (BDS) targeting Israel.
Benjamin Hess, from the Austrian Union of Jewish Students, told the Austrian daily Der Standard, which first reported the court decision, that it was “clearly decided” that holding up an Israel flag and expressing pro-Israel sentiments is a legitimate expression of opinion.
He asked, however, why it “is necessary in Austria at all to go to court in order to have something so fundamental to be established.”
The Vienna city authorities argued that police warnings against the Israeli activists has not deterred pro-Israel activists from showing Israeli flags, and that there was a threat of escalation between the rival groups.
A spokesperson for an organization that monitors antisemitism (Informations und Beobachtungsstelle antisemitismus), who was at the protest in March 2019, confirmed to The Jerusalem Post at the time that a police supervisor told the students the Israeli flag was a “provocation” and issued the activists a €150 fine.
“Once again there was a demonstration in Austria in which antisemitic slogans such as ‘child murderer Israel’ were present, said the spokesperson for monitoring group combating antisemitism.”
In 2020, Austria’s national parliament unanimously passed a resolution condemning the BDS campaign as antisemitic and urging that the anti-Israel movement not be supported.
“BDS, which has also increasingly appeared in Austria in recent years, makes use of this antisemitic pattern,” stated the resolution. The antisemitic pattern refers to one of the alleged antisemitic BDS goals that seeks to not “recognize the right of the Jewish people to self-determination,” the resolution explained.
Some 25 people attended the anti-BDS demonstration in March 2019 organized by the Austrian Union of Jewish Students and the Alliance Boycott Antisemitism. According to Der Standard, the pro-BDS group reportedly shouted antisemitic slogans, and one speaker wore a scarf from the US and EU-designated terrorist organization the Popular Front for the Liberation of Palestine.
 The anti-BDS groups shouted “Long Live Israel” and held Israeli flags while calling “Free Palestine from Hamas,” the newspaper reported.
Rabbi Abraham Cooper, the associate dean of the Simon Wiesenthal Center (SWC) in Los Angeles, told the Post at the time, “Apparently it is still a provocation for Jews to defend their people’s honor by waving the flag of Israel. SWC urges the chancellor and other Austrian leaders to publicly wave the Blue and White [Israeli flag] on Israel Independence Day in solidarity with Israel and the Jewish community. And the police? Check their obvious anti-Jewish bias.”
https://www.jpost.com/bds-threat/austrian-court-overturns-fine-for-showing-israeli-flag-679952

The European Broadcasting Union’s decision cleared the last hurdle for the Jewish state to participate in May’s musical extravaganza.

Israel will be allowed to compete in the 2024 Eurovision Song Contest with the reworked entry “Hurricane,” organizers informed Jerusalem on Thursday.

After the European Broadcasting Union (EBU), which organizes the annual musical extravaganza, threatened to disqualify two of Israel’s entries over perceived political messaging, the Kan broadcaster worked to modify the lyrics to ensure the country’s participation in May.

The last lines of “October Rain” described the condition of Israelis during the Oct. 7  attacks, in which some 1,200 people were slaughtered: “There’s’ no air left to breathe / No place, no me from day to day.”

In one of the verses, the Israeli contestant, Eden Golan, sang the word “flowers,” which is Israel Defense Forces slang for fallen soldiers, but which does not carry that connotation for European viewers.

Israel’s second choice song, “Dance Forever,” was an apparent reference to the massacre at the Supernova music festival near Kibbutz Re’im, where Hamas terrorists murdered 364 people on Oct. 7.

Kan has said that the Jewish state’s third submission tells the story of a “young woman who is surviving a personal crisis.” The song, set to the tune of “October Rain,” will be presented to the public during a live TV broadcast on Sunday.

Last month, the EBU reaffirmed that Israel would be allowed to compete amid the war against Hamas in Gaza, rejecting parallels drawn by pro-Palestinian activists with Russia’s exclusion over its invasion of Ukraine.

“Comparisons between war and conflict are complex and difficult and, as an apolitical media organization, it is not our place to make them,” EBU Director-General Noel Curran told AFP.

A review by EBU’s governing bodies found “that the Israeli public broadcaster Kan met all the competition rules for this year and can participate, as it has for the past 50 years,” Curran noted.

The EBU head said his organization was “aware” of voices calling for the Jewish state to be excluded from this year’s competition.

“However, the Eurovision Song Contest is a non-political musical event and a competition between public service broadcasters that are members of EBU. It is not a competition between governments,” he said.

The Eurovision Song Contest 2024 is taking place in Malmö, Sweden, following the Scandinavian country’s victory at the 2023 song contest. Golan, 20, will represent the Jewish state in the second semifinal on May 9. The grand final will take place two days later.

Last year, Israeli pop star Noa Kirel finished in third place in the Eurovision final in Liverpool, behind Sweden and Finland.

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