By Henry Srebrnik, [Calgary] Jewish Free Press
On December 5, 2016, I published an article,
“The ‘No-Go’ Bastions inside European Cities,” in the Journal Pioneer, a Prince Edward Island newspaper, describing
the ever increasing number of so-called “no-go” areas in
European cities.
These are neighbourhoods with largely Muslim
refugee populations, places where even the police fear to enter.
Not surprisingly, I was lambasted by local
politically correct people who refuse to accept the truth.
One notorious Israel-basher who never fails
to attack the country called my piece “dangerous, disappointing
and misleading,” and maintained that it “suffers from
stereotypical biases and other inaccuracies.”
Another writer seemed to think that I
considered all European Muslims responsible for the acts of a
few who engage in violence. Of course not. Clearly, the vast
majority are law-abiding people who want to get on with their
lives.
But when comes to no-go areas, it looks like
I was right, because now even Angela Merkel, the German
chancellor who has admitted more than a million asylum seekers
to the country since 2015 has acknowledged their existence.
Merkel waited until this February to publicly
refer to “no-go areas,” high-crime, largely Muslim immigrant
neighborhoods across Europe where state authorities fear to
tread, and the very existence of which have long been furiously
denied by liberals as an Islamophobic invention.
“There are such areas and one has to call
them by their name and do something about them,” Merkel said.
She also denounced “another form of
anti-Semitism” emerging in Germany. “We have a new phenomenon,
as we have many refugees among whom there are, for examples,
people of Arab origin, who bring another form of anti-Semitism
into the country.” Her comments were broadcast by Israel TV's
Channel 10 on April 22.
Merkel also made a statement on January 27,
Holocaust Memorial Day in Germany. “It is inconceivable and
shameful that no Jewish institution can exist without police
protection, whether it is a school, a kindergarten or a
synagogue,” she remarked.
In fact Germany
has become a very dangerous place for Jews. Over the past year,
the country has witnessed an increase of anti-Semitic attacks.
In April, video of a Syrian refugee attacking a man wearing a
kippa, or Jewish skullcap, while calling him a Jew in Arabic,
prompted outrage in Berlin.
Merkel condemned
it as a “disgrace,” while thousands of Germans of different
faith groups, including Muslims, marched in solidarity with the
Jewish community across the country.
Since then, other disturbing stories have
emerged in the German news media: an Afghan boy greeting his
teacher with “Heil Hitler” and proclaiming that he, too, was
Aryan, and a group of Syrian refugees calling the Holocaust “a
Jewish conspiracy,” explaining that they had learned that in
school back home.
Josef Schuster, head of the Central Council
of Jews in Germany, stated that the incidents “are more
aggressive, more pronounced, and directly affect Jewish people
with insults or attacks.”
Many of those who
arrived in Germany came from nations where anti-Semitism is
widespread, including Syria, Iraq and Afghanistan. But
officials, analysts and Jewish and Muslim leaders say Germany
has been slow to recognize the risks.
Christian Democratic legislator Stephan
Harbarth told Die Welt that the government must be able to wield
the ultimate threat of deportation. “Anyone who incites
anti-Semitic hate and rejects Jewish life in Germany cannot stay
in our country,” Harbarth contended.
Sawsan Chebli, state secretary for federal
affairs for the city of Berlin, a Muslim of Palestinian
background, has suggested that young migrants who have chanted
anti-Israel slogans in demonstrations in Germany should be
required to visit a concentration camp memorial.
It was the sight of Arab immigrants,
including Palestinian-Germans like herself, burning an Israeli
flag underneath the Brandenburg Gate in December while chanting
“Death to Israel” that moved Chebli to speak up.
The German government has now appointed a
commissioner for anti-Semitism. Felix Klein is the first person
to hold the job, which was created by Germany’s Bundestag this
year.
“We’ve seen anti-Semitic cases recently all
over Germany,” he told the Washington Post’s Berlin bureau
chief, Griff Witte, in an April 25 interview.
He pointed to “the great influx of refugees
and people who came to Germany that were raised and educated in
countries that are still in the state of war with Israel, or
that have been brought up with certain perceptions of Jews in
Israel that are totally unacceptable to a German society.”
Klein stated that “to a certain extent, the
cultural dimension that is linked with the influx was
underestimated. Now we have to deal with it.”
It’s beyond ironic
that the country responsible for the Holocaust has now, in a
manner of speaking, “imported” new forms of anti-Semitism while
it was trying to alleviate the plight of refugees fleeing civil
war in Syria and elsewhere. It’s certainly a demonstration of
the law of unintended consequences.
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