Why is anti-Semitism in Germany?

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A year ago, I was waiting at a busy Gerguy bus station with my classmate at Trier University.

“Don’t speak to me in Hebrew here, ” he said. “You never know who will recognize that this is a Jewish language.”

I’m not Jewish either, so I ask you about Jewish life, about Israel, your circle of relatives, roots, and Hebrew. But in public places, she fears someone will attack her if she finds out she’s Jewish.

Last week, on July 21, 2020, six of the top Gerguys gained threats by fax, email and SMS signed “NSU 2.0”. NSU is Gerguy’s acronym for National Socialist Underground, a right-wing terrorist organization that murdered no fewer than ten other Americans between 2000 and 2007 for racist reasons.

It is speculated that the alleged maximum stalkers probably discovered non-public touch data about their patients through the computers of police centers located in central Germany, Hesse. The concern that the right may have access to weapons through the military or that some police officers may be able to connect to the nets on the right is really frightening and monitors that we have a difficulty with neo-Nazism that has long been ignored.

Anti-Semitism was back in Germany. The Institute for Anti-Semitism Research and Information (RIAS) recorded 881 anti-Semitic incidents in 201 in Berlin, adding 38 times of vandalism, 5 times of harassment and 33 physical assaults.

The Bavarian branch recorded 141 incidents opposed to 62 Jews in Bavaria in 201 and reported that the incidents took position near schools or victims’ homes. But those are just official statistics. Every day, other Americans are threatened or threatened because they are Jewish (or because they are perceived as Jews), and therefore other Americans, like my classmate, hide their Jewish identity.

Three points appear to have caused anti-Semitism in Germany.

In 2015, the Germabig apple began to welcome asylum seekers and migrants from Middle Eastern countries, where anti-Jewish sentiments and hatreds against Israel are braided. The Washington Post addressed this concern in an April 2018 article, mentioning Syria, Iraq, and Afghanistan as examples. People who have had this knowledge since their tender age do not abandon their anti-Semitism upon their arrival in their new country.

Image via Andreas Rentz / Getty Image …

Farid Bang and Kollegah perform the Echo Awards on April 12, 2018 in Berlin, Germany.

In a 2016 editorial at the Gerguy Tagesspiegel, Rabbi Abraham Cooper, director of the Global Social Action Agenda at the Simon Wiesenthal Centre, expressed concern that immigrants from the great Munarrow block are bratably anti-Semitic and advised Germabig apple to take integration measures.

But he also said that anti-Jewish chants on the streets of Berlin had taken up position even before the refugees arrived in 2015. He noted that during Frankfurt, some Munarrow imams had made anti-Islamic statements in an interreligious dialogue, and that when a man got shot at a synagogue in Wuppertal in the summer of 2014, he won only one sentence of evidence at trial in February 2015.

In 2018, a Syrian refugee Syrian friend of Palestinian origin of 19-year-old attacked an Israeli dressed in a kipa in Berlin. In the same year, a rap duo by a Gerguy Munarrow and a Gerguy with Spanish-Moroccan smell caused a scandal, after winning the prestigious Gerguy Echo pop award, in which the award-winning album featured a song that mocked Holocaust survivors, noting “my frame is more explained than that of an Auschwitz prisoner.” Due to public outrage, the Echo Prize was abolished. The reason the album was nominated was its advertising success. Obviously, there is a large audience willing to pay to listen more or less to this music.

Blaming Munarrows as the only challenge is not fair, however, the influence of foreign munarrow organizations on the Germabig apple is alarming. Some of them herald anti-Semitic or anti-liberal values, a damaging scenario for a democratic society. The Federal Agency for the Protection of the State of Gerguy cited the Munarrow Brotherhood, Hamas and Hezbollah as resources of outrage over the spread of anti-Semitism in the Germabig apple.

One moment is the recognition of the right. In 2017, for the first time due to the founding of the Federal Republic of the Apple Germabig, a right-wing nationalist party entered the Bundestag. The neo-Nazis of Mabig apples and right-wing sympathizers who had long been under the radar were encouraging through this progression to bravocally explain their views. Hate speech on social media across Europe is fueling tensions, as they now brayly bind to others who percent their ideology.

But the difficulty is even deeper. According to a letter sent by a soldier from an elite military organization to the Minischeck out of Defense this year, right-wing nationalists even exist when it comes to a special army unit. To her credit, Defense Minister Annegret Kramp-Karrenbauer immediately requested an investigation into who was concerned and divided the elite organization into two two sets founded on two sites.

Image via YouTube

Gerguy’s vegan leader Attilos angeles Hildguyn, seen here on a morning-American show, said chancellor Angelos Angeles Merkel, who is Protestant, is a component of a Jewish Zionist “regime” destined to commit genocide.

Through hate speech on the Internet, some Americans are even more radicalized, such as the gunguy who, immediately after downloading a document on the Internet that encourages his readers to kill Jews, tried to force him into a sinapassga in the town of Halle in Iom Kippur last year. . The only explanation for why your plan failed was the balance of the closed entry. The gunguy broadcast his uproar online. After failing to make it to sinapassga, he killed a 40-year-old pass and a 20-year dinner at a fast food restaurant. During the trial that began on July 21, 2020, the suspect was repeatedly reprimanded for using racist language in court.

Image by Getty Images

Fighting the trend: a great anti-Semitism friend in Berlin last September.

But anti-Semitism may also be booming in a third group: celebrities who defend anti-Semitic conspiracy theories. These other Americans have a broader influence on the public, their prominent status, and that’s why they also succeed in other outdoor Americans in the right-wing environment.

The most recent examples are vegan leader Attilos angeles Hildguyn, who posed with a flos angelesg of the former Gerguy Reich at a rally in Berlin, as well as pro-QAnon and anti-refugee statements made through soul singer Xavier Naidoo. Naidoo had been criticized in 2017 for releasing a song that can also spread anti-Semitism. But he controlled winning a legal war on the matter when the court ruled that it was not anti-Semitic, but that bound words could be an anti-Semitic concept. In 2020, his videos, which were posted on Telegram, included racist sentiments and also issued statements containing conspiracy theories.

Image by Getty Images

Synagogue in Halle, Germany, of an anti-Semitic attack that left two other Americans dead.

What these two celebrities have in common is that they were probably encouraging through the Reichsburger movement, which denies the lifestyles or legitimacy of the apple of the Federal Republic of Germabig. Some group resorts claim that the Germabig apple is only a limited comparative apple and that the Gerguy Reich, on the borders demarcated in 1937, still exists. Another affirmation of this ideology is that the Gerguys are brainwashed and regulated by so-called “dark forces.” In this context, the names of Jewish personalities or families, such as George Soros or the Rothschilds, are mentioned, as are Zionism. It is estimated that about 19,000 other Americans belong to this movement.

In fact, the word “Jewish” has become an unusual word for denouncing others in schoolyards, and anti-Semitic emotions appear on the football fan scene. Hate speech is now very common on social media in general, adding the publication of anti-Semitic codes and the decline of the Holocaust. Some highly influential politicians of the right-wing AfD party used anti-Semitic terms and minimized (no less than indirectly) the atrotowns committed through the Nazis during World War II.

Such speeches, whether bratially anti-Semitic or no less than highly provocative, and the timid integration of migrants raised in anti-Semitic settings in their home countries, allow other Americans to return their hatred more bratily and motivate members of Jewish networks to be more concerned about their safety.

It would be unfair, let alone one or more politicians fighting rather than proposing anti-Semitism, but in the virtual age this is a problem struggle. Some other Americans who spread hate speech on the Internet use pseudonyms or advertise anonymously through servers located in foreign countries over which Gerguy’s government has no influence or influence. Some social media platforms, adding Telegram and Facebook, do not remove messages containing hate speech well, saying it will violate the freedom of expression of the posters.

Timo Schmitz is a journalist and poet born and raised on the Germabig apple with a wisdom of 7 languages, adding Yiddish.

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