Diversity Macht Frei
September 8, 2016
The president of the Central Council of Jews, Josef Schuster, has reacted with anger to the strong showing of the AfD in the regional elections in Mecklenburg-Vorpommern. “The AfD is not an alternative for Germany, but a sign of failure for Germany,” he explained on Monday morning in Berlin.
Unfortunately the AfD “have had success of stirring up resentments against minorities and offering words instead of solutions”. Apparently many voters do not understand or they do not care that neither in Mecklenburg-Vorpommern nor across the country has the AfD separated itself from the far-right spectrum.
In view of the electoral success of the party, the established parties should engage more strongly with the concerns and problems of the people. At the same time it is pleasing, continued Schuster, that the NPD* will not be represented in the new Mecklenburg-Vorpommern regional parliament. “However for many right-wing extremists the NPD continues to be the basis from which they start their actions. We continue to believe that a ban on the NPD is right and necessary.”
The NPD is the old-skool anti-immigration party in Germany, similar to the BNP. They got 6% of the vote in the previous regional elections in Mecklenburg-Vorpommern but this fell to 3% in the most recent elections, probably because half of their voters switched to the AfD. Under Germany’s proportional representation system, parties below 5% are not represented in parliament.
Meanwhile, in Greece, Jews are demanding the suppression of Golden Dawn. Of course, they played an instigating role in bringing about the legal action against Golden Dawn.
World Jewish Congress (WJC) CEO Robert Singer and the leadership of the Greek Jewish community held a series of meetings with senior Greek government officials, including Foreign Minister Nikos Kotzias, Education Minister Nikos Filis, Minister of Public Order Nikos Toskas, opposition leader Kyriakos Mitsotakis, the head of the Orthodox Church in Greece Archbishop Ieronymos II and others.
Singer emphasized the good relations between Greece and Israel and raised a number of issues, including the threat posed by the extreme-right Golden Dawn party, the security of the Greek Jewish community, and anti-Semitic statements made by Greek Orthodox church officials recently.
Robert Singer said: “Archbishop Ieronymos reassured us that the Greek Orthodox Church does not agree with these statements and that he is open to intensify the interfaith dialogue with the World Jewish Congress.”
Singer said that although there had been few violent incidents against Jews and Jewish sites in Greece in recent months, anti-Semitic stereotypes were still widespread in Greek society. He welcomed initiatives undertaken by the government to teach about the Holocaust in public and private schools in Greece.
“Racism and anti-Semitism are not just opinions, they are dangerous to our societies as a whole, and that’s why they need to be combatted vigorously. The key to this is education, and also firmness on the part of the government and the leaders of civil society.”
Regarding the far-right Golden Dawn (Chryssi Avgi) party, the WJC CEO said: “The actions of Golden Dawn are harmful to Greece’s reputation in the world. Golden Dawn leaders are currently on trial on serious charges, and I hope that this trial will soon be completed. Golden Dawn must be politically isolated and fought, and I am glad that nobody I spoke to here in Greece thinks that any contacts should be established with this party.”
Every time Europeans try to organise politically to prevent their own destruction, the Jews mobilise against the parties they create.