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By Ilan Costica (Own work) [GFDL (http://www.gnu.org/copyleft/fdl.html) or CC BY 3.0 (http://creativecommons.org/licenses/by/3.0)], via Wikimedia Commons |
As Jews, we’re always feeling our collective pulse. We read
of an antisemitic incident and mentally compare it to events leading up to the
Holocaust. How bad is this on a (Kristallnacht) scale of 1-10? Is it time to
pack our bags and make an escape?
Well, last week there was an antisemitic event in Valencia,
Spain, that rated an 8 on my personal Kristallnacht scale. There was a
basketball game. The
Hapoel
Jerusalem team played Valencia. The lights were dimmed at the start of the
game, at which point, cops came to the area where all the Israeli fans were
seated and beat the crap out of them.
They used clubs.
The incident got little play in the press. I saw maybe three
stories in total.
I shared the Israel National News
story on
Facebook, which said in part:
“About 30 fans, who came to support their team in their game
in Spain, were beaten by local Spanish police officers who used clubs.
“Police said that the Jerusalem fans did not respond to the
officers’ demands that they sit only in two rows at the back of the hall, which
was not enough for all 30 fans, and claimed that the fans broke chairs and even
raised a hateful sign against the officers.
“As soon as the lights in the hall were dimmed, the local
police burst into the stands where the Jerusalem fans were sitting, and began
to violently remove them from the hall. Anyone who tried to take pictures of the
incident was attacked as well.
“Later, the fans were split into two groups - those who had
ID cards and those who did not. Those who were without an ID card were
physically searched by the officers.
“After ten minutes, during which the Jerusalem fans were
surrounded by officers, they were released and were escorted to the nearest
train station.
“Journalists who witnessed the incident reported that there
were no disturbances by the fans, and that the only reason they were attacked
was because they were Israelis.”
Dave Bender
tagged
Jonty Maresky on
the thread, a fellow Efratian, who, as it turns out, is team physician for the
Hapoel Yerushalayim basketball team. Jonty wrote:
“I happily found a replacement for this game so I wasn't
there, although hopefully we'll beat them today thus forcing a final game in
Valencia on Wednesday and I'll be there.
“The Valencia local government recently passed anti-Israel
legislation regarding the sale of Israeli products.
“The Hapoel management were helpless in the face of a pre-arranged
uniformed ambush, performed as the lights were dimmed thus circumventing the
in-house cameras.
“The management announced yesterday that Hapoel will
reimburse all the fans for the cost of their air tickets to Valencia.
“Antisemitism has many faces. Especially in Europe we [are] constantly
reminded that it tends to be most malignant when it comes down from the
administrative ranks of a particular society.....”
When I first read that story on INN, I had to look twice. I
expect to see antisemitism in a story about soccer. Antisemitism is just rife
in soccer. We’ve seen it in
Holland,
Bosnia,
Italy,
England,
Poland,
Croatia,
and
more.
I figure that soccer is the most popular game in Europe and that it’s the kind
of game where testosterone and tensions are going to run high. The kind of game
where the common man is going to let loose and express himself, no holds
barred.
I think we can pretty much gauge how Europe feels about the
Jews from these many antisemitic soccer incidents.
But now Jew-hate appears to have moved into basketball, as
well.
We did, of course, have the
incident
last year in Newton, Massachusetts, during which Catholic Memorial High School fans
chanted, “You Killed Jesus,” at Newton North fans. But there, the principal of
the Catholic school forced the chanters to apologize. Catholic clergy spoke out
forcefully from their pulpits and educational programs on the subject of
antisemitism were planned and executed in the schools.
That is how leaders of the community, how educators and the
establishment, should handle antisemitism. With action, forceful
statements, and education. Instead, what we have in Spain is the establishment
actively taking part in the antisemitic proceedings, an outright abuse of power
and position, a planned assault on Jewish Israelis by the police.
An “ambush” as Jonty called it.
They waited until the lights were low so the cameras wouldn’t
catch it.
They were sly about it.
And it seems to me that when police beat up Jews on the sly,
things are going from bad to worse.
Definitely an 8 on my Kristallnacht scale.
When I think about what happened in Valencia, I picture Nazis
going after Jews, hitting them over the heads with clubs, pulling out their
beards, forcing elderly Jews to scrub the cobblestones of Berlin. That stuff
was all very public, while in Valencia, the police waited for the lights to
dim. They did it to Israelis, rather than local Jews. It’s when they do it in
broad daylight, to random locals Jews that it may be too late for the Jews of Valencia
(and Europe) to leave.
What happened is a symptom of an illness that is
progressing, getting worse.
Not that there are many Jews in Spain, just
45,000 of them.
After all, the Edict of Expulsion wasn’t annulled until 1968. That’s when the
Jews began to come back. They opened a synagogue in Madrid and started building
communities. Of course, there was no real religious freedom until Franco’s
regime ended in 1977. But the Jews are always hopeful.
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Front row in order from left to right: Karl Wolff, Heinrich Himmler, Franco and Spain's Foreign Minister Serrano Súñer in Madrid, October 1940 |
Now it’s time for them to be wary. Things are not looking
good when the police beat up Jews in the dark so the cameras won’t catch it.
Definitely an 8 on the Kristallnacht scale.
Not looking good at all.
We have lots of ideas, but we need more resources to be even more effective. Please
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