Israel comes to a halt to commemorate the Holocaust

Commemorations begin with a ceremony at Yad Vashem Holocaust memorial

Hungarian and international academics, including from the Yad Vashem Holocaust museum in Jerusalem, resigned from an advisory board over the distorted concept for the Budapest site, PHOTO: AFP

JERUSALEM:
Israelis stopped their cars and stood still, often with heads bowed, for two minutes on Thursday for the country's annual commemoration of the six million Jewish victims of the Nazi Holocaust.

Sirens rang out nationwide during the commemoration, while pedestrians and drivers in Jerusalem, the bustling seaside city of Tel Aviv and elsewhere stood on roadsides and in the middle of streets in silence.

Israel began commemorations on Wednesday night with a ceremony at its Yad Vashem Holocaust memorial in Jerusalem that included speeches from Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu and President Reuven Rivlin.

"We are living nowadays in a paradox," Netanyahu said.

He pointedly referred to Saturday's shooting in a California synagogue that killed one person and wounded three others, two of them Israelis.
Rivlin, without specifying names, warned against allying with leaders who employ new forms of anti-Semitism.

Netanyahu has been criticised for forming alliances with right-wing European leaders such as Hungarian Prime Minister Viktor Orban as a way of countering European Union criticism of Israel's treatment of Palestinians.

Orban has faced allegations of stoking anti-Semitism in Hungary with nationalist rhetoric and a campaign against US Jewish billionaire philanthropist George Soros.


"Not every right-wing party in Europe that believes in controlling immigration or in protecting its unique character is anti-Semitic or xenophobic," Rivlin said.

Holocaust museum stokes controversy among Hungary's Jews

"But political forces where anti-Semitism and racism are part of their language, their legacy or their ideology can never be our allies."

A report on Wednesday warned anti-Semitism was on the rise in parts of North America and Europe where Jews once felt safe and spoke of an "increasing sense of emergency."

Moshe Kantor, the president of the European Jewish Congress, sounded the alarm in an annual report from his Kantor Center that draws on official statistics.

"In 2018, we witnessed the largest number of Jews murdered in a single year since decades," Kantor said, deploring a 13-percent rise in "severe and violent" incidents.

The Anti-Defamation League said in a report published Tuesday that anti-Semitic incidents in the United States remained at near-record high levels in 2018.

That included an October attack at a synagogue in Pittsburgh that killed 11 people, the deadliest ever attack against American Jews.
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