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| Photographer:
Michail Miloslavski |
(July 31, 2007
- Jerusalem) A new exhibit on current antisemitic trends will
open at the German Ministry of Foreign Affairs in Berlin on
Wednesday, August 1, 2007. The exhibit, “Antisemitism?
Anti-Zionism? Criticism of Israel?” will be on display in the
Ministry’s courtyard before moving to the Technical University
in Berlin, and elsewhere in Germany. It was produced with the
support of the German Center for Political Education (Bundeszentral
für Politische Bildung).
The exhibit,
produced by Yad Vashem and the Center for Antisemitism Studies
at the Technical University of Berlin, explores current
antisemitic trends in Europe. Minister of State at the Federal
Foreign Office Gernot Erler will address Wednesday’s opening,
as will Yad Vashem Chairman Avner Shalev and Prof. Wolfgang
Benz, Director of the Center for Antisemitism Studies at TU
Berlin.
“This exhibit
is timely and important, and its display in Germany is
significant. The exhibit illustrates how 62 years after the
Holocaust, antisemitism in Europe still exists, and that these
insidious beliefs are alive and well - if in a new form,” said
Shalev. “We must always be vigilant as antisemitism, whether
classic, or in its current anti-Israel manifestation, attempts
to make inroads and influence young people and the uninformed.
Only through vigilance and education can we hope to combat
this alarming phenomenon. That is why I am pleased that this
exhibit will travel throughout Germany, and hopefully to other
countries in Europe as well.”
Including some
45 panels, divided into thirteen chapters, the exhibit begins
with a review of the Jews’ demography and richness of Jewish
life, then a brief history of antisemitism, before focusing on
current examples of antisemitic expressions over the past
decade. “Classic” religious-based antisemitism of the extreme
Christian right is presented side by side with the newer
antisemitism that is often mixed with extreme anti-Israel
sentiment and the violent language of Islamists and the
radical left. The trivilialization and denial of the Holocaust
that has become a mainstay of antisemites and its use as a
rhetorical weapon, is examined as well. The exhibit looks at
current expressions of antisemitism in the European media,
through caricatures, photos, and more, as well as at
antisemitic attacks in Europe, including violence and
vandalism.