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Europe |
Jews reluctantly abandon Swedish city amid growing anti-Semitism |
2010-07-11 |
![]() Sweden, a country long regarded as a model of tolerance, has, ironically, been a refuge for Eilenberg's family. His paternal grandparents found a home in Malmo in 1945 after surviving the Holocaust. His wife's parents came to Malmo from Poland in 1968 after the communist government there launched an anti-Semitic purge. But as in many other cities across Europe, a rapidly growing Muslim population living in segregated conditions that seem to breed alienation has mixed toxically with the anger directed at Israeli policies and actions by those Muslims -- and by many non-Muslims -- to all but transform the lives of local Jews. Like many of their counterparts in other European cities, the Jews of Malmo report being subjected increasingly to threats, intimidation and actual violence as stand-ins for Israel. "I didn't want my small children to grow up in this environment," Eilenberg said in a phone interview just before leaving Malmo. "It wouldn't be fair to them to stay in Malmo." Malmo, Sweden's third-largest city, with a population of roughly 293,900 but only 760 Jews, reached a turning point of sorts in January 2009, during Israel's military campaign in Gaza. A small, mostly Jewish group held a demonstration that was billed as a peace rally but seen as a sign of support for Israel. This peaceful demonstration was cut short when the demonstrators were attacked by a much larger screaming mob of Muslims and Swedish leftists who threw bottles and firecrackers at them as police seemed unable to stop the mounting mayhem. "I was very scared and upset at the same time," recalled Jehoshua Kaufman, a Jewish community leader. "Scared because there were a lot of angry people facing us, shouting insults and throwing bottles and firecrackers at the same time. The sound was very loud. And I was angry because we really wanted to go through with this demonstration, and we weren't allowed to finish it." Alan Widman, who is a strapping 6-foot-tall member of parliament and a non-Jewish member of the Liberal Party who represents Malmo, said simply, "I have never been so afraid in my life." The demonstrators were eventually evacuated by the police, who were not present in sufficient numbers to protect their rally. But some participants complained that the police's crowd-control dogs remained muzzled. The Eilenbergs are not particularly religious, but they have a strong Jewish identity and felt unable to live in Malmo as Jews after this episode. Eilenberg said he knows at least 15 other Jewish families that are thinking about moving away. |
Posted by:ryuge |
#5 Europe needs to curb Muslim immigration They cannot let Turkey into the EU. Turkey only manages to be a secular state by the force of the army. That is all that holds the Islamists in check. If Turkey joins the EU it is all over. |
Posted by: anon1 2010-07-11 19:03 |
#4 None of this is going to end well. |
Posted by: Secret Asian Man 2010-07-11 16:22 |
#3 When Sturup is renamed Yasser Arafat International Airport, you may wish to relook your Malmo real restate holdings. |
Posted by: Besoeker 2010-07-11 15:36 |
#2 And so it begins. |
Posted by: Swanimote 2010-07-11 14:14 |
#1 There should be an effort to stigmatize Malmo, that every time there is a mention of the liberalism in which Swedes are so proud, the name "Malmo" alone should be enough to dispel their self-congratulations. "The Swedes *used* to be liberal and egalitarian, but now, well, Malmo. Need I say more?" |
Posted by: Anonymoose 2010-07-11 14:11 |