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בלמ"ס/מיידי

 

אל: כל הנציגויות

דע: תפוצת הסברה

מאת: מח' מידע ואינטרנט – אגף תקשורת

 

הנדון: עופרת יצוקה – גינוי גל האנטישמיות

 

 

 

Jerusalem, 12 January 2009

 

 

 

Israel Expresses its Concern about Current Wave of Anti-Semitism

(Communicated by the Foreign Ministry Spokesman)

 

Vice Prime Minister and Minister of Foreign Affairs Tzipi Livni has expressed Israel's concern about the current wave of antisemitic attacks in various parts of the world. 

 

Israel has embarked on a defensive campaign against Hamas, a terrorist organization which, on a daily basis, has launched rocket and mortar barrages, thus threatening the lives of Israel's civilians - men, women, and children. Moreover, Hamas' Charter and many declarations to this very day call for the destruction of Israel and, using antisemitic epithets, call for the annihilation of the Jewish people.

 

We have received with great concern and revulsion many reports of physical, moral, verbal and other manifestations of antisemitic attacks towards Jews and Israeli citizens in many parts of the world. Examples of these include physical assault, violence and abuse towards Jews, the desecration of cemeteries and synagogues, the use of antisemitic incitement in pro-Palestinian demonstrations, the writing of antisemitic graffiti on Jewish property, as well as cartoons, editorials and other press stories reminiscent of the kind that appeared in the media of certain countries during the darkest days of the early 20th century. Israel and the Jewish people are appalled at these expressions of incitement, hatred and blatant extremism.

 

The Government of Israel therefore calls upon the leaders of the world to condemn, suppress and curb any and all forms of such incitement and hate, and to further hold accountable those responsible for their actions. We know that there is a delicate balance in maintaining freedom of expression while preventing it from becoming hate speech or worse. Nonetheless, the dangers that lie within the Pandora's box that appears to have been opened with this current wave of anti-Semitism are known too well to humanity, and we must all strive to prevent all forms of  incitement to hatred and discrimination, whoever the victim might be.

 

Israel will continue to defend the operation it has undertaken to defend the lives of its citizens from systematic and continuous terrorist attacks. Nevertheless, whatever one's opinion may be of this operation, it should never be used to legitimize hate and antisemitic incitement.

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Credits, from top: Motti Buganim, who has lived his entire life in Sderot, stands outside his house on 12/29, which was hit by a Kassam. He and his wife and child took cover in a sheltered room in the house when the rocket hit. Photo courtesy JAFI. Israeli kids huddle in their family bomb shelter in Ashkelon during a 'red alert' as the missile-warning siren sounds on Jan. 1, 2009. Credit: JAFI. Funeral for Netivot's Beber Vaknin, killed by a missile from Gaza.  Photo by AP/Ariel Schalit. An Israeli tank near the Gaza border, as warplanes strike Hamas targets. Photo by Brian Hendler/JTA. An Israeli home in Netivot, damaged by a missile from Gaza on 12/28. Photo courtesy JAFI. Israelis comfort each other after a Palestinian missile hits their house in Tkuma on Dec. 24. Photo by AP/Yehuda Lahiani. Participants at Jan. 7, 2009 Israel Solidarity rally in Washington. Credit: Betty Adler Photography, 2009, for The Jewish Federation of Greater Washington