Posted on 03/30/2007 5:23:03 PM PDT by Cornpone
Around ten per cent of the Swiss population are anti-Semitic, according to a wide-ranging study of anti-Jewish and anti-Israeli attitudes published on Friday.
The survey also found that more than a quarter of the population had a tendency to agree with anti-Jewish stereotypes.
Reacting to the study, Jewish organisations said that more needed to be done to raise awareness. The Federal Commission against Racism said that every percentage was "too much".
The research, which questioned 1,030 people across the country in February, was carried out by the gfs polling institute in Bern for the Federal Commission against Racism, in cooperation with the Jewish weekly magazine Tachles.
It found that ten per cent of the Swiss population had "systematic anti-Semitic attitudes".
This group was overrepresented in the Italian-speaking part of the country, in the lower socio-economic strata, on the right end of the political spectrum, in rural areas and among those with no Jewish acquaintances.
Another 28 per cent held selective anti-Semitic views and 15 per cent felt resentment and disappointment due to Israel's policies, but did not have particularly negative attitudes towards the Jewish population.
A generally positive attitude towards Jews was observed among 37 per cent of the population. Ten per cent of answers were unclassified.
Swiss Jewish community
In all 55 per cent regarded the Jewish minority in Switzerland - there are an estimated 20,000 Jews in the country with respect. But a strong minority of this percentage was critical of the perceived self-imposed segregation of the Jewish community.
Almost half of those asked rejected the notion that Jewish people had too much influence on world politics, with 72 per cent holding the same view for Swiss politics.
In terms of the debate over the Swiss position in the Second World War regarding Jews - its refugee policy, and the money deposited in Switzerland by Nazi victims - the report said that the Swiss no longer considered themselves as victims of Jewish pressure to make amends.
However, the report found that the Swiss were generally critical of Israel.
Fifty-four per cent believe Israel is governed by religious fanatics and 50 per cent think Israel is carrying out what the report terms a "war of extermination" against the Occupied Territories.
The authors pointed out that although this "emotional resentment" against Israel's foreign policy was applied to Jews in general, the criticism did not amount to an anti-Semitic attitude.
What's this? Federal Commission against Racism Community reactions
For Alfred Donath, president of the Swiss Federation of Jewish Communities, the ten per cent was "worrying". But he said it had remained constant in recent years.
Donath said that anti-Semites usually did not know any Jews personally. "We have to make Judaism and Jewish thinking better known," he told the Swiss news agency.
This view was shared by William Wyler, the head of the David Centre that campaigns against anti-Semitism in Switzerland. He believes that the percentage of hardcore anti-Semites is roughly equivalent to that of other countries.
The Federal Commission against Racism said the ten per cent was too big, but noted that it would be hard to target this group.
"We are interested in the 28 per cent who have anti-Semitic tendencies," said its president Georg Kreis.
He added that similar wide-ranging studies were necessary regarding society's attitude towards Muslims and travellers.
Gotta be higher. Egypt runs a TV show ,"...The Egyptian 40 part TV series connecting the State of Israels founding to the principles of the Protocols of the Elders of Zion...."
Jew/Israel bashing is a common Muslim State tactic. Muslim children do not spring into this world hating Jews. They are taught in State sanctioned media and schools to hate.
I met a girl from Switzerland a few years back. I asked her if she had French, German or Italian in her family history. She told me she had a Palestinian parent....Need I say more.
ping
Oh.
So she was "swiss."
Heidi in a Burqua.
Willaim Tell with a Suicide Belt.
That kind of "swiss."
Disclaimer: Opinions posted on Free Republic are those of the individual posters and do not necessarily represent the opinion of Free Republic or its management. All materials posted herein are protected by copyright law and the exemption for fair use of copyrighted works.