Posted on 02/26/2011 3:21:50 AM PST by WesternCulture
A year after claims about an exodus of Jews from Malmö made global headlines, many Jewish residents still don't feel safe in southern Sweden, The Local's Karen Holst discovers.
The past couple of years have been turbulent for Malmö's Jewish community. A spike in anti-Semitic attacks in 2009 prompted a number of Jews to leave the city altogether, concluding they would never feel accepted there.
Controversial comments by the town's long-serving Social Democratic mayor Ilmar Reepalu also put Malmö in the spotlight, drawing criticism from within his own party, as well as from influential Jewish organisations aboard.
And in December 2010, the US-based Simon Wiesenthal Center issued a warning urging Jews to exercise "extreme caution" when traveling in southern Sweden.
While current statistics show a significant decline in anti-Semitic attacks in 2010 when compared to 2009, the nearly 3,000-member Jewish community in Skåne continues to shrink.
People wonder if there will even be a Jewish community here in 10 years, Fredrik Sieradzki, spokesperson for the Jewish Community of Malmö (Judiska Församlingen i Malmö), tells The Local.
Despite the decrease in reported attacks, as well as community efforts to ease racist rancor, many of south Swedens Jewish residents continue to feel dangerously threatened.
According to Sieradzki, many young Jewish families are relocating because they feel Skåne is not a safe area to raise their children. Coupled with an aging baby-boomer generation, there are few willing or present to take vacated leadership positions within many of the area's Jewish organisations.
Some of us feel there is no hope and we are losing people because of anti-Semitism, he adds.
Police reports show the number of anti-Semitic incidents nearly doubled in 2009 but have declined in 2010 by more than half.
We believe the number of attacks increased in 2009 due to the Davies Cup and two big demonstrations against Israel. Now the statistics show hate-crime against Jews going down dramatically in 2010, explains Susanne Gosenius, a hate crime coordinator for Skåne police.
Sieradzki argues, however, that the numbers may not reflect reality as many Jewish residents choose not to report every incident, such as intimidating slurs and other verbal attacks.
Maybe the numbers are lower or maybe not. It doesnt matter because the feeling is the same many of us cannot and do not feel at home here, says Sieradzki.
He points out that the severity of attacks is also intensifying.
Last October a group of about 20 teenagers attacked the Jewish communitys residential education centre during a youth retreat.
The first night they shouted vicious, nasty slurs. The next night it escalated and they broke down the fence and were banging on windows and doors, Sieradzki explains.
It was quite frightening.
Sieradzki, who applauded the nearby municipality of Vellinge for its swift response to the incident, also points out that the teenagers in the attacking group were not Muslim as many are quick to assume.
These boys were not Arabs. They were all Swedish. And I assure you the Jewish people are not attacking anybody.
Despite the years decline in reported attacks, the Simon Wiesenthal Center, the largest international organization for Jewish human rights, nevertheless went ahead with its decision to issue a travel warning for Jews visiting southern Sweden.
The move put Skåne to the same plane as countries that have experienced heinous, even fatal attacks and bombings on Jewish people, such as Turkey, Greece and Belgium.
We made a very serious statement by putting Malmö on our advisory list, Rabbi Abraham Cooper, Associate Dean of the Center, tells The Local.
Its a serious move and we hope to take serious measures to rectify it.
But the warning rankled some members of Malmö's Jewish community, who claim they weren't informed about the move ahead of time, and surprised local authorities as statistics showed that attacks were on the decline.
I can understand that Jewish people feel threatened in Malmö, hate crimes specialist Gosenius explains.
We have a huge population from the Middle East, West Bank and Gaza and most (Jewish) victims describe their perpetrators as young Muslim men.
But Im not sure the warning for Malmö fits. Its a very drastic act.
Sieradzki has mixed emotions about the Wiesenthal Center's "surprise" advisory.
While he understands the Centers point, he argues the move may have been too severe and feels the Jewish leaders in Skåne could have helped moderate the message had they known about it.
They should have talked to us first, argues Sieradzki.
We are trying to create an atmosphere in Malmö where we co-exist and Im not sure that this travel warning is good.
Rabbi Cooper rejects the idea that the Center's warning came as a surprise, pointing to a meeting in Stockholm prior to the advisory where prominent members of south Swedens Jewish community were in attendance.
The analysis comes from the ground up, says Cooper.
Experiences from Jewish members in Malmö and a previous colleague there led to what we did.
He stated that families should be able to go to any house of worship, whether its Fridays, Saturdays or Sundays, without fear of intimidation, violence or something worse.
People of faith, or no faith, should be able to walk on the street and feel equally protected. There is a climate of intimidation in Malmö and we need to take steps to address it, says Cooper.
In response to 2009s hike in attacks, Malmö city officials created the Dialogue Forum to ease hostilities between Jews, Muslims, the Roma, and other victimized minorities.
As the Forum's one-year anniversary approaches, the Jewish community believes the dialogue has had little effect.
Its sad we have to have a group, and we do hope something good comes of it but there hasnt been anything yet, says Sieradzki, adding that the 6,000-member Islamic Centre, of their own initiative, recently invited members of the Jewish community to their mosque.
Mayor Reepalu, who was also singled out by the Wiesenthal Center last year for comments about the city's Jewish community in which he "blamed the situation on the Jews themselves as the community did not 'distance itself from Israel,'" according to the Center.
While Reepalu refused to be interviewed for this article, he has undertaken efforts in the last year to make amends and further understand the hostilities Jewish people encounter in Malmö through meetings with Sieradzki and other Jewish community leaders.
Since then the 15-year mayor has invited members from the Simon Wiesenthal Center to Malmö, although an exact date for the visit has not yet been set.
I can confirm we are coming to Sweden and we are coming next month, says Rabbi Cooper.
While the agenda for the meeting is still being hammered out, the focus will likely be on improving the situation in southern Sweden.
The meeting will be also accompanied by a seminar on anti-Semitism and Islamophobia.
"Its good that something is happening," says Sieradzki.
"There are Jews is Malmö. We live here, we are here to stay and we wont gain anything by attacking each other."
Unfortunately I have not time to get deeply involved in this discussion concerning my old hometown. However, there are a few statements and misconceptions regarding the history of Folke Bernadotte and the White Buses I would like to comment.
1) Western Culture’s relatives who took part in the rescue operation certainly would have risked their lives. The buses had to traverse several areas in Germany that were exposed to Allied bombing raids. According to a story (in German unfortunately: Demokratische_Geschichte_Band_02_Essay11-1.pdf) about the White Buses several Swedes were killed during the bombing raids.
2) After the rescue Count Bernadotte received several hundreds of letters from grateful rescuees and people grateful for his actions. These letters are retained in the State Archives (Riksarkivet). That Western Culture’s relatives never got any personal thanks (during the actual rescue operation , one presumes) may possibly be explained by the story related in the same document quoted above.
Basically the rescuers were totally naïve about what the prisoners had endured, and the prisoners - especially the Jewish ones - were terrified of the ambulances, since they knew what use closed vehicles had been put to in other camps.
3) To call Count Bernadotte “the best friend the Jews ever had” is stretching things quite a bit. Firstly, the rescue action was not mainly concerned with Jewish prisoners, but with Scandinavian detainees - Jewish or Gentile. Later on more non-Scandinavians, especially women, were rescued.
Folke Bernadotte’s own political position has been widely discussed by historians. At best considered “very conservative”, at worst openly sympathetic to the Nazi cause.
His friendship and later defence in the war crime trials of Walter Schellenberg, Second-in-command of the Gestapo, head of the SD and the Abwehr, and successor of Wilhelm Canaris as the head of the Combined Secret Services, hardly served to show him in a good light. Very difficult to square a close friendship with an SS- and Gestapo-officer, with friendship of the Jewish people. (Of course, that does not justify the assassination of Count Bernadotte, but that really should go without saying.)
Well, I live in Los Angeles and I have read enough about Malmo to know not to go there if I ever should visit; same for the outlying communities around Paris — like, for instance, St. Denis, which we ventured into one evening about 5 pm. to see the French Kings’ cathedral there. Yegad. Might be nice at noon.
Yah, and some of us of Viking blood have made it to the Far Land of California. We are still berzerkers at heart, tho.
Kurt would be most unhappy.
If WC follows his (or her) usual form, he’ll have run now that he has been confronted with the illogic of his positions.
You don’t live in Gothenburg, but in the same State as I. W.C. was the first name in the reply and you were c.c.!!!
“Im not an expert of neither Malmö or NYC, but just like most of us wouldnt take a stroll through Central Park after dark, we wouldnt do so in Kungsparken, Malmö or any other city with a population of over 100 000 or so.”
Hogwash!
We were married in Malmo (Sjomansgaarden) in 1983 and until 2000 we made many trips to Scandinavia on business and stayed in our apartment on Mariedalsvagen!!
I had a brother and other family members in Copenhagen that we often visited taking the last hydrofoil/catamaran back to Malmo and could very safely walking through the parks long after midnight. During our last trip in 2000 we were warned not to do that because of the muzzie youth gangster’s preying on regular citizens!!!
http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=5a1PM6YB8wg
You really have to be careful with your postings!
Denmark and Norway are the REAL Vikings, while Sweden had an "open" door policy during the WWII!!
I went to school with a Jewish boy/friend in Copenhagen and since 1943 I never saw him again. But I remember vividly when I personally saw the Red Cross buses coming up from Germany rolling through the streets of Copenhagen down to the railway ferry taking them over to Malmo!!!
So please explain how YOUR relatives risked their lives, hmmm. And who was it that really risked their lives shipping over the Danish Jews in small fishing boats???
That's Abram's country = later Abraham, Isac, Jacob aka (Israel)!!!
When did I ever say I lived in Göteborg or anywhere else in Sweden?
That was another poster who said they lived there.
I live in Dade City FL, north of Tampa...anybody can XX my profile phone number and find out exactly where I am.
I am one of the LEAST secretive, anonymous, or misleading people on this forum.
“You really have to be careful with your postings!”
- Teach me all you can.
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