From the BBC:
“Belgian city of Aalst says
anti-Semitic parade 'just fun'”
A Belgian city has defended as
"just fun" a carnival featuring caricatures of Orthodox Jews wearing
huge fur hats, long fake noses and ant costumes. Israel, Jewish groups and
Belgian Prime Minister Sophie Wilmès were among many who strongly condemned the
costumes in Sunday's parade in Aalst. Some
critics said likening Jews to ants was similar to Nazi anti-Semitism, which
persecuted Jews as "vermin". The Aalst mayor's spokesman told the BBC
"it's our humour... just fun". Peter Van den Bossche said "there
isn't a movement behind it" and "we don't wish harm to anyone". "It's our parade, our humour, people can
do whatever they want," he said. "It's a weekend of freedom of speech."
Critics called this mockery of Orthodox Jews and the Western Wall anti-Semitic Aalst lies 31km (19 miles) northwest of
Brussels - the heart of the EU - and is run by the New Flemish Alliance (N-VA),
a nationalist party pushing for Flanders independence. The city drew much
criticism for parading caricature Jews last year - so much so that it was
dropped from Unesco's cultural heritage list in December. After the outcry,
Aalst itself had asked to be taken off the list. Unesco - the UN's educational
and cultural agency - was also satirised in the parade on Sunday. Other floats
mocked UK Prime Minister Boris Johnson and Brexit, climate activist Greta
Thunberg, and Jesus Christ on the cross. There were also people parading in
Nazi SS uniform - despite the fact that, in World War Two, the Nazis deported
about 25,000 Jews from occupied Belgium to the Auschwitz death camp, where most
were murdered. Aalst mocks Brexit, with a float featuring Boris Johnson and the
Queen In Sunday's parade some caricature
Jews posed with a mock-up of the Western Wall - often called Jerusalem's
Wailing Wall, a holy site for Jews. It was labelled "the wailing
ant", in Dutch "de klaugmier". The Dutch for "wailing wall"
is "klaagmuur". "This doesn't encourage anti-Semitism; the
reaction last year was over the top," Mr Van den Bossche said. "Two
hundred percent it's not anti-Semitic." Mock-Nazis parading in Aalst - in
a country that was terrorised by the Nazis He underlined that the carnival themes were
based on news events as seen in Aalst - hence the mockery of Unesco. When asked
about the Nazi characters in Sunday's carnival, he said: "Those symbols -
normally we don't accept that, we condemn that. "We say: what can we do about it? Put
people in prison? No." Israel's foreign ministry director-general Yuval
Rotem tweeted that Aalst had indulged in "despicable anti-Semitic
exhibitions". Belgian PM Sophie
Wilmès said the pretend Jews in the Aalst parade "harm our values and our
country's reputation". "The
use of stereotypes stigmatising communities and groups based on their origins
leads to divisions and endangers our togetherness," she said. Joël Rubinfeld, head of the Belgian League
against anti-Semitism, said: "It is sad, deplorable, shameful that 50
persons are tainting an entire carnival, a popular celebration. It gives a
catastrophic image of the city of Aalst and also of our country abroad."
^ Making fun of a person –
especially a public figure like Greta Thunberg - during Carnival is fine and funny (as long
as you don’t call for them being harmed) but making fun of a whole race of
people - like the Jews – is disgusting,
racist, and in this case, Anti-Semitic. It is not humor when you go after a
whole race and promote their death (i.e. the use of the Nazis.) The Mayor and
people of Aalst that support this kind of hate are only showing the world that
they are racists and Neo-Nazis and that people would be better to stay away
from Aalst at all costs. ^
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