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Lavrov's 'Hitler was a Jew' claim is part of the long history of Russian antisemitism

Zelensky follows in the footsteps of Jewish dissidents and iconoclasts - a David who does not fear Goliath. This is why Putin and Lavrov wish to turn him into a neo-Nazi.

May 4, 2022 09:27
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Russian Foreign Minister Sergei Lavrov gestures during a press conference following talks with his Italian counterpart in Moscow, on February 17, 2022. (Photo by SHAMIL ZHUMATOV / POOL / AFP) (Photo by SHAMIL ZHUMATOV/POOL/AFP via Getty Images)
4 min read

The remarks of Sergei Lavrov to Italian television last Sunday that Hitler was of 'Jewish blood' and that 'the most ardent antisemites were Jews' shocked Jews around the world.

Deliberate or not, they caused a rupture between Moscow and Jerusalem. Naftali Bennett and Yair Lapid reacted personally — as Jews. The late father of the Israeli Foreign Minister, Yair Lapid, had been saved from Nazi extermination — together with tens of thousands of Hungarian Jews in a Budapest Ghetto in 1944 — through the efforts of the Swedish diplomat, Raoul Wallenberg.

In a subsequent statement, the Russian Foreign Ministry enthusiastically promoted Lavrov's view by pointing the finger at Kyiv and at past instances of Ukrainian antisemitism. The Russian Foreign Ministry labelled Lapid's angry reaction as 'anti-historical'. Yet this deflection strategy conveniently ignored Russia's long history of antisemitism — stretching back to the 1920s when references were made to the Jewish origins of Trotsky, Zinoviev and Kamenev, Bolshevik revolutionaries who opposed Stalin.

By 1934, while Oswald Mosely and the British Union of Fascists were holding rallies at the Royal Albert Hall and at Olympia, Jews who wished to leave for Palestine were being arrested. With the onset of the Great Purge in 1937, many Jews who were in exile or incarcerated in the Gulag, disappeared without trace.