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Serbia becomes latest country to adopt IHRA definition of antisemitism

The Israeli embassy in Belgrade welcomed the move

June 3, 2020 08:29
Faculty of Special Education and Rehabilitation in Belgrade, which was owned by Jews before the WWII and confiscated by Nazis during the occupation of Belgrade from 1941-1945.
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Serbia has become the eleventh country to adopt the International Holocaust Remembrance Alliance (IHRA) definition of antisemitism.

Israel’s embassy in Belgrade welcomed the move, stating that it “will help Serbia in recognizing and prosecuting cases of this dangerous phenomenon.”

According to JNS, the decision of the Serbian government had been made several months ago, but the government did not want news of it to be lost amid the coverage of the coronavirus pandemic.

Several countries have already adopted the definition of antisemitism, with the United Kingdom being the first to do so in 2016. Other Balkan states, including Romania, Bulgaria and North Macedonia, have also adopted the definition.

Prior to the Second World War, Serbia had a Jewish population of around 30,000, however two thirds of the population were murdered in the Holocaust, along with the country’s ethnic Serbs, whom Hitler also blamed for Germany’s defeat in the First World War.

After the Second World War had ended, those who survived emigrated, mostly to Israel. As of 2011, there were just over 1,300 Jews in Serbia.

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