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Toby Axelrod

ByToby Axelrod, Toby Axelrod Berlin

Opinion

I understand the temptation to compare today's Germany to the 1930s, but it’s wrong

Constant historical references distract us from weeding out today's antisemitism, our Berlin correspondent says

June 21, 2019 09:13
The rise of the anti-immigrant Alternative for Germany (AfD) party has generated alarm
2 min read

With news of antisemitic incidents on the rise in Germany, readers abroad may understandably be concerned. In Berlin alone, where I live, the number of incidents rose by 14 per cent over the previous year, to 1,083.

Many cases are never solved — and it’s likely that many are not reported, either — but where perpetrators are identified, the vast majority comes from far-right circles, with some in extreme left or Islamic categories.

Just this week, a 20-year-old man wearing a kippah was spat on and insulted in Berlin. And a rabbi who served in Düsseldorf for 18 years reported having been harassed by an aggressive man — the first such incident in all that time.

But these statistics do not permeate my everyday world. I personally feel safe on the streets and in the synagogues; in the latter, security systems perhaps serve more to reassure participants than to protect against an unseen threat.