ajwps
Active Member
It appears that European countries are now returning to the days of WW2 when hatred of the Jewish people was rampant. Most Europeans either ignored the murder of their neighbors, turned the Jews over to the Nazis or even took part in wholesale slaughter of those 'damn Jews.'
Well there at it again. Remember that less than .01% of the world's population of Jews are ruling the world by proxy. Wow...
I say if the majority of the world finds the Jews evil, then by G-d they must be by the majority decision.
Well there at it again. Remember that less than .01% of the world's population of Jews are ruling the world by proxy. Wow...
I say if the majority of the world finds the Jews evil, then by G-d they must be by the majority decision.
Reuters
LONDON - A report on anti-Semitism in Europe has
been shelved by the EU's racism watchdog after it
found that Muslims and pro-Palestinian groups were
behind many of the incidents, the Financial Times
reported on Saturday.
The European Monitoring Centre
on Racism and Xenophobia
(EUMC) decided not to publish
the research after clashing
with its authors over their
definition of anti-Semitism,
which included anti-Israel
acts, the paper said.
"The decision not to publish
was a political decision," a source familiar
with the report told the Financial Times. He
said the report had uncovered a "trend towards
Muslim anti-Semitism, while on the left there
is also mobilization against Israel that is not
always free of prejudice".
The report was commissioned by the EUMC
following a peak in anti-Semitic activity in
early 2002. Its leaked findings come just a
week after the bombing of a Jewish school near
Paris and suicide attacks on two Istanbul
synagogues.
A deputy board member not named by the paper
confirmed the directors of the EUMC had
regarded the study as biased, adding that they
had judged the focus on Muslim and
pro-Palestinian perpetrators to be
inflammatory.
An extract from the report obtained by the
Financial Times stated: "...it can be concluded
that the anti-Semitic incidents in the
monitoring period were committed above all by
rightwing extremists and radical Islamists or
young Muslims."
Beate Winkler, EUMC director, told the paper the
report was shelved because of problems with
time scales but also due to the overly
complicated definition of anti-Semitism. "Of
course there are people of Arab descent
committing such acts. This will be represented
in our next report," she added.