German activists threaten by Israeli official.
In the Ministry of Intelligence Services there is one person
responsible for international relations. That same person is also
currently threatening the citizens of Germany.
On December 15th, Maj. Res. Arye Sharuz Shalicar published a status on his personal Facebook page, in which he shared a report from the German newspaper Welt on Israeli security forces using live fire to disperse a protest on the outskirts of Ramallah. The protests in Palestine, against Trump’s declaration to move the U.S. embassy to Jerusalem, were accompanied by demonstrations across the world, including in Germany.
Sharuz Shalicar’s status included a message for the protesters:
“PLEASE SHARE! The message of this article goes out to all those in Germany, who think they can burn a Star of David in public without punishment. WE know WHO you are, WHERE you are, and HOW to bring YOU to justice. Live in fear!”
In the eyes of the Ministry of Intelligence Services, it isn’t enough that Israeli citizens live in fear — now it wants to rain terror on citizens of the world. Thus, it seems we have gotten to a point in which the representative of a government ministry is threatening the residents of a foreign country — who are exercising their democratic right to protest — all while linking to an article on the Israeli army’s use of live fire against an occupied territory.
In the past few days, German media outlets have been flooded with reports and analyses on the burning of an Israeli flag during a demonstration in Berlin. In response, politicians from centrist parties, as well as the Central Council of Jews in Germany, have called to outlaw flag burning.
This has come up, for example, in the rhetoric surrounding the “burning of the Star of David.” Photos from the protest clearly show an Israeli flag being burned, which the Ministry of Intelligence Services surely knows how to recognize. This is not merely a Jewish symbol, but a national flag that has turned into a symbol of occupation and oppression of the Palestinian people. Why should people refrain from burning a symbol of their own oppression?
The Ministry of Intelligence Services has some work to do if it wants to raise the anxiety levels of Germany’s residents, including Jewish ones.
Meanwhile, Jewish Antifa Berlin has suggested its own way of celebrating Hanukkah. The group published a photo of a Menorah with various national flags in place of candles, accompanied by the following text: “On our Chanukia, instead of candles, there are now the symbols of human bondage – the national flags of repressive regimes from all over the world, which, in their own unique ways, are responsible for global misery. Their sacralization is the modern form of idolatry.”
In response, Arye Sharuz Shalicar offered the following explanation: “This is my private page. I was born and raised in Germany and have faced hundreds of anti-Semitic attacks from young Muslims. It is inconceivable that they threaten Jews and burn Jewish/Israeli symbols. It hurts me personally and I am no longer willing to tolerate it.
I must also add that I had and continue to have Muslim friends in Germany who are also tired of it, since the violent behavior of a few thousands gives the average German the feeling that every person with a Middle Eastern/Arab/Muslim background is a radical, which is entirely untrue, and this only strengthens the radical right.”
Inna Michaeli is a feminist activist, a PhD student of Sociology at the Humboldt University of Berlin, and a blogger at Local Call, where this piece was first published in Hebrew. Read it here.
On December 15th, Maj. Res. Arye Sharuz Shalicar published a status on his personal Facebook page, in which he shared a report from the German newspaper Welt on Israeli security forces using live fire to disperse a protest on the outskirts of Ramallah. The protests in Palestine, against Trump’s declaration to move the U.S. embassy to Jerusalem, were accompanied by demonstrations across the world, including in Germany.
Sharuz Shalicar’s status included a message for the protesters:
“PLEASE SHARE! The message of this article goes out to all those in Germany, who think they can burn a Star of David in public without punishment. WE know WHO you are, WHERE you are, and HOW to bring YOU to justice. Live in fear!”
In the eyes of the Ministry of Intelligence Services, it isn’t enough that Israeli citizens live in fear — now it wants to rain terror on citizens of the world. Thus, it seems we have gotten to a point in which the representative of a government ministry is threatening the residents of a foreign country — who are exercising their democratic right to protest — all while linking to an article on the Israeli army’s use of live fire against an occupied territory.
In the past few days, German media outlets have been flooded with reports and analyses on the burning of an Israeli flag during a demonstration in Berlin. In response, politicians from centrist parties, as well as the Central Council of Jews in Germany, have called to outlaw flag burning.
Not only a Jewish symbol
The reports are full of distortions, which present the demonstrations against the Israeli occupation — and in this case against Trump’s provocations in Jerusalem — as anti-Semitism. This creates a closed circle: appropriating the Jewish community and its symbols in the service of the occupation helps paint Palestinian protest as anti-Semitic.This has come up, for example, in the rhetoric surrounding the “burning of the Star of David.” Photos from the protest clearly show an Israeli flag being burned, which the Ministry of Intelligence Services surely knows how to recognize. This is not merely a Jewish symbol, but a national flag that has turned into a symbol of occupation and oppression of the Palestinian people. Why should people refrain from burning a symbol of their own oppression?
The Ministry of Intelligence Services has some work to do if it wants to raise the anxiety levels of Germany’s residents, including Jewish ones.
Meanwhile, Jewish Antifa Berlin has suggested its own way of celebrating Hanukkah. The group published a photo of a Menorah with various national flags in place of candles, accompanied by the following text: “On our Chanukia, instead of candles, there are now the symbols of human bondage – the national flags of repressive regimes from all over the world, which, in their own unique ways, are responsible for global misery. Their sacralization is the modern form of idolatry.”
In response, Arye Sharuz Shalicar offered the following explanation: “This is my private page. I was born and raised in Germany and have faced hundreds of anti-Semitic attacks from young Muslims. It is inconceivable that they threaten Jews and burn Jewish/Israeli symbols. It hurts me personally and I am no longer willing to tolerate it.
I must also add that I had and continue to have Muslim friends in Germany who are also tired of it, since the violent behavior of a few thousands gives the average German the feeling that every person with a Middle Eastern/Arab/Muslim background is a radical, which is entirely untrue, and this only strengthens the radical right.”
Inna Michaeli is a feminist activist, a PhD student of Sociology at the Humboldt University of Berlin, and a blogger at Local Call, where this piece was first published in Hebrew. Read it here.