۲۸ فروردین ۱۴۰۳ |۷ شوال ۱۴۴۵ | Apr 16, 2024
German far-right AfD's 'racist' Jewish group sparks outcry

Germany's far-right party AfD launched a "Jewish" group which it says will battle against mass immigration of Muslims anti-Semitic views, sparking an outcry.

Hawzah News Agency (Berlin, Germany) – Germany's far-right party AfD on Sunday launched a "Jewish" group within its ranks which it says will battle against mass immigration of Muslim men with anti-Semitic views, sparking an outcry.

The party said a group of 19 have formed "Jews in the AfD," and that anyone joining must be a card-carrying member of the party who is either ethnically or religiously Jewish.

The move drew a backlash from Germany's Jewish community, which blasted the AfD as a "racist and anti-Semitic party."

Some 250 people, many from Jewish organizations, also held a protest Sunday in Frankfurt against the new group.

"You won't get a Kosher stamp from us," said Dalia Grinfeld, who heads the Jewish students Union in Germany, at the protest.

Leading members of the AfD have come under fire repeatedly for comments that appear to play down the Holocaust.

Party co-leader Alexander Gauland in June described the Nazi period as a mere "speck of bird poo in over 1,000 years of successful German history."

Another leading AfD politician, Bjoern Hoecke, has criticized the sprawling Holocaust memorial in Berlin, branding it a "monument of shame."

Ahead of Sunday's launch, Jewish organizations including the Central Council of Jews in Germany issued a statement condemning the AfD.

"The AfD is a party that provides a home for hatred for Jews as well as the relativizing, or even denial of the Holocaust," it said.

The AfD's deputy parliamentary group leader Beatrix von Storch hit back in an interview published Sunday by broadsheet Welt am Sonntag.

Taking aim at the Central Council of Jews, von Storch compared it to "official churches", which she dismissed as "part of the establishment."

Capitalizing on discontent over an influx of asylum seekers in 2015-2016, the AfD is now the biggest opposition party in Germany with over 90 seats in parliament.

 

 

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