Israeli bill to outlaw the word Nazi sparks ire

Mail.com

JERUSALEM (AP) — An Israeli draft law that would criminalize the use of the word Nazi in most cases has sparked a debate on freedom of speech in a state that was founded out of the ashes of the Holocaust.

Seven decades later, memories of the extermination of millions of Jews during World War II permeate virtually every aspect of life in Israel. Public figures and interest groups frequently invoke the World War II genocide to score political points, and the word and Nazi symbols have slipped into Israeli discourse over the years.  

The bill would impose a fine of 100,000 shekels (nearly $29,000) and six months in jail for anybody using the word or symbols from Adolf Hitler’s Third Reich in a “wrong or inappropriate way.” Educational settings would be exempt, as would certain artistic performances, said Shimon Ohayon, the bill’s sponsor.

The Knesset gave preliminary approval to the measure on Wednesday, but it still must pass three more readings and committee discussions before becoming law. A similar effort in 2012 fell in committee amid opposition.

Ohayon, from the hard-line Yisrael Beitenu party, said the law would put Israel on par with other nations “battling anti-Semitism.” He acknowledged enforcement would largely rely on violations being reported to police.

“We want to prevent disrespect of the Holocaust,” said Ohayon, the bill’s sponsor. “We allow too many freedoms which are taking over in a way that is harming us.” Opponents say the measure endangers freedom of speech in a country that takes pride in being a democracy in a volatile region dominated by monarchies and authoritarian leaders.

“Week after week you want to shut mouths and harm freedom of expression,” said Zehava Galon, leader of the opposition Meretz party. Six million Jews were murdered in the systematic Nazi effort to kill all the Jews of Europe. Created in 1948 in the shadow of the war, Israel provided a haven for hundreds of thousands of refugees freshly liberated from Nazi death camps. Today, it is home to about 200,000 aging survivors.

Preserving the memory of the Holocaust has become a central tenet of Israeli identity. Students learn about the event from a young age and thousands of high school pupils make an annual pilgrimage to Auschwitz and other Nazi death camps in Europe to forge a personal link to the murder of millions of Jews.

The country comes to a standstill on Israel’s annual Holocaust remembrance day, when Israelis reflect for a moment as a siren sounds nationwide. Visiting foreign leaders are routinely brought to Israel’s Holocaust memorial to directly confront the dimensions of the nightmare, and the nation’s military leaders hang posters of a famous flyover by the Israeli air force over Auschwitz in 2003.

However, unlike other nations scarred by the Holocaust, such as Germany and France, Israel does not have a law specifically barring the use of Nazi symbols and they have crept into society. In the most noteworthy example, protesters at a tumultuous Jerusalem demonstration brandished pictures of Israeli Prime Minister Yitzhak Rabin in a Nazi SS uniform in the months before he was killed. Combined with calls for Rabin’s death and hard-liners branding him a traitor, critics charged that the climate of incitement emboldened Rabin’s assassin to shoot him.

Ultra-Orthodox Jewish demonstrators have donned yellow Nazi-style Star of David patches to protest government policy and shouted “Nazis” at Israeli police who try to break them up. Jewish settlers have worn the patches as Israeli soldiers removed them from settlements to be evacuated. Sports fans have been heard taunting players with the slur “Nazi.”

The Holocaust also has routinely been invoked — some say exploited — for political aims. Israeli Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu frequently compares Iran’s nuclear ambitions to Nazi Germany. Tehran denies it is seeking atomic weapons, as Israel and its allies allege. Some Israeli doves have also compared Israel’s occupation of the West Bank and Gaza and its treatment of the Palestinians to Nazi behavior.

Many experts said they don’t see a need for such a law in Israel. Israeli historian Tom Segev said Israelis already treat the legacy of the Holocaust with the gravitas it deserves. He also called into question how the law would be enforced and the feasibility of throwing anyone who mentioned the word “Nazi” into jail.

Robert Rozett, from Israel’s Holocaust memorial Yad Vashem, said education and public figures should guide society’s relationship with the symbols. “Through education, through the example of our leaders, cultural and political and others, people would understand that they should not use these symbols when they don’t belong,” he said.

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18 thoughts on “Israeli bill to outlaw the word Nazi sparks ire

    1. another truth, in 1938, the world atlas/facts, that their were only 3 and 1/2 million jews in whole of europ, so were did 6 million arrive, i visited belson, i saw the photo’s i,d saw them when i was five, see finklestein, from new york on youtube, he admits its false,

  1. “….anybody using the word or symbols from Adolf Hitler’s Third Reich in a “wrong or inappropriate way.”

    This is hysterical. I guess the Jews are getting tired of being compared to the Nazis, so they want to legislate that only German Nazis are Nazis, and no one can legally notice that the Jews are far worse.

    1. Bingo JR! Israel knows that their actions against the Palestinians is seen by the World as being parallel to the actions of Nazi Germany or, grossly exceeding Germany’s atrocities.

    2. on youtube channel lezlow111, it showed news paper article of british newspaper, stating that, judea has declared war on hitler government, well before he entered poland to liberate germans who were being murdered by polish army, and chamberland knew about it,

  2. Its obviosly eroding the holohoax myth of 6 million and their claims of victims they use to get people to feel sorry for them. This is how they roll. In addition of the headline article about jews declaring war on Germany it should be added the 6 million number was first used in 1919. It is a giant sick joke by a nation whose language is lie and deny and its history from day one is phony and only export is misery. There is nothing that comes from them that benefts the human race. In reality they are worse than the Nazi s ever dreamed of and nothing but a parasite. No matter what laws they pass the look of disgust and the contempt will always be exempt

  3. “Ohayon, from the hard-line Yisrael Beitenu party, said the law would put Israel on par with other nations “battling anti-Semitism.”

    This coming from the most anti-Semitic scum of the earth.

  4. ““We allow too many freedoms which are taking over in a way that is harming us.””

    Kinda sounds like Barry’s rhetoric.

    “Opponents say the measure endangers freedom of speech in a country that takes pride in being a democracy in a volatile region dominated by monarchies and authoritarian leaders.””

    So I’m guessing they are not a Constitutional Republic like we are or they are trying to use the same rhetoric they use in the U.S. to make the people believe they are a democracy when they are clearly not.

  5. “Six million Jews were murdered in the systematic Nazi effort to kill all the Jews of Europe.”

    Bahahahahaha! Maybe we should all send these journalists who write this stuff an almanac of that year to prove that 6 million figure never existed. I’m getting real sick of their continuous lies. Not that the almanac would make a difference to them, but it would get their attention that we the people don’t believe them anymore.

  6. Don’t they EVER take a break from making trouble???? The same thing, all throughout history. Creating division, unrest, hate, dishonesty, confusion, usury, and everything else that is undesirable.

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