By Stefan J. Bos, Chief International Correspondent Worthy News
AMSTERDAM (Worthy News) – Jewish leaders fear an outbreak of antisemitism on Saturday, May 4, when the Netherlands will observe two minutes of silence for those who died in World War Two, including over 100,000 Dutch Jewish people and more recent armed conflicts.
The main focus is on Amsterdam, the capital, where the Dutch royal family and other dignitaries attend the live televised ceremony at 8 pm local time.
Unlike previous years, only 10,000 of the usual 20,000 people will be allowed to attend the event at Dam Square near the Royal Palace of Amsterdam amid security concerns, said Mayor Femke Halsema.
More than a decade ago, a man shouted during the moment of silence, causing massive panic and forcing security forces to evacuate the royal family briefly.
Yet this year’s extra security measures have done little to ease concerns about possible incidents, explained Dave Heilbron, a board member of the Amsterdam-based Centraal Joods Overleg, or ‘Central Jewish Consultation’ (CJO) advocacy group.
“I know of a woman in the [Amsterdam suburb town] of Amstelveen who was hiding after being threatened at home by three women because her daughter serves in the Israeli army,” he told Christian television channel Family7 on Friday.
HOLOCAUST MUSEUM
Jewish people were also targeted elsewhere, including during the recent opening of the Holocaust museum in Amsterdam, where relatives of Holocaust victims and survivors heard slogans such as “dirty Jews,” Heilbron stressed.
Heilbron noted that he, too, faced antisemitism. “The Taxi company Uber here is no longer picking me up because I am [outspoken] Jewish.”
Uber could not immediately be reached for comment about this case, though the firm is generally believed to pick up Jewish people among its customers.
Heilbron also said that he removed a Jewish symbol from his home in North Amsterdam amid mounting tensions. “I think this is like [the Nazi-era of the] the 1930s,” he argued, adding that many of the up to 45,000 Jews are fearful in cities such as Amsterdam, Rotterdam, and The Hague.
His observations were confirmed by Holocaust survivor Phia Baruch, a Dutch journalist and founder of Worthy News’ online news partner, De Couturekrant (The Couture Newspaper).
“Some Jews fear civil war in the Netherlands. I know a Jewish pedicure salon owner and her daughter who closed their Amsterdam store. The owner was rushed to hospital with heart issues due to a heart rhythm disorder due to stress over hatred towards Jews,” Baruch told Worthy News.
JEWISH STUDENTS
Jewish students were also anxiously awaiting the annual Remembrance of the Dead on May 4. “Jewish students fear that the American anti-Israel protests will spread to universities here in the Netherlands,” noted Tamar Efrati, a Jewish student in Amsterdam.
“These protesters want all universities to halt their cooperation with Israel and universities to view Zionism as discrimination,” Efrati added.
The mounting antisemitism has been linked to anger among pro-Palestine protesters about Israel’s war against Hamas in Gaza
However, an opinion poll published by Dutch broadcasters showed some 91 percent of those questioned are against allowing protests during the national moment of silence.
Some Palestinian activists said they, therefore, decided to hold an alternative memorial remembering Israel’s “genocide” in Gaza.
They gathered near Amsterdam’s Homomonument, or Gay Memorial, which commemorates gays and lesbians killed by Nazi Germany.
The Palestinian activists did not address concerns within the LGBTQ+ community that same-sex activity is strictly prohibited in Hamas-ruled Gaza.
Copyright 1999-2024 Worthy News. This article was originally published on Worthy News and was reproduced with permission.
Latest News from Worthy News
The ‘Days of Repentance’ operation launched by Israel against Iran in late October targeted and destroyed a highly secretive nuclear weapons research facility in Parchin, according to Axios.
A United Nations committee has agreed to tackle “hate speech” and “misinformation” globally through Artificial Intelligence (AI) and media, despite worries the approach may “stifle pluralistic debate.”
Christians in Myanmar’s Rakhine state face continued persecution by the country’s Buddhist military junta (Tatmadaw), which has proved itself violently hostile to believers and recently imposed new restrictions on church services, International Christian Concern (ICC) reports.
Brief scuffles broke out, and soccer fans whistled and booed as the Israeli anthem played at the start of the France-Israel match in Paris following a pogrom against Jews in the Netherlands, officials said Friday.
China’s President Xi Jinping has inaugurated a controversial massive port on the edge of Peru’s coastal desert that locals fear will leave many of them without a hopeful future.
With pornography increasingly and freely available to minors on the internet, the Evangelical Fellowship of Canada (EFC) has called on the Canadian parliament to support a bill that would hold pornography platforms accountable to “ensure child sexual abuse materials and intimate images shared without consent are not uploaded to their sites,” Christian Daily International (CDI) reports.
Tensions between Iran and Israel remain high as Tehran’s military pledged a strong response to Israel’s strikes last month. At the same time, the UN’s atomic watchdog is focused on preventing nuclear escalation, with IAEA chief Rafael Grossi urging that Iran’s nuclear facilities, including Fordow and Natanz, should not be targeted as he is scheduled to visit the country.