Sonntag, 15. März 2026

An Attack on Synagogues Is an Attack on All of Us






What we are witnessing around the world right now is intolerable. Synagogues are being attacked, Jewish schools threatened, Jewish communities once again forced to live under police protection. In Europe, in North America, and in many other parts of the world, Jewish institutions have become targets of hatred and violence.


This is not a coincidence. And these are not “isolated incidents.” This is antisemitism — open, aggressive, and increasingly violent antisemitism.


Anyone who attacks a synagogue today knows exactly what they are doing. They are attacking Jewish life. They are attacking people whose only “crime” is that they are Jewish.


The perpetrators feel emboldened by a climate of radicalization that has intensified globally since October 7. Since the Hamas massacre of Israeli civilians, hatred toward Jews has escalated at a frightening pace. What some initially framed as “criticism of Israel” has in many places degenerated into outright hatred of Jews.


Particularly disturbing is where some of this hatred now comes from. Alongside Islamist networks and far-right extremists, we are witnessing a new wave of left-authoritarian antisemitism.


Within parts of the radical left, the Jewish state has been turned into a symbol of an alleged global evil. Israel is demonized, delegitimized, and dehumanized. Anyone who spends time in certain activist circles today hears rhetoric that echoes the darkest chapters of antisemitic history.


This ideology calls itself “anti-colonial,” “anti-imperialist,” or “post-colonial.” In reality, it reproduces ancient antisemitic patterns: the image of an all-powerful Jewish state, a global Jewish conspiracy, a people supposedly responsible for the world’s injustices.


When Israel is turned into the embodiment of absolute evil, a climate is created in which violence against Jews begins to appear explainable — even justifiable. That is exactly what we are witnessing now.


Synagogues are attacked.

Jewish schools are threatened.

Jewish communities are forced to barricade their doors.


And yet some still speak about “context” and “understandable emotions.”


No.


There is no context that explains attacks on synagogues.

There is no political conflict that justifies violence against Jewish children.

And there is no ideology — religious or political — that makes hatred of Jews acceptable.


The escalation in the Middle East, the war in Gaza, and the aggressive role of the Iranian regime are now being exploited by antisemites worldwide to legitimize their hatred. Jews everywhere are being turned into scapegoats for geopolitical conflicts for which they bear no responsibility.


This is not protest.

This is incitement.

And increasingly, it is violence.


Anyone who attacks synagogues today is attacking the foundations of our democratic societies. Because a society in which Jews must live in fear is no longer a free society.


We must finally say this clearly: antisemitism is not merely a fringe phenomenon of extremist groups. It is re-emerging within the very language of political activism, disguised as moral outrage.


And those who remain silent about this bear responsibility.


Protecting Jewish life is not a secondary issue. It is a central test of our democracies.


Because when synagogues burn, a piece of our freedom burns with them.


Samstag, 21. Februar 2026

Antizionism Is Not a Harmless Political Position by Andreas Büttner

 


Since October 7, 2023, debates about Israel, the Middle East, and the boundaries of legitimate criticism have intensified across Europe. In democratic societies, this is both inevitable and necessary. The policies of any government—including that of Israel—must remain open to scrutiny. Criticism of military strategy, settlement policy, coalition politics, or constitutional reforms is not only legitimate; it is a hallmark of democratic discourse.

But alongside legitimate criticism, another development has gained traction: the growing normalization of anti-Zionism as if it were merely one political viewpoint among many—morally neutral, historically detached, and unrelated to antisemitism.

That characterization deserves closer examination.

What Zionism Actually Means

At its core, Zionism is the movement affirming the right of the Jewish people to national self-determination in their historic homeland. It emerged in the late 19th century as a response to persistent antisemitism in Europe and the failure of emancipation to provide lasting security for Jewish communities.

Zionism is not a theological doctrine. It is not inherently right-wing or left-wing. Historically, it encompassed socialist, liberal, religious, and secular strands. What united these diverse currents was one central idea: Jews, like other peoples, are entitled to political self-determination.

The principle of self-determination is enshrined in Article 1 of the United Nations Charter. It underlies decolonization movements, independence struggles, and the modern international order. Ukrainians defending sovereignty, Baltic states asserting independence, Czechs and Slovaks forming separate republics—all are examples of this principle in practice.

The question, therefore, is straightforward: If self-determination is a universal right, why should it be denied uniquely to the Jewish people?

The Problem of Selective Denial

Critics often argue that anti-Zionism is not antisemitic because it targets a state, not a people. In theory, that distinction could hold. In practice, however, radical anti-Zionism frequently goes beyond criticism of specific policies and instead rejects the legitimacy of Jewish statehood itself.

This is where the issue becomes more complex.

The International Holocaust Remembrance Alliance (IHRA) working definition of antisemitism—adopted by numerous governments and institutions—notes that denying the Jewish people their right to self-determination, for example by claiming that the existence of a State of Israel is a racist endeavor, may constitute antisemitism.

The key issue is not criticism. It is selectivity.

When the right to national self-determination is affirmed for every other group but rejected only for Jews, a double standard emerges. Double standards have historically been a recurring feature of antisemitic thinking. Jews are judged by criteria applied to no other people. Their collective existence is treated as uniquely suspect.

To be clear: not every critique of Zionism falls into this category. Political ideologies can be debated. Nation-states can be questioned. Borders and constitutional structures can be discussed. Freedom of expression protects even radical positions.

But there is a critical distinction between questioning nationalism in general and singling out the only Jewish state as inherently illegitimate.

From Critique to Delegitimization

Legitimate criticism addresses government conduct: settlement expansion, military decisions, judicial reforms, coalition agreements. These are policy matters.

Anti-Zionism in its radical form, by contrast, does not limit itself to policies. It targets the very existence of Israel as a Jewish state. It calls not for reform but for dissolution. It denies the legitimacy of Jewish collective sovereignty.

This shift—from policy critique to ontological negation—is decisive.

When Israel alone is portrayed as uniquely evil, uniquely colonial, uniquely racist; when comparisons to Nazi Germany become commonplace; when “Zionists” are invoked as a global force manipulating world events—the line between political critique and the recycling of classic antisemitic tropes becomes dangerously thin.

In many contemporary discourses, “Zionist” functions less as a neutral political descriptor and more as a coded substitute for “Jew.” Conspiracy narratives that once spoke of “Jewish power” now speak of “Zionist control.” The vocabulary has changed; the structure of the accusation has not.

Free Speech and Its Limits

In liberal democracies, not every antisemitic statement is criminal. Freedom of expression protects a wide range of views, including offensive and misguided ones. Criminal law typically intervenes only when there is incitement to hatred or violence.

But the absence of criminal liability does not imply moral or political neutrality.

A society committed to democratic values must be capable of naming patterns that undermine equality. Not every manifestation of antisemitism meets the threshold of criminal incitement. Yet antisemitism in any form corrodes democratic culture because it denies equal legitimacy to a minority’s collective identity.

Anti-Zionism that rejects Jewish self-determination does precisely that.

The Historical Dimension

The Jewish experience in Europe is not abstract history. For centuries, Jews were denied political belonging. They were tolerated as individuals but rejected as a collective. Emancipation promised equality, yet waves of exclusion and persecution persisted. The catastrophe of the Holocaust was not an accident of history; it was the extreme outcome of long-standing patterns of delegitimization.

In this historical context, the existence of a Jewish state represents more than a geopolitical fact. It embodies the recognition that Jews are not merely a religious minority but a people with collective political agency.

To argue that Jews may exist—but not as a sovereign political community—echoes a familiar structure: conditional acceptance.

A Necessary Distinction

None of this means that Israel is above criticism. On the contrary: democratic accountability is essential. Nor does it imply that every person who identifies as anti-Zionist harbors antisemitic intent.

Intent, however, is not the only relevant factor. Political ideas must also be evaluated by their structural implications.

When anti-Zionism becomes the categorical denial of Jewish statehood—while affirming the legitimacy of national self-determination elsewhere—it ceases to be a neutral political theory. It becomes a discriminatory standard applied uniquely to Jews.

That is why anti-Zionism, insofar as it delegitimizes Jewish self-determination, must be recognized as a contemporary manifestation of antisemitism.

The Universal Question

Ultimately, this debate is not about shielding a government from criticism. It is about the universality of principles.

Is the right to self-determination universal—or conditional?

Is equality before political norms consistent—or selective?

If universal principles are applied selectively, they lose their universality. And once exceptions are made for one people, the foundation of equal rights begins to erode.

A democratic society must defend free debate. But it must also defend the principle that no people’s collective existence is uniquely illegitimate.

Anti-Zionism that denies Jewish self-determination is not simply another political opinion. It is a challenge to the very idea of equal legitimacy among peoples.

Naming that challenge is not an attempt to silence debate. It is an attempt to preserve its moral foundation.

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This text was first published on the platform Oct7blog.blogspot.com

Nennt ihre Namen!

 

Nennt ihre Namen! 


Seit dem 7. Oktober 2023 sind fast 700 Tage vergangen. Fast 700 Tage, in denen Menschen von der palästinensischen Terrororganisation Hamas festgehalten werden. Fast 700 Tage, in denen sie gefoltert, misshandelt, in Dunkelheit und Angst gefangen sind. Fast 700 Tage, in denen die deutsche Politik sie im Stich lässt.

Am 7. Oktober ermordete die Hamas über 1200 Menschen und verschleppte mehr als 250 in den Gazastreifen. Es war der größte antisemitische Angriff seit dem Holocaust. Viele Geiseln wurden getötet, andere leben noch – irgendwo in den Tunneln von Gaza. Unter ihnen auch Deutsche. Unsere Mitbürger. Auf ihr Schicksal aufmerksam zu machen, ist unsere Verantwortung.

Und doch: Ihre Namen sind nicht auf unseren Lippen. Ihre Gesichter nicht auf unseren Titelseiten. Ihr Schicksal nicht in unserem Bewusstsein. Deutschland redet geradezu obsessiv über Israel. Über Siedlungen. Über »Verhältnismäßigkeit«. Über angeblichen »Völkermord«. Aber über die Geiseln? Über sie spricht fast niemand. Es ist, als existierten sie nicht mehr. Ein moralisches Versagen sondergleichen.

Kein Staat darf hinnehmen, dass seine Bürger verschleppt und vergessen werden

Kein politisches Argument wiegt schwerer als der Schutz menschlichen Lebens. Kein Staat darf hinnehmen, dass seine Bürger verschleppt und vergessen werden. Keine Gesellschaft darf sich damit abfinden, dass Menschen in der Gewalt von Terroristen verrotten. Und doch erleben wir genau das – Tag für Tag, Woche für Woche, Monat für Monat. Wer die Geiseln vergisst, gibt auch ein Stück seiner eigenen Menschlichkeit auf.

Katar, die Türkei, der Iran – sie alle haben Einfluss auf die Hamas. Sie finanzieren, sie schützen, sie unterstützen. Und dennoch: Wo ist der Druck aus Berlin? Wo sind die klaren Forderungen, die Sanktionen, die Konsequenzen? Warum bleibt es bei freundlichen Gesprächen, bei diplomatischen Floskeln, bei warmen Worten – während deutsche Staatsbürger in Ketten liegen?

Deutsche Staatsbürger liegen in Ketten: Wo ist der Druck aus Berlin?

Wir müssen es klar sagen: Das Schweigen ist unerträglich. Es ist nicht nur eine politische Frage. Es ist eine Frage der Ehre. Was bedeutet ein deutscher Pass, wenn man als deutsch-israelischer Staatsbürger verschleppt wird – und der eigene Staat kaum sichtbar für einen kämpft? Was sagt es über Deutschland aus, wenn man lieber Israel verurteilt, als die eigenen Bürger heimzuholen? Was sagt es über unsere Gesellschaft, wenn wir mehr Energie in Anklagen gegen den jüdischen Staat stecken als in den Schutz deutscher Leben?

Die Angehörigen der Geiseln wissen längst, wie es sich anfühlt, vergessen zu werden. Sie bitten, sie klagen, sie schreien – und stoßen in Berlin auf kühle Distanz. Sie erleben, dass das Leben ihrer Kinder, ihrer Eltern, ihrer Geschwister keine Lobby hat. Sie hören Worte des Mitgefühls – und sehen Tatenlosigkeit. Sie wissen: Wenn die eigene Regierung nicht für dich kämpft, wer dann?

Wir dürfen nicht zulassen, dass die Opfer des Terrors aus unserem Bewusstsein verschwinden

Das darf nicht sein. Wir dürfen nicht zulassen, dass die Opfer des Terrors aus unserem Bewusstsein verschwinden. Wir dürfen nicht zulassen, dass deutsche Geiseln geopfert werden – auf dem Altar politischer Bequemlichkeit. Wir dürfen nicht schweigen, wenn ihre Freiheit in unseren Händen liegt.

Die Bilder der Geiseln müssten jeden Tag in unseren Nachrichten erscheinen. Ihre Namen müssten in unseren Schulen gelehrt werden. Ihre Schicksale müssten Teil unserer politischen Debatten sein. Und jeder Politiker, der über den Nahen Osten spricht, müsste zuerst von ihnen sprechen. Von den Menschen, die uns an die Wahrheit erinnern: dass der 7. Oktober ein Tag des Terrors war – und dass dieser Terror weitergeht, solange auch nur eine Geisel in den Händen der Hamas ist.

Darum dieser Appell: Vergesst sie nicht! Nennt ihre Namen! Haltet ihre Bilder hoch! Erzählt ihre Geschichten! Fordert von der Bundesregierung, endlich alles zu tun – nicht nur in Worten, sondern in Taten! Mit echtem Druck. Mit klaren Konsequenzen. Mit der Entschlossenheit eines Staates, der seine Bürger nicht im Stich lässt.

Fast 700 Tage ohne Freiheit, ohne Licht, ohne Gewissheit, ob sie den nächsten Tag überleben

Seit fast 700 Tagen warten sie. Fast 700 Tage ohne Freiheit, ohne Licht, ohne Gewissheit, ob sie den nächsten Tag überleben. Fast 700 Tage, in denen die Zeit stillsteht – für sie, für ihre Familien, für alle, die hoffen und beten.

Vergesst sie nicht – nicht heute, nicht morgen, nicht, bis sie alle zurück sind. Denn ein Staat, der seine Geiseln vergisst, verliert sein Gesicht. Und eine Gesellschaft, die nicht mehr für sie einsteht, verliert ihr Herz. Die Geiseln sind nicht nur ein Prüfstein für Israel – sie sind ein Prüfstein für uns alle.

Der Text erschien zuerst am 31.08.2025 in der Jüdischen Allgemeinen