Off Topic: Shaven heads, tattoos and Israeli flags in Western Europe
Shaven heads, tattoos and Israeli flags in Western Europe | JPost | Israel News.
As I was viewing photographs from a rally held by the EDL in London, I could easily spot all the usual elements of a far-right march in Europe: the young, disenchanted and angry white males, the shaven heads, the tattoos. Some wore bomber jackets and army boots while others were dressed in trainers and sneakers and held flags and signs up in the air.
However, there was something else in these photographs that struck me, making me wonder whether this rally might be the messenger of a new era: some of the protesters were holding up Israeli flags while listening to one of the speakers at the rally – a bearded man wearing a yarmulke.
I later found out the speaker was Los Angeles-based Chabad rabbi Nachum Shifren, also known as “the Surfing rabbi,” who had been invited by the EDL to speak at the rally.
Western Europe is rapidly changing. The European Union’s Open Door Policy encouraging immigration is transforming the continent, with some predicting that by 2050 Muslims will account for more than 20 percent of the EU population. This is already the case in a number of European cities.
Non-Muslims will be in a minority in Birmingham by 2026, Christopher Caldwell, an American journalist, said in a Telegraph interview, and he predicted this would occur even sooner in Leicester. Another forecast holds that Muslims could outnumber non-Muslims in France by mid-century.
This remarkable demographic change, combined with acts of terrorism such as the London 7/7/2005 bombings that left 52 dead, or the Toulouse school shooting in France carried out by Muslims living in Europe, have left their mark on European far-right politics.
Until the 1980s the term “extreme right” was synonymous with neo-fascism; links to neo-fascism were openly declared by parties such as MSI (Italian Social Movement) and the British NF (national Front). The ’80s were a turning point, with new parties emerging and older ones changing and gaining unprecedented popularity. West European far-right parties more than doubled their share of votes, from 4.75% in 1980-1989 to 9.73% in 1990-1999.
During that time the far right got a foothold in West European countries, and made remarkable gains: the National Front in France, Hider’s FPö in Austria, in Belgium the FN and Vlaams Blok, and others.
The 1990s saw one of the most significant transformations of politics in advanced Western democracies; successfully distancing themselves from both the reactionary politics of the traditional extremist neo-fascist and neo-Nazi right, these parties offered an alternative that challenged the traditional establishment of West European politics. These emerging parties included the Italian Lega Nord, the French National Front, the Dutch Party for Freedom and many more.
The moderation process that the far-right European parties underwent, combined with charismatic leaders, helped them gain unprecedented electoral support.
Many researchers feel that another major contributing factor was the “shifting of the out group” among many of these parties; that is, the trading of anti-Jewish for anti-Muslim sentiment.
As the “out group” changed, so did the discourse of these parties, shifting from neo-fascist and at times anti-Semitic rhetoric to an emphasis on a narrative of “clash of civilizations,” according to which western ideas and values have to be defended against the dangers of Islam.
A claim is made by some of the far-right parties that they are the defenders of western civilization against the “expansion of Islam” and the “Islamization of Europe.” Some of these parties view Israel as a European enclave battling at the forefront of this war against militant Islam, in defense Judeo-Christian values.
“My friends, what we need today is Zionism for the nations of Europe,” Geert Wilders, founder and leader of the Party for Freedom in the Netherlands, which has achieved considerable electoral success, said at the “Europe’s Last Stand?” conference, organized by the American Freedom Alliance on June 10, 2013. In 2011, Marine Le Pen, the head of France’s National Front told Haaretz: “After all, the National Front has always been Zionistic and always defended Israel’s right to exist.”
This new appeal by the far right cannot be dismissed easily, poses a challenge to European Jewry, as well as to Israel: should we accept the extended hand of West Europe’s far right? While most Israeli politicians, together with the leaders of European Jewry, refute these gestures, fearing for Israel’s image, others have embraced them warmly.
Visits to Israel by far-right politicians have included a delegation of prominent figures from several countries, including the head of Austria’s Freedom Party, Heinz-Christian Strache, and have been met by lowranking Israeli officials and unofficial elements of the Israeli right.
In Britain, the EDL created a “Jewish Division,” that is now headed by James Cohen, a Canadian writer and activist who previously lived in Israel. Cohen admitted in an interview with the Jewish Chronicle that he had “done some soul-searching” after being asked to lead the division following the departure of his predecessor.
He said he hoped British Jews would join EDL members at protests and in campaigning, yet the Board of Deputies of British Jews had condemned the EDL “unreservedly.” A spokesman for the board said: “It is clear for all to see that the EDL are solely intent on causing divisions and mistrust between different groups in British society. When they wave Israeli flags at a rally or demonstration, they do so only to goad the Muslim community and to stir communal tensions.
This, and everything that the EDL stands for, is utterly abhorrent. All right-thinking people should be repulsed by extremism from any quarter.”
Unfortunately, things are not so simple. Considering the vicious anti-Israel and sometimes anti-Semitic sentiment among elements of the far Left and Muslim leadership in Europe – questioning Israel’s very right to exist, and resulting in Jews being subject to daily harassment and having to conceal their identity in some areas, this new embrace by the far right has to be seriously considered or, as Winston Churchill once said, “If Hitler invaded hell I would make at least a favorable reference to the devil in the House of Commons.”
The writer is a graduate student at Hebrew University’s Helmut Kohl Institute for European Studies, focusing on the far right in Europe.
June 30, 2013 at 8:11 PM
Off Topic:
Brilliant as always. David Wood: Sharia Comes to Great Britain
June 30, 2013 at 11:19 PM
What does far right mean after all?
Like the word ‘racist’ it has been so often misused that it has lost any meaning.
The Likud party is often called a right wing party (and sometimes worse) in the German media.
Throwing all ‘far-right’ parties together also doesn’t help.
This article contains at least two blatant factual errors.
Neither Geert Wilders nor his party, the Party for Freedom had ever anything to do with neofascism.
Wilders was a member of the VVD-party until 2004.
The VVD is a liberal party with conservative elements.
Wilders’ Party for Freedom was not founded in the 90’s but in 2006.
It is because of articles like this that you cannot trust our media.
They ofthen lump everything they think is ‘far-right’ together.
Whether they do it out of ignorance or to smear certain positions and persons does not matter. The end result is the same.
In this case the reader who doesn’t know the facts may think that Gert Wilders or his party dropped their supposed antisemitism because they discovered a bigger enemy (islam).
I suggest that the JP let next time write such articles not by a graduate student but by someone who knows how to put a factual correct article together.
July 1, 2013 at 2:06 PM
fuck off there far right neo Nazis who dont give a flying fuck about isreal or any othe country we have all watched them siege hailing at there meetings and the jews are the third race on there list once they have done with the Muslims and gipsys,any one who supports them is the scum of the earth
July 1, 2013 at 3:02 PM
Are you suggesting that Geert Wilders is a Neo Nazi?
Are you suggesting that he supports Neo Nazis?
WTF. You have serious problem with your brain if you think that I support Neo Nazism.
Show me one single statement where Mr. Wilders or I am supportiing Neo Nazism in any way, shape or form.
Unless you do that, Shut the hell up.
In case you don’t get it.
I did not say that I support all the groups and parties mentioned in the article.
I simply said that I don’t trust our media because they are quick to label anyone who disagrees with certain political correct views as ‘racist’ or ‘right-wing’.
It may surprise you but the German Neo Nazis fully support Iran and the ‘Palestinian’ and Muslim cause because of their hate for Israel and the Jews.
The irony is that people who are critical of islam are falsely labeled neo fascists.
Wilders lived for 2 years in Israel and visited Israel 40 times in the last 25 years. His isupport for Israel is not something new and neither is it something that he does for oppurtunistic reasons. Who are you to accuse him?
The scum of the earth are not only those who supprt Neo Nazis.
The scum of the earth are also those who falsely accuse others of supporting them.
July 1, 2013 at 3:28 PM
were armed to the teeth and coming for them soon
July 1, 2013 at 3:41 PM
and i will add to that that thats just how the National socialist party started in Germany in 1933,the EDL are part of the BNP and German far right i should know i spent 6 months infiltrating them they are absolutely vile
July 1, 2013 at 4:05 PM
So what, Justice?
This is not relevant to my comment and neither could you refute what I said.
I’m not qualified to talk about the EDL but I sure as hell know something about the parties in Germany and about German history.
So out of couriosity, what is the German far right?
Which parties are you talking about?
July 1, 2013 at 4:14 PM
i am not going to carry this on my comment was not aimed at you personally, you live in America thats like living on a different planet compared to Europe,trust me there all bad,i stand for free speech and across the board representation of the worlds people whatever they believe in or race they are, We are all people
July 1, 2013 at 4:50 PM
I’m not an American.
I’m a Greek living in Germany for almost all my life.
So I know something about Europe and about the poltics here.
Maybe it is because I am sounding like a conservative American that people here sometimes think I’m from the US.
The real far-right party in Germany is the NPD. They have the Nazi ideology that we so despise.
That’s all.
July 1, 2013 at 5:31 PM
NPD is financed by the russian far right all the far right groups get there financing from the russian far right,
July 1, 2013 at 5:35 PM
i say thsi because these groups are thying to gain public support from people like you and me,to have a free europe and world we must rid ourselves of both the far right and left,there is noting wrong with being a conservative it is a good thing believing in values and a stable and productive society serves us all the extremists must be stopped if we are ever to live in peace,i reject them all