Current:Home > ContactItaly’s leader denounces antisemitism; pro-Palestinian rally is moved from Holocaust Remembrance Day -Excel Money Vision
Italy’s leader denounces antisemitism; pro-Palestinian rally is moved from Holocaust Remembrance Day
Poinbank View
Date:2025-04-10 09:07:19
ROME (AP) — Italy’s president on Friday denounced rising antisemitism and delivered a powerful speech in support of the Jewish people as he commemorated a Holocaust Remembrance Day overshadowed by Israel’s military campaign in Gaza and a rise in anti-Israel acts here.
Also Friday, Rome’s police chief ordered pro-Palestinian activists to postpone a rally in the capital that had been scheduled for Saturday, the actual day of Holocaust Remembrance. Israel’s Jewish community has complained that such protests have become occasions for the memory of the Holocaust to be co-opted by anti-Israel forces and used against Jews.
In a ceremony at the Quirinale Palace attended by the premier and leaders of Italy’s Jewish community, President Sergio Mattarella called the Holocaust “the most abominable of crimes” and recalled the complicity of Italians under Fascism in the deportation of Jews.
He said the Oct. 7 attacks by Hamas against Israel were “a gruesome replica of the horrors of the Shoah.”
But Mattarella also expressed anguish for the mounting Palestinian death toll in Gaza as a result of Israel’s military campaign and called for fundamental human rights to be respected everywhere.
“Those who have suffered the vile attempt to erase their own people from the land know that one cannot deny another people the right to a state,” Mattarella said.
Antisemitic episodes in Italy hit an unprecedented high last year, with 216 incidents reported in the last three months of 2023 following the Oct. 7 attack, compared to 241 in all of the previous year, the Antisemitism Observatory reported. Overall, 454 incidents of antisemitism were reported last year, the biggest-ever increase.
“The dead of Auschwitz, scattered in the wind, continually warn us: Man’s path proceeds along rough and risky roads,” Mattarella said. “This is also manifested by the return, in the world, of dangerous instances of antisemitism: of prejudice that traces back to ancient anti-Jewish stereotypes, reinforced by social media without control or modesty.”
Mattarella also strongly condemned the Nazi-Fascist regimes that perpetrated the Holocaust. Sitting in the audience was Premier Giorgia Meloni, whose Brothers of Italy party has neo-fascist roots but who has strongly backed Israel and supported Italy’s Jewish community.
Mattarella said it must never be forgotten that Italy under Fascism adopted “despicable racist laws” which barred Jews from schools and the workplace. He called the laws “the opening chapter of the terrible book of extermination.”
Referring to Benito Mussolini’s final government in the Nazi puppet state in Salò, northern Italy, he added that “members of the Republic of Salò actively collaborated in the capture, deportation and even massacres of Jews.”
Significantly, he quoted Primo Levi, the Italian-born Auschwitz survivor whose memoir “If This is a Man” remains a standard work of Holocaust literature. Just this week, Italy’s Jewish community denounced that pro-Palestinian protesters had cited Levi in a flyer promoting Saturday’s planned protest, but in reference to Gaza, not the Holocaust.
It was one of several instances of pro-Palestinian advocates using the memory of the Holocaust against Israel and Jews. On Friday, nearly 50 small bronze plaques appeared on the sidewalk in front of the offices of the U.N. refugee agency in Rome with the names of Palestinians killed in Gaza. They were identical to the bronze memorial plaques affixed to cobblestones around Rome in front of the homes of Jews who were deported during the Holocaust.
veryGood! (614)
Related
- Backstage at New York's Jingle Ball with Jimmy Fallon, 'Queer Eye' and Meghan Trainor
- Puerto Rico is in the dark again, but solar companies see glimmers of hope
- An ornithologist, a cellist and a human rights activist: the 2022 MacArthur Fellows
- 'One Mississippi...' How Lightning Shapes The Climate
- Justice Department, Louisville reach deal after probe prompted by Breonna Taylor killing
- Climate Change Stresses Out These Chipmunks. Why Are Their Cousins So Chill?
- Pokimane Reveals the Top Products She Can't Live Without, Including Her Favorite $13 Pimple Patches
- Ariana Madix Makes Out With Daniel Wai at Coachella After Tom Sandoval Breakup
- North Carolina trustees approve Bill Belichick’s deal ahead of introductory news conference
- After January storms, some California communities look for long-term flood solutions
Ranking
- Will the 'Yellowstone' finale be the last episode? What we know about Season 6, spinoffs
- Don't Call It Dirt: The Science Of Soil
- Western wildfires are making far away storms more dangerous
- Rise Of The Dinosaurs
- Meet first time Grammy nominee Charley Crockett
- Investors have trillions to fight climate change. Developing nations get little of it
- Why heavy winter rain and snow won't be enough to pull the West out of a megadrought
- Glee’s Kevin McHale Regrets Not Praising Cory Monteith’s Acting Ability More Before His Death
Recommendation
All That You Wanted to Know About She’s All That
Why some Indonesians worry about a $20 billion international deal to get off coal
Taurus Shoppable Horoscope: 11 Birthday Gifts Every Stylish, Stubborn & Sleepy Taurus Will Love
Never Have I Ever Star Jaren Lewison Talks His Top Self-Care Items, From Ice Cream to Aftershave
Intel's stock did something it hasn't done since 2022
When flooding from Ian trapped one Florida town, an airboat navy came to the rescue
Who is Just Stop Oil, the group that threw soup on Van Gogh's painting?
Grasslands: The Unsung Carbon Hero