(COMTEX) B: Israeli president urges 'decisive steps' against anti-Semitism
in German parliament speech ( AP WorldStream )
BERLIN, May 31, 2005 (AP WorldStream via COMTEX) -- Israeli President Moshe
Katsav addressed the German parliament in Berlin's restored Reichstag building
Tuesday, urging European governments to intensify the fight against a "wave of
anti-Semitism."
"Today we are witnesses of a wave of reviving anti-Semitism which we have not
known since the end of the World War II, a wave accompanied by aggressive hate
propaganda," said Katsav, whose three-day visit to Germany marks 40 years of
diplomatic relations between the two countries.
He warned that anti-Semites exploited modern technology and mass media as well
as the freedoms offered by democracy and globalization to advance their message.
"We would like to express our appreciation to the governments of Europe, among
them the German government, which are taking decisive steps against the wave of
anti-Semitism," Katsav said. "These steps, however, are insufficient."
He said Germany was a "good friend" of Israel and praised the thousands of
Germans who rallied against a neo-Nazi demonstration on May 8, the anniversary
of the end of World War II.
Katsav joined U.S. President George W. Bush, Russian President Vladimir Putin
and Ukrainian President Viktor Yushchenko among a small group of foreign leaders
who have addressed lawmakers since the lower house, or Bundestag, moved to
Berlin in 1999.
He is the second Israeli president to address the German parliament. In a 1996
speech to lawmakers in Bonn, Ezer Weizman urged them to "recognize any stirring
of racism and to smash any stirring of neo-Nazism."
Israel and West Germany established diplomatic relations on May 12, 1965.
Katsav started his three-day visit to Germany Monday. It follows a trip to
Israel in February by German President Horst Koehler, who in a speech to
Israel's parliament expressed "shame and humility" toward the victims of the
Holocaust.
The Reichstag was torched in a 1933 fire which came just a month after the
Nazis' rise to power and was followed by the suspension of civil liberties.
Soviet troops raised the red flag over the building in 1945.
"Here, in this building, the tragedy began that led to the systematic
extermination of the Jewish people," Katsav said Tuesday.
"We, the postwar generation, have the task of together learning the lessons of
the Shoah and passing them to the next generation," he said, using the Hebrew
word for the Holocaust, the murder of 6 million Jews.
By DAVID McHUGH
Associated Press Writer
Copyright 2005 Associated Press, All rights reserved
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