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In reply to the discussion: Federal Judge Approves Trump Effort to Obtain List of Jews From Penn [View all]Behind the Aegis
(56,108 posts)Earlier this month, Guy Wolf, the president of the Jewish Cultural Centre in Liège, Belgium, awoke to alarming news: overnight, an IED was detonated outside his local synagogue, blowing out the windows and setting the front doors and nearby cars alight.
The attack on the historic temple was the first such incident in the city since the Holocaust, according to local officials. Though Wolf had heard about a rise in antisemitic attacks in other cities, he was taken aback that it happened in Liège. There are only about 500 Jewish people in this city of half a million, the synagogue isnt particularly active and the Jews are well-integrated. If you attack the Jewish community here, Wolf said, you are attacking the city of Liège, because we are completely inside of it.
The whole thing has left the 68-year-old Wolf wondering: If Jews cant feel safe here, can they feel safe anywhere?
This is an increasingly urgent question for Jewish communities as antisemitism rises across the globe, and particularly in the West where Jews have lived in relative peace since the end of World War II. But a spasm of antisemitic violence and hostile rhetoric stemming from conflicts in the Middle East is making many Jews feel increasingly isolated from their homelands and their neighbors.
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