jews import "anti-semitism," and then demand "anti-semitism" be solved

Started by yankeedoodle, October 15, 2021, 10:19:34 AM

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yankeedoodle

We have here the case of Sweden, which took in refugees from the Middle East, who were made refugees by jews* so Israhell could rule their home countries so poor dear little precious Israhell can be "safe," which it never can be, until all the goy are either enslaved or dead.   <:^0
(*The goy get to use their resources and lives to do the dirty work for the jews, of course.)

So, these refugees - forced from their homeland by jews - arrive in Sweden where they find - guess what? - JEWS.  Of course, they hate jews for what they did to them, which makes them - you guessed it - "anti-semites."

So, the jews in Sweden are demanding that Sweden solve the problem of "anti-semitism" that was caused by jews.

We see here the never ending cycle of jews causing trouble wherever they are.  Killing and destroying (tricking the goy into doing it for them, of course) and creating "anti-semitism," and then demanding that they be protected, because of "anti-semitism," the end result being that they get to kill and destroy - using the goy's lives and resources - and the goy must protect them.

https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=8ERmOpZrKtw

With dozens of world leaders watching, Sweden looks to turn around its reputation on antisemitism
https://www.jta.org/2021/10/14/global/with-dozens-of-world-leaders-watching-sweden-looks-to-turn-around-its-reputation-on-antisemitism

MALMÖ, Sweden (JTA) — Malmö, Sweden's third largest city, has in recent years become known as a hotbed of antisemitism.

With around one third of its inhabitants born outside of Sweden, many of them often living in ethnically homogenous neighbourhoods, the city has also become a synonym for Sweden's integration problems.

But this week, Malmö — and by extension, Sweden's government — aimed to turn that reputation on its head with a conference about combating antisemitism attended in person or on video by nearly 50 heads of state, foreign government ministers, European Union officials and World Jewish Congress representatives. U.S. Secretary of State Antony Blinken, Israeli President Isaac Herzog and French President Emmanuel Macron sent in video messages.

YouTube, led by Jewish CEO Susan Wojcicki, pledged over $5 million to nonprofits and government entities to fight online antisemitism. Facebook's COO Sheryl Sandberg, meanwhile, who has spoken publicly about how her Jewish ancestors escaped persecution in Europe to the United States, joined live by video, and said her company is devoted to meticulous reviewing of its users' content — despite its past issues with moderation on the topic.

Unlike in other similar conferences on the subject, The Malmö International Forum on Holocaust Remembrance and Combating Antisemitism did not end with a joint declaration signed by all of its attendees. Swedish Prime Minister Stefan Löfven said he preferred the leaders present to focus on discussing "concrete measures" that can be used to curb antisemitic incidents and behavior.

European Commission President Ursula von der Leyen, who joined virtually from Brussels, introduced the newly adopted "EU Strategy on Combating Antisemitism and Fostering Jewish Life (2021-2030)" plan and proposed the creation of a Young European Ambassadors for Holocaust Remembrance program.

​​"We are not looking for another declaration, we are looking to translate these principles of these documents into reality," Löfven, who is leaving his office next month, said in a speech Wednesday.

If and how the conference serves as a turning point for the country's on-the-ground antisemitism problem remains to be seen. While the heads of state held the spotlight, Swedish media reports in recent weeks have told stories of the local Jews who are continuing to leave Malmö, some after suffering antisemitism directly in their daily lives.

"You can hold your nice speeches, we're moving while you're doing it," the mother of a 12-year-old Jewish girl told Sweden's newspaper Dagens Nyheter. Her daughter described how she had found graffiti reading "Free Palestine" and "F–k Israel" by her school locker, and how someone spit on her jacket. It has proven too much for the girl's mother, who is relocating their family to Israel next summer, despite not speaking any Hebrew.

That story is not unique — all of the Swedish Jewish students interviewed in a survey published by the City of Malmö earlier this year said they had been exposed to some form of antisemitism at school.

The problem extends far beyond the classroom. In 2017, the Malmö synagogue's windows were shattered with stones. In 2020, the city had to suspend its partnership with the Arab Book Fair, as an antisemitic book appeared on its website (the title has subsequently been removed).

But it was perhaps an experiment conducted in 2015 by a Swedish journalist that drew the most attention to the situation. The reporter, wearing a kippah and a Star of David pendant, was verbally and physically attacked while walking through various Malmö neighborhoods.

In Malmö and beyond, Swedish Jews have felt caught between different streams of antisemitism — from both radicalized Muslim immigrants and neo-Nazi movements.

"Yes, you are taking a risk when you walk around with a Star of David," Frederik Sieradzki, the spokesman for the Jewish Community of Malmö organization, told the Jewish Telegraphic Agency in an interview before the conference. In 2019, in the wake of a report on the city's declining Jewish population, he told JTA that his Jewish community could disappear entirely by 2029.

But Sieradzki struck a more optimistic tone in talking about this week's conference. The community, he said, is forging closer ties to Katrin Stjernfeldt Jammeh, Malmö's mayor since 2013, who detailed plans to "create better conditions" for Jews in the city in an interview with Haaretz before the conference.

"We've been working with the Jewish community in several ways to map the problem, to create an understanding of the problem and, today, we have a long-term commitment. We're investing more than 2 million Euros ($2.3 million) over four years," she said. "We're also working within our school system, mapping the problem there too, and creating different ways to prevent prejudice."

Sieradzki confirmed that within the last 20 years, the number of Jews in the city has been halved, to approximately 500 members today. But he was careful in drawing cause and effect conclusions, and emphasized that the fear and experience of antisemitism is not the only factor driving the numbers down. Younger generations have better career opportunities in Stockholm, and also more ways of engaging in religious life; older people move to the cities where their children and grandchildren live; many older members of the Malmö community, among them Holocaust survivors, die out over time.

Even those who decide to leave for Israel point to multiple reasons for their moves, he said. And Sieradzki has noticed that in the past two years, the curve has flattened, and the number of Community organization members has remained practically unchanged. He takes that as a good sign.

During an event held before the conference celebrating Jewish life in Sweden, Ronald Lauder, the head of the World Jewish Congress and a prominent Republican donor, spoke of another factor that has been a flashpoint in the country for decades: the harsh criticism of Israel common in Swedish society and government.

Speaking in Malmö's main synagogue, he expressed disappointment with the United Nations, where Sweden had until recently regularly signed on to resolutions singling out Israel for international rebuke. Before this September, Israel and Sweden's foreign ministers had not spoken to each other for seven years, a historic low in relations.

The previous mayor of Malmö, Ilmar Reepalu, was also known for his sharp anti-Israel stance, and for blaming attacks on Jews on their support of the Jewish state.

"What if Sweden was under attack today?" he said to the audience, which included Löfven, defending Israel's actions in armed conflicts with the Palestinians and others in its region.

Over a decade ago, Lauder wrote an op-ed in which he heavily criticized Swedish politicians and media for inspiring antisemitic attitudes with what he deemed their over-the-line Israel rhetoric. But his tone on Tuesday was dramatically different.

"Ten years ago Sweden was not friendly at all, not only to Israel, but to the Jewish people," Lauder told JTA. 'We worked day and night. We watched and we listened to what the prime minister and his government were doing. It was like a miracle... I will use Prime Minister Löfven as an example when I speak to people. I hope other countries will follow."

Löfven, who has led Sweden since 2014, has been clear that he wants to leave behind a legacy of defending Jews. He first visited the Auschwitz museum in 2017 and on International Holocaust Remembrance Day in 2019 he declared that Sweden would create a state museum devoted to memorializing the Holocaust. In 2020, an allocation of over $1 million towards the goal was announced, and last month the government declared further support of approximately $3.5 million dollars to be given to the National Historical Museums Agency responsible for the task.

It has now been confirmed that the new museum will be located in Stockholm — even though opinions on that choice were split both among Swedish Jews and scholars. Stockholm — the city of Sweden's most famous Righteous Among the Nations, diplomat Raoul Wallenberg — and Malmö were the two most frequently mentioned locations.

Malmö, which lies in the southernmost part of Sweden, just 25 miles across the Öresund strait from Copenhagen, became a safe haven for several thousand Danish Jews in 1943 and for four thousands more in 1945, when it took in evacuees from the Bergen-Belsen concentration camp. Despite that, some feared that the Holocaust history would have been used to hide Malmö's current problems. Others argued that the contemporary issues made it more important to place a museum about Jews there.

Despite the gestures, 97-year-old Holocaust survivor Lea Gleitman, who has lived in Malmö since 1946, succinctly summarized the feelings many Swedish Jews had about the Malmö conference, in an interview with Sweden's national broadcaster SVT.

"It is important, but only if it really leads to something. Sometimes it is just talk, but we have hope, maybe," she said.


abduLMaria

Jews are Cowards who NEVER fight a fair fight.

They are responsible for the anti-Jewish sentiment they create, no matter how loudly they whine.
Planet of the SWEJ - It's a Horror Movie.

http://www.PalestineRemembered.com/!

yankeedoodle

jews get "hate crime"-investigation publicity for now-you-see-it-now-you-don't projections around Sweden.  Amazing that nobody got a photograph of these projections, isn't it?   <:^0

'Holocaust was a scam' projected on Swedish synagogue during international antisemitism conference
https://www.jta.org/2021/10/15/global/holocaust-was-a-scam-projected-on-swedish-synagogue-during-international-antisemitism-conference

(JTA) — Swedish police are investigating how the words "the Holocaust was a scam" were projected onto the main synagogue in Malmö while that city was holding an international forum on combating antisemitism.

The projection was seen on the Synagogue of Malmö and on other buildings in cities across southern Sweden on Wednesday night, the day of the Malmö International Forum on Holocaust Remembrance and Combating Antisemitism.

Police are handling the case as a hate crime, the Swedish newspaper Dagens Nyheter reported.

The Nordic Resistance Movement, a neo-Nazi group, claimed responsibility for the incident, according to Dagens Nyheter.

The conference had brought together heads of state and other prominent government officials from dozens of countries in a city known for its high rates of antisemitism.

Israel's strikes in Gaza in 2009 triggered a wave of antisemitic assaults in Malmö, which had then over 1,000 Jews. Then mayor Ilmar Reepalu reacted by instructing the local Jewish community to distance itself from Israel, giving many the impression that he was blaming the victims.

The Jewish community in Sweden's third-largest city has since dwindled down to around 500.

Despite Wednesday's synagogue incident, Katharina von Schnurbein, the European Commission's coordinator on combating antisemitism, told the Jewish Telegraphic Agency on Friday that she thinks the conference shows that "change is possible."

"The fact that the conference happened in Malmö sends a message, that this sort of thing will not be accepted and will be confronted," von Schnurbein said.

At the conference, she presented a new strategic plan for combating antisemitism and fostering Jewish life in Europe, published by the European Commission on Oct. 5.

Although the plan does not include a stated budget, von Schurbein said, "it will tap into programs in various departments" and its "components will receive millions of euros in funding in the coming period."

Among the goals of the plan is to set up a cross-European methodology for documenting and reporting antisemitic hate crimes.

On Tuesday, Jewish community leaders at a separate conference in Brussels complained that the EU plan was "not serious" because it does not address two issues that have alienated local Jews for years: bans on the ritual slaughter of animals and attempts to ban non-medical circumcision.

Von Schurbein said the plan does reference the ritual slaughter issue. Members states need to find "a fair balance between respect for the freedom to manifest religion and the protection of animal welfare," the document states.

The EU Commission and her office intend to facilitate efforts to strike the balance, von Schnurbein said, and call on "EU countries to ensure through policy and legal measures that Jews can live their lives in accordance with their religious traditions," she added.

"But when it comes to the document, the Commission is bound by the ruling of the European Court," which in 2020 upheld the rights of states in Belgium to ban ritual slaughter.


yankeedoodle

Oh, good. Sweden has learned its lesson, and is being friendly with Israhell again.   <:^0

Sweden's foreign minister visits Israel, ending 7-year diplomatic freeze
https://www.jta.org/2021/10/19/global/swedens-foreign-minister-visits-israel-ending-7-year-diplomatic-freeze

STOCKHOLM (JTA) — Sweden's foreign affairs minister visited Israel on Monday, ending a seven-year freeze in diplomatic relations between the two former allies that had started over disagreements on Israel's treatment of the Palestinians.

Foreign Minister Ann Linde's visit opens "a whole new book of friendship and cooperation," said her Israeli counterpart Yair Lapid. Israeli President Isaac Herzog said it symbolized that the countries were "turning a new leaf."

"Sweden and Israel have a deep and long-standing friendship, with extensive trade and cultural ties. There are also quite a few arguments. In recent years, these arguments have caused us to drift apart. Today we are changing that," Lapid said at a press conference with Linde in Jerusalem on Monday.

The visit came less than a week after Sweden's government hosted a high-powered international conference on combating antisemitism in Malmö, a city known in recent years for being a hotspot of that form of hate.

Put together, the two moves signal outgoing Prime Minister Stefan Löfven's desire to repair relationships with Sweden's local Jewish communities and the Jewish state.

"On behalf of Sweden I promise that we say 'never again,' and mean it," Linde tweeted Monday after a visit to Yad Vashem, Israel's Holocaust memorial and museum. "We will continue to take action to combat antisemitism in all its forms, to make sure that we never forget."

Israel and Sweden had ceased formal relations in 2014, after Sweden officially recognized a Palestinian state. The following year, after the multiple terrorist attacks in Paris that left 130 dead, Sweden's then-foreign minister, Margot Wallström, linked the killings to what she argued was a feeling of hopelessness among Palestinians.

Wallström, a longtime outspoken supporter of a Palestinian state, then in 2016 called for an investigation into how Israeli security forces responded to Palestinian attackers during a spate of violence. In response, Lapid, then an opposition leader in Israel's parliament, called her antisemitic.

On Monday, Lapid — whose father and grandmother were among the tens of thousands of Jews saved by the Swedish diplomat Raoul Wallenberg during the Holocaust — welcomed Linde at a press conference in Jerusalem.

"In my parents' house there is a wooden box in which my late father kept some souvenirs that survived the Holocaust. There is a yellow badge with the letter J, Jude — Jew, some photographs and letters that somehow survived the war," Lapid said. "And there's a 'Wallenberg passport,' a document laden with seals and signatures, designed to hide the fact that Raoul Wallenberg had virtually no authority to grant it to my father. But he did ... and saved their lives."

Linde said that "Sweden's policy on the Israeli-Palestinian conflict," which supports a two-state solution, "has not changed." She added that she has been impressed by how Israel's new government has shown it is interested in improving living conditions for Palestinians in Gaza, and that it has condemned violence by Israeli settlers.

On Tuesday she visited Palestinian Authority President Mahmoud Abbas and PA Foreign Minister Riyad al-Maliki in Ramallah, and in talks emphasized that Sweden wants to play "a bigger role in renewing the peace process."

"I have invited both [Israel's and the PA's] foreign affairs ministers to Stockholm," Linde also told the Swedish newspaper Expressen. "Not at the same time though, we take it step by step."