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Synagogue attack sparks fear among Jews in Germany

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BERLIN (Reuters) - As Jews left Yom Kippur prayers across Germany on Wednesday, they were jolted by word that an anti-Semitic gunman had attacked a synagogue in the eastern city of Halle hours before, killing two people.

People gather at the New Synagogue in Berlin, Germany, October 9, 2019, after two people were killed in a shooting in the eastern German city of Halle. REUTERS/Christian Mang
The news heightened fears of more anti-Semitic violence in a nation still scarred by the Holocaust and witnessing the rise of the right-wing Alternative for Germany (AfD) party.

“It’s very scary,” said Samuel Tsarfati, a 27-year-old stage director, as he left a Berlin synagogue with fellow French national Samuel Laufer.

The pair, who live and work in the German capital, had spent the holiest day in the Jewish calendar secluded in prayer and switched off their mobile phones for 25 hours of fasting.

Other members of Germany’s 200,000-strong Jewish community expressed similar alarm over the attack. After trying to blast into the Halle synogogue, a lone suspect killed a woman outside and a man in a nearby kebab shop.

“It’s not a coincidence it happened in east Germany. The far-right AfD is very strong there,” Tsarfati said. Leaders of the AfD, which made big gains in elections in two eastern states last month, condemned Wednesday’s attack in Halle.

Attacks on Jews rose by 20% last year and were mainly carried out by right-wing extremists. Even before the Halle shooting, a heavy police presence guarded the synagogue in the trendy suburb of Prenzlauer Berg where Tsarfati and Lauferis attended prayers.

Jews and German politicians have been particularly worried by comments by Bjoern Hoecke, the AfD leader of eastern Thuringia state, that the Holocaust memorial in Berlin is a “monument of shame” and that schools should highlight German suffering in World War Two.

“What happened today shows that the AfD should not be underestimated,” said Laufer. “AfD leaders like Hoecke don’t want to see that their words encourage some people to kill.”

Hoecke was among the AfD leaders to condemn the Halle attack.

The Halle gunman broadcast anti-Semitic comments before he opened fire. Several German media outlets said he acted alone although police have not confirmed this.

The far-right AfD entered the national parliament for the first time two years ago, riding a wave of anger at Chancellor Angela Merkel’s 2015 decision to welcome almost 1 million migrants. The party’s rise has alarmed Jewish leaders who condemn the party’s verbal attacks against Muslim migrants.

‘BLINDED BY HATRED’
Charlotte Knobloch, a Holocaust survivor and president of the Jewish Community in Munich, suggested that the AfD’s anti-immigrant rhetoric was contributing to an atmosphere of hate that encouraged political violence.

“This scary attack makes it clear how fast words can become acts of political extremism,” she said in a statement. “I’d be interested to know what that AfD has to say about such excesses, for which it had prepared the ground with its uncultured hate and incitement.”

At the gold-domed New Synagogue in Berlin’s city center about 200 people, including Muslim leaders, held a vigil, some carrying Israeli flags and others holding candles. Merkel visited the synagogue in the evening and took part in prayers.

Renate Keller, a 76-year-old attending the vigil with her husband, said the attack in Halle showed that Germany was not doing enough to fight anti-Semitism.

“It scares me that after the Holocaust some people have learned nothing from our history, which still weighs on us today,” she said. “People like the attacker have probably never met a Jew in their lives. They are just blinded by hatred.”

Josef Schuster, president of the Central Council of Jews in Germany, warned of the incendiary potential far-right politics.

Slideshow (12 Images)
“It shows that right-wing extremism is not only some kind of political development, but that it is highly dangerous and exactly the kind of danger that we have always warned against.”
 
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People say that Islamic terrorism is the biggest threat, but the thing is that the propaganda and acts of these groups such as ISIS, taliban, al-qaeda etc don't have a huge affect on the general Muslim population, whereas these white supremisists and neo-nazis do, people are easily being swayed on the internet through forums like 8chan and 4chan. People listen to these al-right speakers on youtube, such as Ben Shapiro, and believe every word they say. It's usually young minds who are being easily swayed or middle aged people who have too much time on their hands, such as the Christchurch shooter. That guy had nothing to do so spent too much time on these chat forums and was easily persuaded.
 
German synagogue shooting was far-right terror, justice minister says

A shooting at a synagogue in the German city of Halle on Wednesday was a far-right terror attack, said Justice Minister Christine Lambrecht.

Alleged perpetrator Stephan Balliet had four kilos (9lb) of explosives in his car, Ms Lambrecht said in a statement with attorney-general Peter Frank.

Mr Frank said the gunman had been planning a massacre.

The suspect, 27, faces two counts of murder and nine counts of attempted murder, German media report.

The German national is due to appear in court on Thursday afternoon.

Prosecutors allege he intended to create a "worldwide effect" by deliberately mimicking tactics used during a mass shooting at two New Zealand mosques earlier this year.

About 2,200 people watched a live stream he allegedly posted on the online streaming platform Twitch.

Could the attack have been prevented?

About 60 worshippers were at a Yom Kippur service at the time of the attack.

German police have faced criticism from the nation's most prominent Jewish community group, which accused the force of "negligence" in its handling of the attack.

The head of the Central Council of Jews said it was "scandalous" that police were not protecting the synagogue on the Jewish Yom Kippur holiday.

"If police had been stationed outside the synagogue, then this man could have been disarmed before he could attack the others," said the council's president, Josef Schuster, on Deutschlandfunk public radio.

In a tweet, Mr Schuster added that it was "a miracle that there were no further casualties" during the incident at the city's synagogue.

"We must make sure that we must protect our Jewish citizens much better," said Ms Lambrecht.

How did the attack unfold?

The video - which was removed from Twitch - shows a man making anti-Semitic and misogynistic comments before driving to the synagogue and shooting at its door.

After failing to get into the synagogue, the gunman shot dead two people: a woman in a nearby street and a man inside a kebab shop about 500 metres (yards) away. Two people were also wounded by bullets and underwent surgery.

Reports say the gunman also tried to set off explosives at the synagogue.

Witnesses say he was heavily armed, and an online anti-Semitic "manifesto" attributed to him shows guns, apparently home-made.

Survivors say they hid behind the synagogue's heavy locked doors until police arrived, which took more than 10 minutes.

How big a threat is anti-Semitism in modern Germany?

Authorities have noted a recent rise of anti-Semitic incidents in Germany, a country that is still haunted by the murder of six million Jews under Nazi rule.

"We unfortunately have to face the truth, which - for some time already - is that the threat of anti-Semitism, right-wing extremism, and right-wing terrorism is very high," Interior Minister Horst Seehofer told reporters on Thursday.
German police provide varying degrees of protection to synagogues. But when this is not possible, local Jewish communities sometimes work with law enforcement to provide for their own security.

Since the shooting, police presence has been increased outside synagogues in several east German cities, including Leipzig and Dresden, according to local media.

Oliver Malchow, chairman of the German police union (GdP), said police were too thinly spread for 24-hour protection of places of worship.

"While we're tackling terrorism we cannot at the same time involve many staff in monitoring far-right extremists," he told German broadcaster ZDF. "We didn't underestimate it, but we can't foresee everything and prevent it."
The attack was condemned by European leaders, including German Chancellor Angela Merkel. At an event in Nuremberg, Ms Merkel said the government would use "all means available" to tackle hatred and bigotry.

Elsewhere, Israeli Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu described the shooting as a "terror attack" and warned anti-Semitism was on the rise in Europe.

https://www.bbc.co.uk/news/world-europe-50003759
 
People say that Islamic terrorism is the biggest threat, but the thing is that the propaganda and acts of these groups such as ISIS, taliban, al-qaeda etc don't have a huge affect on the general Muslim population, whereas these white supremisists and neo-nazis do, people are easily being swayed on the internet through forums like 8chan and 4chan. People listen to these al-right speakers on youtube, such as Ben Shapiro, and believe every word they say. It's usually young minds who are being easily swayed or middle aged people who have too much time on their hands, such as the Christchurch shooter. That guy had nothing to do so spent too much time on these chat forums and was easily persuaded.

Then why did so many Europeans join ISIS?

Sure the far right threat has been underestimated in recent years and more needs to be done to tackle it but it's silly to suggest that religious extremists are not as big a problem as the far right are.
 
Surprising they have not found some so-called Islamic angle to this but admitted it as being an attack from right wingers. Dig a little deeper and the perpetrator could be a Christian nutcase.
 
Surprising they have not found some so-called Islamic angle to this but admitted it as being an attack from right wingers. Dig a little deeper and the perpetrator could be a Christian nutcase.

These are alt-right/neo-Nazis. Not necessarily Christian nutcase.

I used to visit Chan imageboards and those places were littered with these folks. They are not religious; they are racists and they want immigrants gone. They blame the Jews for refugee crisis.
 
These are alt-right/neo-Nazis. Not necessarily Christian nutcase.

I used to visit Chan imageboards and those places were littered with these folks. They are not religious; they are racists and they want immigrants gone. They blame the Jews for refugee crisis.

He could be a Christian. Thing is the media will never use the word "Christian" even if he was one. There are more Christian terrorists out there then the media tells us. The hatred towards Jews is because of Israel's wars where Muslim's are forced to leave home. Those attacking Jews and Israel are correct in this regard, they know that the USA and UK have been fighting Israel/Jewish wars for ages Christian or not.
 
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