ISRAEL AT WAR - DAY 63

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'Cancer Jews, you people don’t exist' - anti-Israel activist

Amsterdam BDS rally at monument to Nazi victims features suicide bomber song

Dutch politicians ask city government why it allows viciously anti-Semitic demonstrations at main memorial for Nazi crimes

Anti-Israel activists in Amsterdam's Dam Square, November 2018 (Facebook screenshot)
Anti-Israel activists in Amsterdam's Dam Square, November 2018 (Facebook screenshot)

AMSTERDAM (JTA) — Representatives of the Netherlands’ ruling party have asked the capital city’s government to explain why it allows anti-Semitic and anti-Israel incitement at a monument for victims of Nazism.

Amsterdam City Council lawmakers Marianne Poot and Diederik Boomsma of the People’s Party for Freedom and Democracy and the Christian Democratic Appeal, respectively, filed nine questions to the city government earlier this week in connection with Sunday’s edition of an action promoting a boycott of Israel that anti-Israel activists stage weekly at the Dam Square monument.

That day, the action, which is usually limited to a handful activists, saw new participants, mostly Arab men but also Europeans and several women. Organizers played from loudspeakers a song by the rapper Ismo, who has featured anti-Semitic and homophobic content in his songs. In a 2014 song, he said “I hate Jews more than the Nazis.”

Titled “Free Palestine,” the lyrics celebrate the actions of a female suicide bomber who blows herself up in Tel Aviv.

“Rush hour in Tel Aviv, she boards the bus with a 60-year-old man, she sits down and closes her eyes and desires for revenge come out and she wants to express them, she blows herself up,” Ismo’s voice was heard singing at the Dam monument, the pro-Israel Center for Information and Documentation on Israel, or CIDI, wrote on its website based on recordings made at the event.

Later that day, one activist told a JTA journalist filming the event: “Cancer Jews, you people don’t exist, you’re made up.” But another, a woman from Ireland, insisted that the rally isn’t anti-Semitic, saying “Criticism is not anti-Semitism.”

Amin Abou Rashed, a man identified by Israel and other Western intelligence agencies as a Hamas operative in the Netherlands, was present at the event alongside BDS activist Simon Vrouwe.

In addition to asking whether the city government considers anti-Semitic expressions appropriate at the country’s main memorial for Nazi crimes, Poot and Boosma asked: “How does the city government view the presence of people collecting funds for groups considered a terrorist organization by the European Union?”

Some of the activists Sunday carried signs showing the Israeli flag with a swastika instead of the Star of David. In the past, a variant of the same sign with a cockroach instead of the symbol was featured at the Dam Square protests.

In recent years, Jewish and non-Jewish supporters of Israel have taken to staging counterprotests at the Dam and in other places where the anti-Israel activists set up shop. Michael Jacobs, who devotes much of his time to the counterprotests and has been arrested numerous times for them, was present with supporters on Sunday with Israeli flags and signs condemning anti-Semitism within the Boycott, Divestment and Sanctions movement.

Vrouwe has also been detained for collecting donations without permission.

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