Swastikas carved into Jewish headstones, memorials daubed with paint in Germany

Cemetery vandalism found in Haren being treated as anti-Semitic hate crime by police; Stolperstein ‘stumbling stone’ plaques for Holocaust victims defaced in Chemnitz, Eilenburg

Cnaan Liphshiz is The Times of Israel's Jewish World reporter

A swastika carved into a headstone at the Jewish cemetery of Haren, Germany in November 2020. (Courtesy of the Jewish Community of Haren/Eli Nahum/Monitoring Antisemitism Worldwide via JTA)
A swastika carved into a headstone at the Jewish cemetery of Haren, Germany in November 2020. (Courtesy of the Jewish Community of Haren/Eli Nahum/Monitoring Antisemitism Worldwide via JTA)

JTA — Amid a recent spate of incidents against Jewish targets in Germany, swastikas were etched into headstones at a cemetery.

The vandalism discovered this week in Haren, a northwestern town about 220 miles (354 kilometers) west of Berlin, is being treated as an anti-Semitic hate crime by police, the dpa news agency reported Tuesday. There are no suspects in custody.

Separately on Monday, unidentified individuals in Chemnitz, 120 miles (193 kilometers) south of Berlin, spray-painted a swastika in purple on memorial Stolperstein, or “stumbling stones” – brass street tiles that were placed at the former homes of Holocaust victims to commemorate them.

“We have had similar incidents when stumbling blocks were damaged or even cemented over,” a local politician, Katharina Weyandt, told the Tag24 news site.

A ‘stumbling block’ in Heidelberg, Germany. Illustrative photo (CC-BY SA The Profitcy/Wikipedia)

On Sunday, red paint was poured over other memorial cobblestones in Eilenburg, a city located 40 miles (64 kilometers) north of Chemnitz, Tag24 reported.

In Ukraine, an incident involving Nazi symbols and Jewish sites was recorded in Uzhhorod, in the southwest. Swastikas were etched into the walls of a former synagogue building and a Celtic cross was spray-painted on it.

Though the building no longer serves as a Jewish house of worship, its characteristic arched windows and doorframes may have attracted the unidentified perpetrators, the United Jewish Community of Ukraine wrote on its website.

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