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Anti-Semitism growing amid COVID protests

September 1, 2020

Jewish groups and police alike have been worried about growing anti-Semitism during large demonstrations in Berlin. Some protesters have used far-right imagery and compared themselves to Holocaust victims.

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Deutschland Berlin Protest gegen Corona-Maßnahmen am 28.8.2020
Image: Reuters/C. Mang

The Central Council of Jews in Germany has warned of increased anti-Semitism due to the protests against coronavirus measures.

"For months, conspiracy theories with anti-Semitic tendencies have been deliberately stirred up in the coronavirus debate," Council President Josef Schuster told German daily newspaper Bild.

"If, for example, the Rothschilds are blamed for the pandemic, then this is a synonym for Jews," said Shuster.

He added that not everyone who protested in Berlin in August was anti-Semitic or racist, "but they walked among them."

Two recent protests have drawn tens of thousands from across the country to Berlin. The demonstrations were mainly peaceful, but at one point, hundreds of demonstrators broke through a blockade in an attempt to storm the Reichstag building.

Police also see uptick

The police trade union, the GdP, said it has also seen a rise in radicalization of protesters against coronavirus protective measures.

"Since the first demonstrations, right-wing groups have influenced the corona protest movement," GdP vice-chairman Jörg Radek told newspapers of the Funke Media Group. "The right-wingers are there and are about to completely take over the movement."

Some protesters have used signs and flags associated with far-right politics, from the Reichskriegsflagge (Imperial War Flag) to costumes comparing themselves to Holocaust victims.

"Nobody can say they are just a follower now. Anyone who stays with the movement must ask themselves whether they want to join forces with right-wing extremists and combine personal concerns in the coronavirus crisis with the extremists' anti-democratic goals," said Radek.  

kbd/aw (AFP, dpa)