Budapest – Thousands of Hungarians March Against Anti-Semitism After Far-Right Poll Gains

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    People participate in the annual "March of the Living" walk in remembrance of the more than half million Hungarian Jews that died in the Holocaust during World War Two, in Budapest, April 27, 2014. REUTERS/Bernadett SzaboBudapest – Tens of thousands of Hungarians joined a protest march on Sunday against anti-Semitism, three weeks after the far-right Jobbik party won nearly a quarter of votes cast in a national election.

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    Budapest’s annual ‘March of the Living’ has drawn an increasing number of participants in recent years to commemorate the deaths of around half a million Hungarian Jews during the Holocaust in World War Two.

    The marchers, many holding European Union and Israeli flags, attended the inauguration of a Holocaust monument on a bank of the Danube where Jews were executed during the war. They then marched in silence through the city to an old railway station from which trains departed 70 years ago for Nazi death camps.

    More people are taking part because they fear anti-Semitism is again on the rise, said Miklos Deutsch, 64, a restaurant manager, after a shofar, a traditional Jewish instrument made from a ram’s horn, gave the signal for the march to start.

    “The cause, indeed, is poverty. When the economy does not really work and people are poor, somebody has to be blamed, and the Jews and the gypsies are blamed,” he said.

    “The strengthening of Jobbik is dangerous,” added Deutsch, whose parents lost most of their relatives in the Holocaust.
    Andras Heisler (2-L), chairman of the Federation of Jewish Religious Communities of Hungary, and Israeli Ambassador to Hungary Ilan Mor (2-R)  participate in the 'March of The Living' along Budapest's Astoria to commemorate victims of the Holocaust, in Budapest, Hungary, 27 April 2014. Others are not identified. It marks the 70th anniversary of the beginning of the Hungarian holocaust during which some 600,000 Jewish Hungarians were deported to Nazi death camps.  EPA/Bea Kallos
    Unemployment has fallen under the rule of Prime Minister Viktor Orban’s conservative Fidesz party, which again secured a two-thirds parliamentary majority in this month’s election.

    But many Hungarians still struggle to make ends meet and this discontent has helped Jobbik increase its support to 21 percent of the national vote from 16 percent four years ago.

    Jobbik denies being anti-Semitic but does little to dispel its reputation for intolerance. Its followers are often openly hostile to Jews and other ethnic and religious minorities.

    “Anti-Semitism has risen. You can feel that in all segments of society: in politics, in media, in schools and in social intercourse,” said another marcher, Gyorgy Burjan, a retired engineer, adding that Jobbik had capitalized on that.

    Jewish groups have also protested against a plan to build a memorial to Hungary’s 1944 German occupation, saying it would conceal the responsibility of local authorities who collaborated with the Germans to ship hundreds of thousands to the camps.
    Participants of the 'March of The Living' walk to commemorate victims of the Holocaust, in Budapest, Hungary, 27 April 2014. It marks the 70th anniversary of the beginning of the Hungarian holocaust during which some 600,000 Jewish Hungarians were deported to Nazi death camps. Front row banner reads: 'About the past for the future'.  EPA/Bea Kallos
    After Sunday’s march, around 600 participants boarded a train bound for Poland, where they were due to take part in a commemoration at the Nazi death camp of Auschwitz near Krakow.


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    10 Comments
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    9 years ago

    Imagine if we could have had a future like this in 1942 in Hungary. Jews marching for Judaism. It goes without saying that when you see this type of religious right to exist pluralism in the nation where there is a cause of hatred and indecency on a daily basis, there is always hope for a better dignified future even in light of the hate of the watch tower against its own pride.

    Will there be an end to the Jobbik Party’s platform in the next few years? I would think that a march like this extols freedom and reasons that there is a crime that will not be unnoticed.

    G-d is quite amazing when you can view his work from the ways of a human development in time.

    Keep this photograph in your memory.

    Never Again.

    ChachoMoe
    ChachoMoe
    9 years ago

    “The cause, indeed, is poverty. When the economy does not really work and people are poor, somebody has to be blamed, and the Jews and the gypsies are blamed,” he said.”

    Amazing how history keeps on repeating itself…same as in postwar Germany, Poland, etc, despite the absence of Jews nowadays in Hungary. Jews will and have always been the chosen scapegoat to blame all the worlds troubles..

    5TResident
    Noble Member
    5TResident
    9 years ago

    Jews have no business living in Hungary in 2014.

    Buchwalter
    Buchwalter
    9 years ago

    Hungarian anti-Semitic programs have received funds from the U.S. and the fact is the land of Horthy and the Hungarian SS cannot be straighten out. That what is crooked cannot be straighten out. I learned that when Hungarian SS guarded the train from Czenstochau to Buchenwald