From the NSP News Service: We note here that things tend to "stay the same" rather than change over time. And the NSP thoroughly supports the concept of monitoring Jews in any nation, state, or area. Jews are dangerous people who spread all sorts of emotional and physical maladies, and who have no notion of the concept of "truth."
U.S. officials Thursday denounced what one called a “grotesque”
leaflet ordering Jews in one eastern Ukrainian city to register with a
government office, but the Jewish community there dismissed it as a
“provocation.”
The fliers were handed out by masked men in front the main synagogue
in Donetsk, where pro-Russian protesters have declared a “People’s
Republic,” Jewish leaders there said. The document warned the city’s
Jews to register and document their property or face deportation,
according to a CNN translation of one of the leaflets.
Geoffrey Pyatt, the U.S. ambassador to Ukraine, told CNN’s “The Lead
with Jake Tapper” that a respected Jewish leader in Ukraine showed him a
photograph of one of the leaflets. He called the document “chilling.”
And in Geneva, where diplomats held emergency talks on the Ukrainian
crisis, U.S. Secretary of State John Kerry called the leaflets
“grotesque” and “beyond unacceptable.”
But the Jewish community statement said relations between the Jews of
Donetsk and their neighbors were amicable, and the self-proclaimed head
of the “People’s Republic,” Denis Pushilin, denied any connection to
the fliers.
Pushilin told CNN the handwriting on the flier wasn’t his, and the
title attached to his name was not one he uses. It wasn’t clear who had
distributed the leaflets, but the chief rabbi of nearby Dnipropetrovsk
said, “Everything must be done to catch them.”
“It’s important for everyone to know its not true,” said the rabbi,
Shmuel Kaminezki. “The Jews of Donetsk will not do what the letter
says.”
The reports come as Ukraine’s Western-backed interim government has
been struggling to contain uprisings by pro-Russian political movements
in several eastern cities, with both sides invoking the historical
horror of Nazism in their disputes. Pyatt told CNN that radical groups
may be trying to stir up historic fears or create a provocation to
justify further violence.
“It’s chilling. I was disgusted by these leaflets,” Pyatt said.
“Especially in Ukraine, a country that suffered so terribly under the
Nazis, that was one of the sites of the worst violence of the Holocaust.
To drag up this kind of rhetoric is almost beyond belief.”
The leaflets were handed out on Tuesday, during the Jewish holiday of
Passover, the Jewish community statement said. They stated that
registration was required because Jewish leaders had supported the
“nationalists and bandits” in Kiev, where a popular revolt ousted
pro-Russian President Viktor Yanukovych in February.
“All citizens of Jewish nationality over age of 16, living on
territories of Donetsk People’s Republic, have to register with DPR
commissioner of nationality before May 3rd, 2014 at the Donetsk Regional
Administration, room 514, registration fee is $50,” read a photographed
copy of the leaflet translated by CNN. “Must have in person $50 cash,
passport, all available IDs, and documentation of ownership of real
estate and transportation.”
The men also hung posters with the same message, it said.
“Who is behind this is an open question,” Rabbi Pinkhas Vishedski
said in the statement. But he said the act was a provocation “and should
be treated accordingly … full stop and end of topic.”
Provocation or not, the U.S.-based Anti-Defamation League condemned
their distribution and what it called their “cynical and politically
manipulative” exploitation of anti-Semitism.
“We are skeptical about the flier’s authenticity, but the
instructions clearly recall the Nazi era and have the effect of
intimidating the local Jewish community,” ADL Director Abraham Foxman
said in a written statement.
Pyatt said that in Kiev, where the Jewish community is a vital part of political life, there is “no sympathy for this approach.”
“It’s almost inconceivable that this kind of thing could be happening in the 21st century,” Pyatt said.
And Kerry said all parties at the Geneva talks unanimously condemned anti-Semitism and other forms of religious intolerance.
“Any of the people who engage in these kinds of activities — from
whatever party or whatever ideology or whatever place they crawl out of —
there is no place for that,” he said.
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