Article in the Forward about Human Rights First's
efforts to urge Secretary Powell to attend.
Posner testimony to the U.S. Senate
Committee on Foreign Relations on antisemitism (4/8/04)
Correspondence between Human
Rights First and the State Department about Secretary Powell's attendance.
HRF report: Fire and Broken Glass: The Rise of
Antisemitism in Europe
English and French versions
U.S. State Department announcement that Secretary Powell will attend Berlin
meeting.
Letter from Vienna: Europe Must Take Action to Counter
Rise in Antisemitism (06/20/03)
U.S.
Congressional Record: Remarks of Rep. Howard L. Berman (D-CA) (3/4/03)
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Background on the OSCE Antisemitism Meeting in Berlin
On April 28 and 29, 2004, the Organization for Security
and Cooperation in Europe, OSCE, will meet in Berlin for an extraordinary
meeting on antisemitism. Held at the invitation of the German government,
the conference is to follow up the OSCE's first ever special meeting on
antisemitism, in Vienna in June 2003.
The Berlin Conference will bring together both governmental delegations
and a broad spectrum of nongovernmental organizations engaged in the fight
against racism and discrimination. The human rights movement will question
OSCE members' fulfillment of past pledges to address antisemitism and
propose concrete actions for improvement.
The meeting is urgently needed. Discrimination against Jews as a religious,
ethnic, or racial group has increasingly taken the form of racist threats
and violence in a pattern across much of Europe, from Russia to the United
Kingdom. This disturbing pattern has included physical assaults on individuals
- and fire-bombings, gunfire, window smashing, and vandalism of Jewish
homes, schools, synagogues, and other community institutions.
Many European governments are not accurately monitoring, reporting, or
effectively combating antisemitic violence, creating a climate that has
contributed to the rise of anti-Jewish hate speech and racist violence.
Often the official response of governments is silence, or to attribute
attacks to common crime or to political protest. The French government
made few public statements about the rising tide of anti-Jewish violence
in 2002 and early 2003, but has now firmly condemned the violence and
taken new measures to monitor and to combat it.
The governments of Belgium, Germany, the United Kingdom, and Russia, where
many attacks have also occurred, have made public statements condemning
the surge in violence. But European governments overall have released
little documentation on anti-Jewish violence, and have, according to nongovernmental
observers, done too little to abate the rising tide. The U.S. Department
of State's own annual reports on human rights conditions and religious
intolerance largely echo European governments' uneven reporting on antisemitic
violence in Europe.
Governments and civil society alike need to confront antisemitic acts
more effectively-as the serious violations of international human rights
they are. A unifying principal for the human rights movement is that antisemitism
and other forms of racism must be combated by a broad movement of civil
society-and not left solely to the communities under threat.
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