• Donderdag, 2 Februari 2012
  • 9 Shevat, 5772

Likoed Nederland - Likud of Holland : informatie over het conflict tussen de Palestijnen en Israel

BETA

European poll: 46% say Jews are ‘different’

Maandag, Januari 26, 2004 / Laatst bijgewerkt: Donderdag, December 15, 2011

By Haaretz Service and Reuters, January 26, 2004.

A poll of nine European nations that was released Monday found that 46
percent of respondents said Jews in their nations were “different,” and 35
percent said Jews should stop “playing the victim” for the Holocaust.

Some 9 percent of the respondents said they “don’t like or trust Jews,”
and 15 percent said “it would be better if Israel didn’t exist.”

The poll by the Ipso research institute for Italian newspaper Corriere della Sera
was conducted in Italy, France, Belgium, Austria, Spain, the Netherlands,
Luxembourg, Germany, and Britain.

The poll, released a day before many European countries mark a day of
remembrance for Holocaust victims, was the latest pointing to what Jewish
leaders see as a worrying trend.

“Obviously the virus of anti-Semitism is far more resilient and determined than
we might have thought in the past,” said British-born Rabbi David Rosen,
international director of inter-religious affairs of the American Jewish
Committee, who lives in Israel.

Asked if Jews in their countries had a “mentality and lifestyle” different than
other citizens, 46 percent said yes. About 40.5 percent said Jews in their
country had “a particular relationship with money” and 35.7 percent said Jews
“should stop playing the victim for the Holocaust and the persecutions of 50
years ago.”

The poll also differentiated between the countries surveyed, finding that
German, Austrian, Spanish and Italian hostility toward Jews was higher than
that in the rest of the countries. In all the countries, anti-Semitic sentiment was
positively correlated with anti-Israel sentiment.

More than 71 percent of those polled said Israel should leave the occupied
territories and Palestinians should stop attacking Israeli targets.

More than 68 percent said they believed Israel had a right to exist but
the government of Prime Minister Ariel Sharon was “making the wrong
choices.”

A poll published Friday in Britain’s Jewish Chronicle newspaper found that
nearly one in five Britons says a Jew would not make an acceptable prime
minister, and almost one in seven believes the scale of the Holocaust is
exaggerated.

In November, Correire della Sera published a national poll that found that 51
percent of Italians think the mentality and way of life of Jews differs from those
of other Italians, and 17 percent said it would be better if Israel ceased to exist.

-- Reacties gesloten.

Meer artikelen uit From the Press

30 januari 2012
Palestinian protest

The Palestinians are doing their best to derail peace talks with Israel
By Con Coughlin, The Telegraph (UK), January 24, 2012. Palestinian protest While the world’s attention is fixed on the …
26 januari 2012
Kill Jews

Palestinian Authority rejects condemnation of Mufti hate speech as “incitement”
By Itamar Marcus and Nan Jacques Zilberdik, Palestinian Media Watch, January 25, 2012. Palestinian Media Watch‘s exposure …
25 januari 2012
Kill the Jews

Israel orders probe against Jerusalem mufti
Sheikh Hussein suspected of incitement to violence and racism after citing a hadith claiming the end of …
8 januari 2012
Confused Abbas

The “confusing” messages of Mahmoud Abbas
By Khaled Abu Toameh, Stonegate Institute, January 6, 2012. Confused Abbas Many Palestinians are finding it increasingly difficult to …
15 december 2011
Happy fish

Israel helps improving Gaza economy with fish farming
Bridges for Peace, November 14, 2011. The Gaza Coordination and Liaison Administration (CLA) successfully completed a fish farming …
9 november 2011
Resenting Israel, Not Netanyahu
Commentary, Novermber 9, 2011. Barack Obama’s dislike of Benjamin Netanyahu was not a state secret prior to …
26 oktober 2011
Dramatic statistics refute media stereotype of violent Jewish settlers
Camera, October 26, 2011. Faced with the refusal of the Palestinian leadership to negotiate directly with Israel, many …
3 oktober 2011
The world blames Israel
By dr. Manfred Gerstenfeld, who has published 20 books. Several of these address anti-Semitism and anti-Israelism. Ynet, October …
30 september 2011
Land without peace: Why Abbas went to the U.N.
By Charles Krauthammer, The Washington Post, September 30, 2011. While diplomatically inconvenient for the Western powers, Palestinian Authority …
27 september 2011
Why do human rights groups ignore Palestinians’ war of words?
By Robert L. Bernstein, the former president and chairman of Random House, is chairman of the group …
25 september 2011
Palestinian President Abbas at the UN: another lost chance for peacemaking
By David Harris, The Huffington Post, September 25, 2011. On Friday, Palestinian President Mahmoud Abbas addressed the UN …
16 september 2011
AP Photo

There is no Palestinian State
By Efraim Karsh, research professor of Middle East and Mediterranean Studies at King’s College London, director of …