In
the latest anti-Semitic attack in the Ukraine, vandals on Friday
sprayed swastikas and graffiti reading "Death to the Jews"
on a synagogue in Simferopol in the Crimea region, reported the
Israel Hayom daily newspaper. "There is no doubt that it was
important to anti-Semites to commit this crime," Anatoly
Gendin, head of the Association of Jewish Organizations and
Communities of Crimea, told the newspaper. "Since the crisis
started, prices have risen by 30 percent and people aren't
receiving their pensions. As always, the Jews are being blamed,
and I'm scared to think where it could progress," he added.
The anti-Semitic incident in Crimea took place the same day that
the Russians began to take over the peninsula.
According
to the Jewish community leader, to get to the building the vandals
had to climb the 2-meter wall that surrounds the synagogue
compound. Rabbi Misha Kapustin, a leader in the Crimean Jewish
community, told Israel Hayom that he had asked worshippers to stay
away from the site. "This was the first time in my life that
a synagogue was closed," he said. "I realized that the
situation wouldn't get better. We don't need to wait for them to
riot against us." Rabbi Kapustin added that intends to write
a letter to a number of heads of state, appealing to them to do
"whatever is in their power to prevent a Russian invasion. To
[ask them to] not abandon Ukrainian Jews."
Anti-Semitic
incidents have been recorded in Ukraine for many years, but have
been on the rise recently, in the wake of the unrest there that
toppled Viktor Yanukovych. In January, unknown assailants stabbed
a hareidi man in Kiev as he was making his way home from synagogue
on a Friday night. As the political situation in the country
worsened, reports indicated that extremists have been targeting
the Jewish community in Ukraine, including a member of the
opposition. A synagogue southeast of Kiev was firebombed last week
by unknown assailants. At the same time, reported Israel Hayom,
other voices are also making themselves heard in Crimea. A
representative of the pro-Russian party that controls the
Sevastopol city council said that "there are no soldiers or
armed people in the streets. There aren't a lot of Jews here, but
those who are left can relax."
The Rabbi of the city of
Kharkov, Rabbi Moshe Moskowitz, told Arutz Sheva last week that a
number of local Jews have already expressed a desire to leave
Ukraine and emigrate to Israel. The unrest of recent month is what
has brought this desire to the fore, he said. MK Rina Frankel
(Yesh Atid) has called on Prime Minister Binyamin Netanyahu to
launch an emergency aliyah operation to bring Ukrainian Jewry to
safety as a result of the unrest.
Source: Arutz
Sheva
My comments:
It is not by chance that the Jews of Crimea are persecuted.
Satan is busy in Crimea and the Ukraine doing his dirty work.
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