Germany's Jews living in fear of thousands of Muslim refugees raised to be anti semitic
MANY German Jews are now living in fear of the hundreds of thousands of Muslim refugees coming into the country because "they have absorbed anti-Semitism from their mother's milk".

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A
spokesman of the Jewish forum for Democracy and against anti-Semitism,
Levi Salomon, said Jew-hating Nazi ideology and the hatred of Israel had
been at the heart of the ruling Baath parties in both Syria and Iraq
for decades.
He warned: "Therefore it must be
assumed that the majority of Syrian refugees have absorbed anti-Semitism
with their mother's milk."
Under the rule of
Nazi Germany in the 1930s until the end of World War 2 in 1945, millions
of Jews were imprisoned and killed during the Holocaust as part of
Adolph Hitler's "final solution" to ethnically cleanse the country of
Jews.

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Millions of Jews were imprisoned and murdered during Adolf Hitler's reign of terror
Salomon added: "It is a reverse import - spawned in the West exported to the Middle East and brought back again."
The fear of a growing anti-Semitism through the refugee immigration is growing among Jews in Germany
The chairman of
the forum, Lela Susskind, said: "The fear of a growing anti-Semitism
through the refugee immigration is growing among Jews in Germany.
"Many of the refugees from Syria and Iraq were raised in a society where the destruction of Israel was state doctrine."
Terror
expert Bernd Georg Thamm wrote a paper about Islamic Jihad for the
forum partly financed by Germany's highest Jewish authority, the Central
Council of Jews, in which he warns of the "Israelization" of Europe -
attacks on individuals, places of worship and cultural institutions.
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Germany has begun to regulate refugee arrivals amid growing public resentment
He said: "The current situation in Israel with constant attacks by Jihadists on people is conceivable in Europe."
Ms
Susskind warned that to integrate all the refugees into German society
"would be very difficult. But we don't believe our fears are being taken
seriously by politicians".
Anti Jewish crimes
rose to a five-year high in 2014 with 1,596 recorded hate crimes against
Jewish people, more than in any other EU state.






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