fbpx
Wikipedia

History of the Jews in Belgium

The history of the Jews in Belgium goes back to the 1st century CE until today. The Jewish community numbered 66,000 on the eve of the Second World War[4] but after the war and The Holocaust, now is less than half that number.

The location of Belgium (dark green) in Europe
Belgian Jews
Belgische Joden/Juifs belges
יהודים בלגיים/בעלגיאַן אידן
Total population
30,000-42,000[1][2]
Regions with significant populations
Antwerp, Brussels
Languages
Dutch, French, Hebrew, Yiddish or other languages
Religion
Judaism, or irreligious
Related ethnic groups
Ashkenazi Jews, Sephardi Jews[3]

Today, Belgium is home to more than 42,000 Jews,[5] of whom two-thirds live in Antwerp.

History edit

 
Tombstone from Tienen dating from 1255-56, with the Hebrew inscription: "A stone engraved and placed at the head of (the) lady Rivkah, daughter of Mr. Moses, who died in the year 5016 and who rests in the garden of Eden".[6]
 
Jews being burned at the stake. Miniature from a 14th-century manuscript

Early history edit

 
Great Synagogue, Brussels

The first Jews to arrive in the present-day territory of Belgium arrived with the Romans between the years 50 and 60 AD. Jews were mentioned in the Middle Ages in Brabant, and in 1261 Duke Henry III ordered the expulsion of Jews and usurers from the province. The Jewish community suffered further during the Crusades, as many Jews who refused to be baptised were put to death. This early community mostly disappeared after the Black Death persecutions 1348–1350, and finally the Brussels massacre, 1370.[7]

Sephardim edit

In the 16th century, many Sephardic Jews who had been expelled from Spain and Portugal settled in Belgium and the Netherlands. In addition, many Marranos (crypto-Jews who outwardly professed Christianity) settled in Antwerp at the end of the 15th century.

Later history edit

Austrian (Habsburg) rule in Belgium started in 1713. Particularly under Emperor Joseph II, Jews acquired more rights, such as those to practice crafts, own land, and operate their own cemeteries. A number of Ashkenazi Jews immigrated to the area in that period. The status of Jews in Belgium improved further under French and Dutch rule.

Shortly following Belgian independence in 1830, Judaism was given the status of an officially recognized religion (besides Roman Catholicism, the majority faith of the country, and Protestantism). On 17 March 1832 the Central Jewish Consistory of Belgium was founded as the official representative of the Jewish religion to the Belgian authorities. The Great Synagogue of Brussels was built in 1876–1877.

Around the turn of the century, the focal point of the world's diamond trade shifted from Amsterdam to Antwerp, bringing many Jewish diamond traders and polishers to the city. During World War I, many fled to the neutral Netherlands, but they returned after the war. Many Polish and Romanian Jews immigrated during the 1920s while Nazi persecutions brought waves of German and Austrian Jews in the 1930s.

Holocaust edit

 
National Monument to the Jewish Martyrs of Belgium, in Brussels
 
Memorial to Belgian Jews in Neve Ilan forest

Prior to the Second World War, and its peak, the Jewish community of Belgium consisted of roughly 70,000 Jews (35,000 resided in Antwerp and 25,000 in Brussels). About 22,000 Jews at that time were German Jewish refugees. Only 6% of the Jewish population were of Belgian nationality. Belgium was occupied by Nazi Germany between May 1940 and September 1944, and anti-Semitic policies were adopted throughout Belgium, even though popular resistance in some cities hindered their full application. Belgian local police rounded up Jews, on three occasions in Antwerp, assisting the German in fulfilling their murderous policy towards the Jews. Approximately 45% of the Belgian Jews (25.484 people) were deported to concentration camps from Dossin Barracks in Mechelen, primarily to Auschwitz. Only 1,200 of the deportees survived the war. The Committee for Jewish Defence, which worked with the national resistance movement Front de l'Indépendance, was the largest Jewish defence movement in Belgium during the war. Some Belgian Jews who fled Belgium in 1940 were deported on transports from Drancy, France. A total of 28,900 Belgian Jews perished between 1942 and 1945. Belgium was the only occupied country in which a transport (Train XX) was halted to give deportees a chance to escape.

 
Belgium ID card for a foreign Jewish woman used in Vichy France.

The National Monument to the Jewish Martyrs of Belgium is in Brussels. More than twenty thousand names of Belgian Jewish victims are inscribed on the walls of the Monument, some of whom were killed on Belgian territory, but many of whom were shipped off to the death camps and executed in the East.

Today edit

 
Angela Merkel and Moscow Chief Rabbi Pinchas Goldschmidt in the Great Synagogue of Brussels, 2016

Today,[when?] there are around 42,000 Jews in Belgium. The Jewish Community of Antwerp (about 20,000 people) is one of the largest single communities in Europe, and one of the last places in the world where Yiddish is its primary language (mirroring certain Orthodox and Hassidic communities in New York, London and Israel). In addition a very high percentage (95%) of Jewish children in Antwerp receive a Jewish education. In contemporary Belgium, five Jewish newspapers and more than 45 active synagogues exist, 30 of which are in Antwerp.

Antisemitic incidents edit

According to JTA[8] report, the number of antisemitic incidents in 2012 was the highest since 2009. 80 antisemitic incidents were reported throughout Belgium in 2012, a 23% increase from 2011 and an overall increase of 34% since 2000. Five of the incidents involved physical attacks, three of which occurred in Antwerp.[9]

In October 2013, Isi Leibler, the former president of the Executive Council of Australian Jewry, reported on the alarming increase in the levels of antisemitism in Belgium. Leibler described a wide use of antisemitic caricatures in the media including a caricature on the official central Flanders educational website, comparing Israel to Nazi Germany. In addition, he described an increase of 30% in the number of antisemitic incidents including physical assaults and vandalism of Jewish institutions.[10] Furthermore, according to a survey conducted among eight Jewish communities in eight European Union countries, 88% of Belgian Jews feel that in the course of recent years, antisemitism has intensified in their country. 10% of the Belgian survey respondents reported suffering from incidents of physical violence or threats due to their Jewish affiliation since 2008. Most of the victims did not report the incidents to the police.[11]

The increased frequency of antisemitic attacks started in May 2014, when a Franco-Algerian from Roubaix killed four people in a shooting at the Belgian Jewish Museum in Brussels.[12] Two days later, a young Muslim man entered the CCU (Jewish Cultural Center) while an event was taking place and shouted racist slurs.[13] A month later, a school bus in Antwerp, that was driving 5-year-old Jewish children was stoned by a group of Muslim teens.[14] Towards the end of August 2014, a 75-year-old Jewish woman was hit and pushed to the ground because of her Jewish-sounding surname.[15] The Coordination Forum for Countering Antisemitism reported six racist incidents, three of which tool place as a part of different demonstrations againstOperation Protective Edge in Gaza (July–August 2014). Those demonstrations included antisemitic slurs such as "slaughter the Jews" and "Death to the Jews."[16]

Aalst annual carnival edit

In 2009, UNESCO added an annual Aalst, Belgium carnival to its extended Intangible Cultural Heritage List.[17] In March 2019, a float showcasing Jewish stereotypes was displayed at the carnival. The float was widely condemned by major European Jewish groups and Belgium's Jewish community.[18][19] In a report to UNESCO following a complaint by the Forum der Joodse Organisaties [nl], Unia, the country's watchdog on racism, said the float was of a clearly antisemitic kind, but that no laws were breached.

After the city's mayor refused to ban a repeat of such displays, he asked UNESCO through a statement to regional TV Oost[20] to strip the Aalst carnival of World Heritage status, which UNESCO did in December 2019, "over recurring repetition of racist and antisemitic representations".

Data and Analysis edit

A review study published in 2015 by the Institute for the Study of Global Antisemitism and Policy (ISGAP) revealed that in a survey conducted in Brussels, more than half of the Muslim origin respondents agreed with antisemitic statements, such as: "Jews want to dominate everything" and "Jews incite to war and blame others". The review, which analysed a few studies regarding antisemitism in Europe, found that the level of antisemitic attitudes is significantly higher among Muslims than among non-Muslims.[21]

An ADL (Anti-Defamation League) audit published in June 2015 revealed an increase in level of concern about violence against Jews in Belgium. In addition, 7% of the participants claimed that the number of Jews murdered in The Holocaust has been greatly exaggerated by history. In a follow-up survey 53% of the respondents agreed with the statement: "Violence against Jews is a symptom of deep anti-Jewish feelings among some people in my country". The ADL also conducted a research of anti-Jewish attitudes inside the Muslim population of Belgium. The results showed that 82% of Muslim Belgium agreed with the state "Jews have too much power in the business world", compared to 36% of the national population who agreed with it. In all eleven categories included in the research, the Muslim population reached higher levels of agreement with anti-Jewish stereotypes.[22]

On 2015 the Fundamental Rights Agency published its annual overview of data on antisemitism available in the European Union. The finding of the file presents a persistent increase in the number of antisemitic incidents in Belgium through the last ten years. Data of the Interfederal Centre for Equal Opportunities displayed in the file, shows that 130 Complaints of antisemitism were received during 2014, compared to 85 complaints in 2013. Furthermore, the number of incidents in each category has increased in 2014, compared with 2013.[23]

The ADL (Anti-Defamation League) published on 2016 an update for their "ADL Global 100",[24] that contained an update of the antisemitic attitudes toward Jews in Belgium. The findings showed a decrease in the percentage of the population harboring antisemitic attitudes (21% in 2015, compare to 27% in 2014). In addition, the survey shows that 46% of the respondents agree with the phrase "Jews are more loyal to Israel than to this country", and that 39% of the respondents agree with the phrase "Jews still talk too much about what happened to them in the Holocaust".[25]

Notable people edit

See also edit

References edit

  1. ^ American Jewish Year Book. "The Jewish Population of the World (2010)". Jewish Virtual Library. Retrieved 3 August 2014.
  2. ^ "Jewish Heritage in Flanders | VISITFLANDERS".
  3. ^ . Archived from the original on 20 February 2016.
  4. ^ "Belgium" (PDF). Yad-Vashem.
  5. ^ "Jewish Heritage in Flanders | VISITFLANDERS".
  6. ^ Ullmann, Salomon. Histoire des juifs en Belgique jusqu’au XVIIIe siècle: (notes et documents) . Antwerp
  7. ^ Au nom de l'antisionisme: l'image des Juifs et d'Israël dans la ... p27 Joël Kotek, Dan Kotek - 2005 "Des émeutes antijuives s'ensuivent. La profanation de l'hostie, que les chrétiens identifient à la personne même du Christ, serait la répétition du crime du calvaire. En 1370, une vingtaine de Juifs sont brûlés à Bruxelles."
  8. ^ "Home". jta.org.
  9. ^ "Anti-Semitism attacks in Belgium highest since 2009". 16 August 2013.
  10. ^ . www.jwire.com.au. Archived from the original on 7 October 2013.
  11. ^ "Antisemitism intensifies in Belgium". CFCA. Retrieved 23 November 2013.
  12. ^ "4 killed in shooting outside Jewish Museum in Brussels". CFCA. Retrieved 25 May 2014.
  13. ^ "Antisemitic threats near the CCU (Jewish Cultural Center) building". The Coordination Forum for Countering Antisemitism. Retrieved 29 June 2014.
  14. ^ "School bus carrying ultra-Orthodox Jewish children stoned in anti-Jewish attack". The Coordination Forum for Countering Antisemitism. Retrieved 29 June 2014.
  15. ^ "Antisemitic attack against 75 old woman". CFCA. La- Libre. Retrieved 26 August 2014.
  16. ^ "Demonstration features calls to 'slaughter the Jews". CFCA. JTA. Retrieved 26 July 2014.
  17. ^ A Belgian parade may lose its place on UNESCO’s World Heritage List after it allowed an anti-Semitic float
  18. ^ UNESCO Removes Belgium Carnival With Antisemitic Float From Heritage List
  19. ^ Israel welcomes Belgian parade's removal from UNESCO list
  20. ^ "Unesco removes 'racist' Belgian carnival from heritage list". The Guardian.
  21. ^ Jikeli, Gunther. . Institute for the Study of Global Antisemitism and Policy. Archived from the original on 2 April 2015. Retrieved 30 March 2015.
  22. ^ "ADL Global 100- An Index of Antisemitism" (PDF). Anti-Defamation League. Retrieved 20 July 2015.
  23. ^ "Antisemitism Overview of data available in the European Union 2004–2014" (PDF). European Union agency for fundamental rights. Retrieved 20 December 2015.
  24. ^ "ADL Global 100". global100. ADL. Retrieved 25 February 2016.(An international survey conducted in 2013-2014 to measure antisemitic opinions in 100 countries around the world)
  25. ^ "Belgium 2015". gobal100. ADL. Retrieved 25 February 2016.
  26. ^ "Pierre Alechinsky, a print retrospective: an exhibition" (PDF). MoMa. 2017.
  27. ^ "PIERRE ALECHINSKY FOSTERED A KEY LINK BETWEEN WESTERN AND EASTERN AVANT-GARDISM". www.kivoila.com.
  28. ^ The Cahen d'Anvers family claimed descent from the Davidic Line see jewish refugees
  29. ^ http://www.obi-il.org/piks/lelien_1.pdf[permanent dead link]
  30. ^ Vernacular Voices: Language and Identity in Medieval French Jewish Communities. University of Pennsylvania Press. 6 June 2011. ISBN 9780812205350.
  31. ^ British media, others erroneously report Israel’s withdrawal from Eurovision JTA, May 14, 2017
  32. ^ Edmée Cuttat (23 May 2016). "Virginie Efira, sur les traces de Mary Poppins" [Virginie Efira, in the footsteps of Mary Poppins]. Femina (in Swiss French). Retrieved 16 June 2020.
    - Samya Yakoubaly. "Virginie Efira révèle pourquoi elle a choisi d'appeler sa fille Ali..." [Virginie Efira reveals why she chose to call her daughter Ali...]. Purepeople (in French). Retrieved 16 June 2020.
  33. ^ "François Englert". Jewish Virtual Library.
  34. ^ "An afterthought to the great Flam debate". www.vub.be. 8 March 2023.
  35. ^ Françoise De Bueger-Van Lierde, At the origin of the feminist movement in Belgium. “The Popelin Affair”, periodical : Belgian Revue de Philologie et d'Histoire, volume 50, number 4 , date : 1972, read online : https://www.persee. en / doc / rbph_0035-0818_1972_num_50_4_2941
  36. ^ Dictionary of Belgian women: 19th and 20th centuries, Lannoo Uitgeverij, 2006, ISBN 978-2-87386-434-7
  37. ^ "Michael Freilich". Retrieved 26 June 2020.
  38. ^ Gergely, Thomas (25 October 2019). "Salomon Louis Hymans et la Brabançonne". Institut D'etudes du Judaisme. Retrieved 16 April 2023.
  39. ^ Goffaux, Pascal. "Werner Lambersy, présence d'un poète disparu". RTBF.
  40. ^ Jolles, Michael A.; Rubinstein, W. (27 January 2011). The Palgrave Dictionary of Anglo-Jewish History. Palgrave Macmillan. p. 555. ISBN 9780230304666.
  41. ^ Privat, Maurice; Huebner, Friedrich Markus (1929). Finanz giganten Alfred Loewensteins glück und ende. E.A. Seemann. p. 11.
  42. ^ Liphshiz, Cnaan (3 December 2018). . The Times of Israel. Archived from the original on 14 April 2023. Retrieved 15 April 2023.
  43. ^ Mikhman, Dan (1998). Belgium and the Holocaust: Jews, Belgians, Germans. Berghahn Books. p. 549. ISBN 978-965-308-068-3.
  44. ^ Clark, John (12 August 2007). "Frank Oz and that little voice inside". Los Angeles Times. Retrieved 1 December 2015. [Oz's] mother was Flemish, his father Dutch, and he spent the first five years of his life in Belgium
  45. ^ . San Francisco Chronicle. Archived from the original on 14 April 2023. Oz's parents — Dutch-Jewish woodworker and puppeteer Isidore "Mike" Oznowicz and Flemish-Catholic couturier/costumer Frances Oznowicz
  46. ^ "Chaim Perelman". www.jewishvirtuallibrary.org. Retrieved 17 April 2023.
  47. ^ Multiple sources:
    • Leroy, Francis (13 March 2003). Francis Leroy. A century of Nobel Prizes recipients: chemistry, physics, and medicine (p. 80). CRC Press. ISBN 9780203014189. Retrieved 12 March 2012.
    • "Vicomte Ilya Prigogine (Obituary, The Telegraph)". The Daily Telegraph. 5 June 2003. Retrieved 12 March 2012.
    • Ramage, Magnus; Shipp, Karen (29 September 2009). Magnus Ramage, Karen Shipp. Systems Thinkers (p. 227). Springer. ISBN 9781848825253. Retrieved 12 March 2012.
    • "Andrew Robinson. Time and notion". Timeshighereducation.co.uk. 17 July 1998. Retrieved 12 March 2012.
    • . Chaosforum.com. 28 May 2003. Archived from the original on 25 April 2012. Retrieved 12 March 2012.
    • "Biography of Ilya Prigogine". Pagerankstudio.com. Retrieved 12 March 2012.
  48. ^ Ouzman, Sven; Smith, Claire. "Women in Australian rock art research: The legacies of Andrée Rosenfeld and Patricia Vinnicombe - Andrée Jean Rosenfeld (1934–2008)" (PDF). p. 75.
  49. ^ a b Jacobsen, Anja Skaar (2012). Léon Rosenfeld Physics, Philosophy, and Politics in the Twentieth Century. World Scientific. p. 164. ISBN 9789814307819.
  50. ^ "THE BELGIAN JUDOIST AMELIE ROSSENEU WILL PLAY FOR ISRAEL". www.wrestling.com. 3 January 2014.
  51. ^ Taylor, Paul (2004). Jews and the Olympic Games: The Clash Between Sport and Politics : with a Complete Review of Jewish Olympic Medallists. Sussex Academic Press. p. 241. ISBN 978-1-903900-87-1.
  52. ^ Baeck-Schilders ·, Hedwige (1986). Emile Wambach (1854-1924) en het Antwerpse muziekleven. AWLSK. p. 29. ISBN 9789065693761.
  53. ^ Getting a kick out of stardom By Pearl Sheffy Gefen, The Jerusalem Post: 29 November 1996
  54. ^ Sinai, Allon. "Israeli skier Vandeput misses Giant Slalom due to late leg injury". The Jerusalem Post.
  55. ^ Blok, Hanna; Blok, Lodewijk; Wallet, Bart (2007). Bibliografie over het Jodendom en Israël voor het Nederlandse Talgebied, 1992-2006. Peeters. p. 402. ISBN 9789042919679.
  56. ^ "Éliane VOGEL-POLSKY chosen as "patronne de promotion" 2021/2022". www.coleurope.eu. College of Europe.
  57. ^ "Belgium names first ever Jewish, female prime minister". Israel-Hayom. JNS. 31 October 2019. Retrieved 17 November 2020.
  58. ^ Grangeray, Emilie (2 May 2021). "Jonathan Zaccaï : « Imaginer le pire, c'est quelque chose pour lequel je suis assez doué »". Le Monde.fr. Le Monde. Retrieved 15 April 2023.

Further reading edit

  • Moore, Bob. "Jewish Self-Help and Rescue in the Netherlands during the Holocaust in Comparative Perspective," Tijdschrift voor Geschiedenis (2011) 124#4 pp 492–505, a comparison with Belgium
  • Rogeau, Olivier; Royen, Marie-Cécile (28 January 2011). (PDF). Le Vif. Katholieke Universiteit Leuven. Archived from the original (PDF) on 2 October 2013. Retrieved 27 September 2013.

External links edit

  • Jewish Belgium
  • Chabad-Lubavitch centers in Belgium
  • The Virtual Jewish History Tour - Belgium at Jewish Virtual Library
  • Jewish Museum of Deportation and Resistance This museum in Mechelen traces the story of the many Jews who were deported during the occupation. The archives are accessible to those seeking information on the fate of family members.

history, jews, belgium, history, jews, belgium, goes, back, century, until, today, jewish, community, numbered, second, world, after, holocaust, less, than, half, that, number, location, belgium, dark, green, europebelgian, jews, belgische, joden, juifs, belge. The history of the Jews in Belgium goes back to the 1st century CE until today The Jewish community numbered 66 000 on the eve of the Second World War 4 but after the war and The Holocaust now is less than half that number The location of Belgium dark green in EuropeBelgian Jews Belgische Joden Juifs belges יהודים בלגיים בעלגיא ן אידןTotal population30 000 42 000 1 2 Regions with significant populationsAntwerp BrusselsLanguagesDutch French Hebrew Yiddish or other languagesReligionJudaism or irreligiousRelated ethnic groupsAshkenazi Jews Sephardi Jews 3 Today Belgium is home to more than 42 000 Jews 5 of whom two thirds live in Antwerp Contents 1 History 1 1 Early history 1 2 Sephardim 1 3 Later history 1 4 Holocaust 2 Today 2 1 Antisemitic incidents 2 2 Aalst annual carnival 2 3 Data and Analysis 3 Notable people 4 See also 5 References 6 Further reading 7 External linksHistory edit nbsp Tombstone from Tienen dating from 1255 56 with the Hebrew inscription A stone engraved and placed at the head of the lady Rivkah daughter of Mr Moses who died in the year 5016 and who rests in the garden of Eden 6 nbsp Jews being burned at the stake Miniature from a 14th century manuscriptEarly history edit nbsp Great Synagogue BrusselsThe first Jews to arrive in the present day territory of Belgium arrived with the Romans between the years 50 and 60 AD Jews were mentioned in the Middle Ages in Brabant and in 1261 Duke Henry III ordered the expulsion of Jews and usurers from the province The Jewish community suffered further during the Crusades as many Jews who refused to be baptised were put to death This early community mostly disappeared after the Black Death persecutions 1348 1350 and finally the Brussels massacre 1370 7 Sephardim edit In the 16th century many Sephardic Jews who had been expelled from Spain and Portugal settled in Belgium and the Netherlands In addition many Marranos crypto Jews who outwardly professed Christianity settled in Antwerp at the end of the 15th century Later history edit Austrian Habsburg rule in Belgium started in 1713 Particularly under Emperor Joseph II Jews acquired more rights such as those to practice crafts own land and operate their own cemeteries A number of Ashkenazi Jews immigrated to the area in that period The status of Jews in Belgium improved further under French and Dutch rule Shortly following Belgian independence in 1830 Judaism was given the status of an officially recognized religion besides Roman Catholicism the majority faith of the country and Protestantism On 17 March 1832 the Central Jewish Consistory of Belgium was founded as the official representative of the Jewish religion to the Belgian authorities The Great Synagogue of Brussels was built in 1876 1877 Around the turn of the century the focal point of the world s diamond trade shifted from Amsterdam to Antwerp bringing many Jewish diamond traders and polishers to the city During World War I many fled to the neutral Netherlands but they returned after the war Many Polish and Romanian Jews immigrated during the 1920s while Nazi persecutions brought waves of German and Austrian Jews in the 1930s Holocaust edit nbsp National Monument to the Jewish Martyrs of Belgium in BrusselsMain article The Holocaust in Belgium nbsp Memorial to Belgian Jews in Neve Ilan forestPrior to the Second World War and its peak the Jewish community of Belgium consisted of roughly 70 000 Jews 35 000 resided in Antwerp and 25 000 in Brussels About 22 000 Jews at that time were German Jewish refugees Only 6 of the Jewish population were of Belgian nationality Belgium was occupied by Nazi Germany between May 1940 and September 1944 and anti Semitic policies were adopted throughout Belgium even though popular resistance in some cities hindered their full application Belgian local police rounded up Jews on three occasions in Antwerp assisting the German in fulfilling their murderous policy towards the Jews Approximately 45 of the Belgian Jews 25 484 people were deported to concentration camps from Dossin Barracks in Mechelen primarily to Auschwitz Only 1 200 of the deportees survived the war The Committee for Jewish Defence which worked with the national resistance movement Front de l Independance was the largest Jewish defence movement in Belgium during the war Some Belgian Jews who fled Belgium in 1940 were deported on transports from Drancy France A total of 28 900 Belgian Jews perished between 1942 and 1945 Belgium was the only occupied country in which a transport Train XX was halted to give deportees a chance to escape nbsp Belgium ID card for a foreign Jewish woman used in Vichy France The National Monument to the Jewish Martyrs of Belgium is in Brussels More than twenty thousand names of Belgian Jewish victims are inscribed on the walls of the Monument some of whom were killed on Belgian territory but many of whom were shipped off to the death camps and executed in the East Today edit nbsp Angela Merkel and Moscow Chief Rabbi Pinchas Goldschmidt in the Great Synagogue of Brussels 2016Today when there are around 42 000 Jews in Belgium The Jewish Community of Antwerp about 20 000 people is one of the largest single communities in Europe and one of the last places in the world where Yiddish is its primary language mirroring certain Orthodox and Hassidic communities in New York London and Israel In addition a very high percentage 95 of Jewish children in Antwerp receive a Jewish education In contemporary Belgium five Jewish newspapers and more than 45 active synagogues exist 30 of which are in Antwerp Antisemitic incidents edit Main article Contemporary antisemitism in Belgium According to JTA 8 report the number of antisemitic incidents in 2012 was the highest since 2009 80 antisemitic incidents were reported throughout Belgium in 2012 a 23 increase from 2011 and an overall increase of 34 since 2000 Five of the incidents involved physical attacks three of which occurred in Antwerp 9 In October 2013 Isi Leibler the former president of the Executive Council of Australian Jewry reported on the alarming increase in the levels of antisemitism in Belgium Leibler described a wide use of antisemitic caricatures in the media including a caricature on the official central Flanders educational website comparing Israel to Nazi Germany In addition he described an increase of 30 in the number of antisemitic incidents including physical assaults and vandalism of Jewish institutions 10 Furthermore according to a survey conducted among eight Jewish communities in eight European Union countries 88 of Belgian Jews feel that in the course of recent years antisemitism has intensified in their country 10 of the Belgian survey respondents reported suffering from incidents of physical violence or threats due to their Jewish affiliation since 2008 Most of the victims did not report the incidents to the police 11 The increased frequency of antisemitic attacks started in May 2014 when a Franco Algerian from Roubaix killed four people in a shooting at the Belgian Jewish Museum in Brussels 12 Two days later a young Muslim man entered the CCU Jewish Cultural Center while an event was taking place and shouted racist slurs 13 A month later a school bus in Antwerp that was driving 5 year old Jewish children was stoned by a group of Muslim teens 14 Towards the end of August 2014 a 75 year old Jewish woman was hit and pushed to the ground because of her Jewish sounding surname 15 The Coordination Forum for Countering Antisemitism reported six racist incidents three of which tool place as a part of different demonstrations againstOperation Protective Edge in Gaza July August 2014 Those demonstrations included antisemitic slurs such as slaughter the Jews and Death to the Jews 16 Aalst annual carnival edit In 2009 UNESCO added an annual Aalst Belgium carnival to its extended Intangible Cultural Heritage List 17 In March 2019 a float showcasing Jewish stereotypes was displayed at the carnival The float was widely condemned by major European Jewish groups and Belgium s Jewish community 18 19 In a report to UNESCO following a complaint by the Forum der Joodse Organisaties nl Unia the country s watchdog on racism said the float was of a clearly antisemitic kind but that no laws were breached After the city s mayor refused to ban a repeat of such displays he asked UNESCO through a statement to regional TV Oost 20 to strip the Aalst carnival of World Heritage status which UNESCO did in December 2019 over recurring repetition of racist and antisemitic representations Data and Analysis edit A review study published in 2015 by the Institute for the Study of Global Antisemitism and Policy ISGAP revealed that in a survey conducted in Brussels more than half of the Muslim origin respondents agreed with antisemitic statements such as Jews want to dominate everything and Jews incite to war and blame others The review which analysed a few studies regarding antisemitism in Europe found that the level of antisemitic attitudes is significantly higher among Muslims than among non Muslims 21 An ADL Anti Defamation League audit published in June 2015 revealed an increase in level of concern about violence against Jews in Belgium In addition 7 of the participants claimed that the number of Jews murdered in The Holocaust has been greatly exaggerated by history In a follow up survey 53 of the respondents agreed with the statement Violence against Jews is a symptom of deep anti Jewish feelings among some people in my country The ADL also conducted a research of anti Jewish attitudes inside the Muslim population of Belgium The results showed that 82 of Muslim Belgium agreed with the state Jews have too much power in the business world compared to 36 of the national population who agreed with it In all eleven categories included in the research the Muslim population reached higher levels of agreement with anti Jewish stereotypes 22 On 2015 the Fundamental Rights Agency published its annual overview of data on antisemitism available in the European Union The finding of the file presents a persistent increase in the number of antisemitic incidents in Belgium through the last ten years Data of the Interfederal Centre for Equal Opportunities displayed in the file shows that 130 Complaints of antisemitism were received during 2014 compared to 85 complaints in 2013 Furthermore the number of incidents in each category has increased in 2014 compared with 2013 23 The ADL Anti Defamation League published on 2016 an update for their ADL Global 100 24 that contained an update of the antisemitic attitudes toward Jews in Belgium The findings showed a decrease in the percentage of the population harboring antisemitic attitudes 21 in 2015 compare to 27 in 2014 In addition the survey shows that 46 of the respondents agree with the phrase Jews are more loyal to Israel than to this country and that 39 of the respondents agree with the phrase Jews still talk too much about what happened to them in the Holocaust 25 Notable people editFurther information Category Belgian people of Jewish descent Pierre Alechinsky artist 26 27 Louis Cahen d Anvers banker 28 Menachem Banitt scholar 29 30 Ellie Blanche Delvaux Blanche singer 31 Virginie Efira actress 32 Francois Englert theoretical physicist Nobel prize laureate 33 Leopold Flam philosopher 34 Louis Frank lawyer 35 36 Michael Freilich politician 37 Paul Hymans politician second president of the League of Nations 38 Werner Lambersy poet 39 Bettina Le Beau actress 40 Alfred Loewenstein financier 41 Mischael Modrikamen politician and lawyer 42 Nat Neujean sculptor 43 Frank Oz actor 44 45 Chaim Perelman philosopher 46 Ilya Prigogine physical chemist 47 Andree Rosenfeld archaeologist 48 49 Leon Rosenfeld physicist and Marxist 49 Amelie Rosseneu judoka 50 Gaston Salmon fencer Olympic champion 51 Adolphe Samuel music critic 52 Jean Claude Van Damme actor 53 Virgile Vandeput alpine skier 54 Eriek Verpale writer 55 Eliane Vogel Polsky lawyer and feminist 56 Sophie Wilmes politician Prime Minister of Belgium 57 Jonathan Zaccai actor 58 See also edit nbsp Belgium portal nbsp Judaism portalChaim Kreiswirth the former Chief Rabbi of Antwerp Eisenman Synagogue History of the Jews in Antwerp Belgium Israel relationsReferences edit American Jewish Year Book The Jewish Population of the World 2010 Jewish Virtual Library Retrieved 3 August 2014 Jewish Heritage in Flanders VISITFLANDERS Joods Historisch Museum Joods Cultureel Kwartier Archived from the original on 20 February 2016 Belgium PDF Yad Vashem Jewish Heritage in Flanders VISITFLANDERS Ullmann Salomon Histoire des juifs en Belgique jusqu au XVIIIe siecle notes et documents Antwerp Au nom de l antisionisme l image des Juifs et d Israel dans la p27 Joel Kotek Dan Kotek 2005 Des emeutes antijuives s ensuivent La profanation de l hostie que les chretiens identifient a la personne meme du Christ serait la repetition du crime du calvaire En 1370 une vingtaine de Juifs sont brules a Bruxelles Home jta org Anti Semitism attacks in Belgium highest since 2009 16 August 2013 Anti Semitism in Belgium Reaches New Heights writes Isi Leibler www jwire com au Archived from the original on 7 October 2013 Antisemitism intensifies in Belgium CFCA Retrieved 23 November 2013 4 killed in shooting outside Jewish Museum in Brussels CFCA Retrieved 25 May 2014 Antisemitic threats near the CCU Jewish Cultural Center building The Coordination Forum for Countering Antisemitism Retrieved 29 June 2014 School bus carrying ultra Orthodox Jewish children stoned in anti Jewish attack The Coordination Forum for Countering Antisemitism Retrieved 29 June 2014 Antisemitic attack against 75 old woman CFCA La Libre Retrieved 26 August 2014 Demonstration features calls to slaughter the Jews CFCA JTA Retrieved 26 July 2014 A Belgian parade may lose its place on UNESCO s World Heritage List after it allowed an anti Semitic float UNESCO Removes Belgium Carnival With Antisemitic Float From Heritage List Israel welcomes Belgian parade s removal from UNESCO list Unesco removes racist Belgian carnival from heritage list The Guardian Jikeli Gunther Antisemitic Attitudes Among Muslims in Europe A Review of Recent Surveys Institute for the Study of Global Antisemitism and Policy Archived from the original on 2 April 2015 Retrieved 30 March 2015 ADL Global 100 An Index of Antisemitism PDF Anti Defamation League Retrieved 20 July 2015 Antisemitism Overview of data available in the European Union 2004 2014 PDF European Union agency for fundamental rights Retrieved 20 December 2015 ADL Global 100 global100 ADL Retrieved 25 February 2016 An international survey conducted in 2013 2014 to measure antisemitic opinions in 100 countries around the world Belgium 2015 gobal100 ADL Retrieved 25 February 2016 Pierre Alechinsky a print retrospective an exhibition PDF MoMa 2017 PIERRE ALECHINSKY FOSTERED A KEY LINK BETWEEN WESTERN AND EASTERN AVANT GARDISM www kivoila com The Cahen d Anvers family claimed descent from the Davidic Line see jewish refugees http www obi il org piks lelien 1 pdf permanent dead link Vernacular Voices Language and Identity in Medieval French Jewish Communities University of Pennsylvania Press 6 June 2011 ISBN 9780812205350 British media others erroneously report Israel s withdrawal from Eurovision JTA May 14 2017 Edmee Cuttat 23 May 2016 Virginie Efira sur les traces de Mary Poppins Virginie Efira in the footsteps of Mary Poppins Femina in Swiss French Retrieved 16 June 2020 Samya Yakoubaly Virginie Efira revele pourquoi elle a choisi d appeler sa fille Ali Virginie Efira reveals why she chose to call her daughter Ali Purepeople in French Retrieved 16 June 2020 Francois Englert Jewish Virtual Library An afterthought to the great Flam debate www vub be 8 March 2023 Francoise De Bueger Van Lierde At the origin of the feminist movement in Belgium The Popelin Affair periodical Belgian Revue de Philologie et d Histoire volume 50 number 4 date 1972 read online https www persee en doc rbph 0035 0818 1972 num 50 4 2941 Dictionary of Belgian women 19th and 20th centuries Lannoo Uitgeverij 2006 ISBN 978 2 87386 434 7 Michael Freilich Retrieved 26 June 2020 Gergely Thomas 25 October 2019 Salomon Louis Hymans et la Brabanconne Institut D etudes du Judaisme Retrieved 16 April 2023 Goffaux Pascal Werner Lambersy presence d un poete disparu RTBF Jolles Michael A Rubinstein W 27 January 2011 The Palgrave Dictionary of Anglo Jewish History Palgrave Macmillan p 555 ISBN 9780230304666 Privat Maurice Huebner Friedrich Markus 1929 Finanz giganten Alfred Loewensteins gluck und ende E A Seemann p 11 Liphshiz Cnaan 3 December 2018 Un avocat juif belge est le meilleur allie de Steve Bannon en Europe The Times of Israel Archived from the original on 14 April 2023 Retrieved 15 April 2023 Mikhman Dan 1998 Belgium and the Holocaust Jews Belgians Germans Berghahn Books p 549 ISBN 978 965 308 068 3 Clark John 12 August 2007 Frank Oz and that little voice inside Los Angeles Times Retrieved 1 December 2015 Oz s mother was Flemish his father Dutch and he spent the first five years of his life in Belgium Muppet master Frank Oz shares haunting puppets from his family s past San Francisco Chronicle Archived from the original on 14 April 2023 Oz s parents Dutch Jewish woodworker and puppeteer Isidore Mike Oznowicz and Flemish Catholic couturier costumer Frances Oznowicz Chaim Perelman www jewishvirtuallibrary org Retrieved 17 April 2023 Multiple sources Leroy Francis 13 March 2003 Francis Leroy A century of Nobel Prizes recipients chemistry physics and medicine p 80 CRC Press ISBN 9780203014189 Retrieved 12 March 2012 Vicomte Ilya Prigogine Obituary The Telegraph The Daily Telegraph 5 June 2003 Retrieved 12 March 2012 Ramage Magnus Shipp Karen 29 September 2009 Magnus Ramage Karen Shipp Systems Thinkers p 227 Springer ISBN 9781848825253 Retrieved 12 March 2012 Andrew Robinson Time and notion Timeshighereducation co uk 17 July 1998 Retrieved 12 March 2012 Time and Change Chaosforum com 28 May 2003 Archived from the original on 25 April 2012 Retrieved 12 March 2012 Biography of Ilya Prigogine Pagerankstudio com Retrieved 12 March 2012 Ouzman Sven Smith Claire Women in Australian rock art research The legacies of Andree Rosenfeld and Patricia Vinnicombe Andree Jean Rosenfeld 1934 2008 PDF p 75 a b Jacobsen Anja Skaar 2012 Leon Rosenfeld Physics Philosophy and Politics in the Twentieth Century World Scientific p 164 ISBN 9789814307819 THE BELGIAN JUDOIST AMELIE ROSSENEU WILL PLAY FOR ISRAEL www wrestling com 3 January 2014 Taylor Paul 2004 Jews and the Olympic Games The Clash Between Sport and Politics with a Complete Review of Jewish Olympic Medallists Sussex Academic Press p 241 ISBN 978 1 903900 87 1 Baeck Schilders Hedwige 1986 Emile Wambach 1854 1924 en het Antwerpse muziekleven AWLSK p 29 ISBN 9789065693761 Getting a kick out of stardom By Pearl Sheffy Gefen The Jerusalem Post 29 November 1996 Sinai Allon Israeli skier Vandeput misses Giant Slalom due to late leg injury The Jerusalem Post Blok Hanna Blok Lodewijk Wallet Bart 2007 Bibliografie over het Jodendom en Israel voor het Nederlandse Talgebied 1992 2006 Peeters p 402 ISBN 9789042919679 Eliane VOGEL POLSKY chosen as patronne de promotion 2021 2022 www coleurope eu College of Europe Belgium names first ever Jewish female prime minister Israel Hayom JNS 31 October 2019 Retrieved 17 November 2020 Grangeray Emilie 2 May 2021 Jonathan Zaccai Imaginer le pire c est quelque chose pour lequel je suis assez doue Le Monde fr Le Monde Retrieved 15 April 2023 Further reading editMoore Bob Jewish Self Help and Rescue in the Netherlands during the Holocaust in Comparative Perspective Tijdschrift voor Geschiedenis 2011 124 4 pp 492 505 a comparison with Belgium Rogeau Olivier Royen Marie Cecile 28 January 2011 Juifs de Belgique PDF Le Vif Katholieke Universiteit Leuven Archived from the original PDF on 2 October 2013 Retrieved 27 September 2013 External links editJewish Belgium Chabad Lubavitch centers in Belgium The Virtual Jewish History Tour Belgium at Jewish Virtual Library visitbelgium com jewish Jewish sites in Belgium Jewish Museum of Deportation and Resistance This museum in Mechelen traces the story of the many Jews who were deported during the occupation The archives are accessible to those seeking information on the fate of family members Retrieved from https en wikipedia org w index php title History of the Jews in Belgium amp oldid 1189114793, wikipedia, wiki, book, books, library,

article

, read, download, free, free download, mp3, video, mp4, 3gp, jpg, jpeg, gif, png, picture, music, song, movie, book, game, games.