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Hungarian government steps up to battle anti-Semitism

Hungary will invest $1.7 million annually to fight anti-Semitism across Europe • Its Jewish community is to be tasked with leading such efforts.

Israeli Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu and Hungarian Prime Minister Viktor Orbán hold a joint press conference at the Parliament building in Budapest on July 18, 2017. Photo by Haim Zach/GPO.
Israeli Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu and Hungarian Prime Minister Viktor Orbán hold a joint press conference at the Parliament building in Budapest on July 18, 2017. Photo by Haim Zach/GPO.

Hungary plans to invest €1.5 million ($1.7 million) annually to fight anti-Semitism across Europe starting in 2019.

The move was set to be announced on Wednesday afternoon at the weekly press conference by the Prime Minister’s Office Chief of Staff Gergely Gulyas, who initiated it.

The funds will be permanently earmarked toward the fight against anti-Semitism.

Activities will include comprehensive evaluations of the legal framework in every E.U. country to consolidate steps to fight anti-Semitism on the legal policy level; initiatives to introduce and amend legislation to better fight anti-Semitism; the establishment of a 24-hour, seven-day hotline for the reporting of anti-Semitic incidents; and a comprehensive evaluation of school curricula in every European education system.

The funds will also be used to monitor anti-Semitism across the continent, with a special emphasis on activities that promote a boycott of Israel in every official language, but also Arabic and Turkish, to create an action plan for tackling anti-Semitism.

Members of Hungary’s Jewish community will lead the efforts across Europe. They will be headquartered in Brussels, the capital of the European Union.

Rabbi Shlomo Kovesh, who manages Budapest’s Chabad House, told Israel Hayom, “We in the community know how to appreciate actions and attach less importance to talk. In the modern world, in which we are flooded with different narratives and in which the truth is constantly challenged, actions are given less importance.”

He continued, saying “the Hungarian government is doing something very important here to fight anti-Semitism, and I congratulate it for that. I call on other governments in Europe to take action. With the increase in anti-Semitism, the time for talk has passed. The time has come for action.”

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