Israel’s Ministerial Committee for Legislation approved on
Sunday a bill that would forbid the use of the word “Nazi” in any form, as well
as words with similar sounds, for any reason.
Use of the word Nazi would be
allowed only for “educational purposes, documentation, historical or scientific
research.” Offenders would face up to six months in prison and a fine of up to
100,000 shekels ($28,000).
The draft law also outlaws “insulting someone by
wishing or expressing hope that the Nazis’ goals should be fulfilled” as well
as “lamenting the fact that the Nazis failed to achieve their goals.” The bill
would not prohibit calling actual Nazis as such.
MK Shimon Ohayon (Yisrael Beiteinu) introduced the bill in
order “to prohibit use of Nazi symbols and terminology.” It will be submitted
to the Knesset for preliminary reading, or an initial vote, on Wednesday.
In addition to prohibiting Nazi terminology, the bill would
forbid the wearing of items including striped clothing meant to resemble the
uniforms worn by concentration-camp prisoners, yellow Stars of David and
swastikas in any form.
“Unfortunately, the phenomenon of using Nazi symbols and
terminology has only become more prevalent in recent years.
The unbearable ease
with which these things are used on a day-to-day basis as part of public and
political discourse represents grave disrespect for the feelings of holocaust
survivors and their descendants, and is worthy of condemnation,” reads the
preamble to the bill, in part. “The world in which we live in makes it
appropriate to solidify prohibitions against using symbols and terminology from
the Holocaust through legislation, in order to prevent the phenomenon from
spreading further.”
Joining Ohayon as sponsors of the bill are MKs Meir Sheetrit
(Hatnuah), Boaz Toporovsky (Yesh Atid), Dov Lipman (Yesh Atid) and Robert
Ilatov (Yisrael Beiteinu). Ohayon, who heads the Knesset caucus against
anti-Semitism, praised the ministerial committee’s decision.
“It is very important that Israel join many other nations in
Europe in forbidding all use of Nazi symbols,” Ohayon said, adding, “The
increasing prevalence of neo-Nazi groups that use these symbols represents a
danger for Jews, and as long as Israel does not forbid use of such images, we
cannot take issue with such phenomena throughout the world.”
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