When Gábor Vona, the leader Hungary's far-right Jobbik
party, made his controversial visit and public address in London on the eve of
International Holocaust Remembrance Day, he faced protests by anti-racism and
anti-fascist campaigners, who said he should never have been allowed into the
UK in the first place.
But Vona also received support during his visit - including
from Neturei Karta, a radical Jewish anti-Zionist sect.
Pictures of several Jewish men wearing traditional hassidic
garb protesting in support of Vona and his Jobbik party were first circulated
by the BBC - although the British media outlet initially erroneously claimed
the group were protesting against his visit.
The confusion likely stemmed from the apparently bizarre
spectacle of supposedly religious Jews supporting a figure who has been
compared to Adolf Hitler for his party's extreme xenophobia.
Jobbik has been branded anti-Semitic and racist for its
views targeting the country's Jewish and Roma minorities, and blamed for an
increase in racism and anti-Semitism in the Eastern European state.
The party notably makes use of several Nazi symbols, including the Árpád stripes, which were initially used by the Hungarian Nazi Arrow Cross, which collaborated with Nazi Germany and was instrumental in the deportation and murder of 400,000 Hungarian Jews.
The party notably makes use of several Nazi symbols, including the Árpád stripes, which were initially used by the Hungarian Nazi Arrow Cross, which collaborated with Nazi Germany and was instrumental in the deportation and murder of 400,000 Hungarian Jews.
In 2009, Jobbik MP Krisztina Morvai sent an open letter to
Israel’s ambassador to Hungary, in which she detailed her joy at the deaths of
Israeli soldiers killed by Hamas terrorists in Gaza.
"The only way to talk to people like you is by assuming
the style of Hamas. I wish all of you lice-infested, dirty murderers will
receive Hamas’ ‘kisses'," she wrote.
But Jobbik's hatred for the State of Israel is precisely the
reason why Neturei Karta turned up in support. Angered by the implication that
it was opposed to the far-right party, Neturei Karta lodged a complaint with
the BBC, accusing it of "distorting our message", after which the
picture was removed.
On its Facebook page, the radical sect - which numbers no
more than a few hundred and has been disowned by all mainstream Jewish sects -
posted a status clarifying that its members were indeed there to support
Jobbik.
"Members of Neturei Karta were demonstrating against
the strident and aggressive actions of the Zionists against Jobbick [sic] and
Mr. Vona," it said, referring to anti-racism groups opposed to the visit.
"The Rabbis of NK were carrying a banner with a clear message: 'Authentic
Jewry is Against Zionist Aggression'."
"The BBC ignored the banner and totally distorting
[sic] our message. They stated that the Rabbis were there to demonstrate
against Mr. Vona and Jobbick. That is totally false.
"I have lodged a complaint with the BBC and await the
outcome."
Those familiar with Neturei Karta point out that its stance
is far from surprising, since the sect's relationship with extremist groups -
from the far-right to Islamists and the far-left - is nothing new.
"Neturei Karta has always been an important partner for
far-Left and Islamist groups in the UK, who have cited the support of Neturei
Karta as a fig-leaf defence against accusations of anti-Semitism," stated
Stand for Peace, a UK-based anti-extremism group.
"In 2006, the sect’s UK branch leader Ahron Cohen
stated that the Holocaust dead 'deserved it'. Similarly, Cohen was present at
Iran’s Holocaust Denial conference in 2006 – paid for by the Iranian foreign
ministry –[where] he was warmly greeted by Mahmoud Ahmadinejad, the Iranian
President and infamous supporter of terrorism. One fellow speaker at Iran’s
conference included David Duke, former 'imperial wizard' of the white
supremacist group the Ku Klux Klan."
"In June 2012, Neturei Karta’s UK leader Aharon Cohen
addressed a group at St George’s Tavern in London, according to anti-fascist
organisation Searchlight. The group, led by ex-National Front member Troy
Southgate, declares itself 'opposed to liberalism, democracy and
egalitarianism.'
"Holocaust denier Lady Michele Renouf, a champion of
David Irving, was one of the 30 attendees. The “New Right” is a neo-nazi
organisation, run by a former National Front activist, Troy Southgate. It is
the successor organisation to his “National Revolutionary Faction”, which
Southgate describes as:
"…a hardline revolutionary organisation based on an
underground cell-structure similar to that used by both the Islamic Resistance
Movement (Hamas) and the IRA…[...]"
Neturei Karta opposes the existence of the State of Israel
based on the assumption that an independent Jewish state prior to the coming of
the Jewish Messiah is sacrilegious. It has regularly aligned itself with
extremist Islamist groups, including Hamas, Hezbollah and other terrorist
organizations.
Just yesterday, a Neturei Karta member was sentenced to four
and a half years in an Israeli jail for volunteering to spy for Iran and
"kill a Zionist".
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