Paul
Goble
Staunton, November 6 – A Jewish
teacher and community activist who was sentenced in August to 85 months in the
camps for stealing and taking bribes has dismissed his attorneys in advance of
a rehearing ordered by an appeals court saying that in his case they would have no impact on court
because the outcome has been determined by political forces beyond the court
room.
The case of Petr Farber, currently
unemployed, might have attracted little attention had it not been for a
statement to the court at that time by a Russian prosecutor who asked “could
someone with the name of Farber [a clearly Jewish name] help the village for
free?” (nazaccent.ru/content/8681-v-moskve-sostoyalsya-piket-v-zashitu.htm).
Some in Moscow suggested that this
remark had less to do with anti-Semitism than with the arbitrariness of the
Russian court system – see ng.ru/blogs/leorad/prigovor-farberu-i-norma-zhizni.php
– but the Russian Jewish Community recognized the dangers inherent in such
comments and organized protests (help.rjc.ru/site.aspx?SECTIONID=85646&IID=2444628
and help.rjc.ru/site.aspx?SECTIONID=345556&IID=2444912).
Farber’s latest move, to dispense
with lawyers and to represent himself, is likely to attract even more attention
given the increasingly overheated ethnic scene in the Russian Federation and
especially the openly pro-Nazi and anti-Semitic attitudes on display during
Monday’s Russian March (nazaccent.ru/content/9612-ilya-farber-otkazalsya-ot-advokatov-tak.html).
Farber explained his decision in an
appeal published on his son’s Facebook page by saying that the involvement of
professional advocates in judicial hearings “will not influence the decision of
the court” because the court has already made its decision and will ignore the
evidence and arguments they make (facebook.com/piter.farber/posts/674155159269373).
Nina Tumanova of the Tver oblast
court said, however, that “even if Farber refuses to use [lawyers], his right
to defense will all the same remain. If none of his lawyers will take part, a
defender will be found. But two of them have confirmed that they will
participate” (rapsinews.ru/judicial_news/20131105/269524099.html).
What
will happen next both in the Tver courtroom and on the streets of Moscow thus remains
unclear, but Farber’s latest declaration is likely to provoke new concerns
among human rights and Jewish activists that xenophobic groups the Kremlin has
tolerated if not in fact supported are adding Jews to the list of their
targets.
But
one thing is certain: those who tolerate or sponsor attacks on minorities of
one kind as the Russian authorities have done in the case of gastarbeiters from
Central Asia and the Caucasus can seldom keep such mobilized anger from
spreading to other ethnic and religious groups and, given Russia’s unfortunate history
in particular, to the Jewish groups.
That in turn will pose a challenge
to many people of good will in Russia and the West who have been inclined to
explain away Russian anger at and attacks against Muslims and immigrants but
who, history suggests, will find it more difficult to offer such explanations
and defenses of any open manifestation of popular and especially official
anti-Semitism in Russia.
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