Paul
Goble
Staunton, April 16 – Berl Lazar, the
chief rabbi of Russia, has appealed to Prime Minister Dmitry Medvedev as head
of the ruling United Russia party to take action against a United Russia
candidate in Chelyabinsk for expressing openly anti-Semitic ideas during a
campaign speech.
“The Jewish community of Russia is
shocked by the anti-Semitic speech of Vladislav Vikhoryev, a participant in the
United Russia primaries in Chelyabinsk oblast, who spoke about ‘a conspiracy of
the Jews against the Russian people” (medialeaks.ru/1504dalex_antsemitism
and echo.msk.ru/blog/echomsk/1748504-echo/).
But the chief rabbi said he and his
fellow Jews were even more concerned that party’s organizers let him off with a
warning and “retained him among those seeking a place in the electoral list” of
United Russia.
Vikhoryev made his remarks last
Sunday, April 10. They have since been posted on Youtube and include his claims
that “the main problem and threat to the security of Russia are the Jews,” that
the Jews carried out a coup under Boris Yeltsin, and that since then, “the Jews
have carried out the planned destruction of Russian culture, the state and the financial
system.”
Other Jewish leaders have argued
that Vikhoryev’s remarks should be examined not just by the United Russia
authorities but by Russia’s law enforcement agencies. Among those making that
argument is Yury Kanner, president of the Russian Jewish Congress (lenta.ru/news/2016/04/13/antisemit/).
This case puts United Russia and the
Kremlin in a difficult position. If it fails to take strong action against
Vikhoryev, it will show itself to be indifferent to anti-Semitism, all of
Vladimir Putin’s statements about Russia as a place to which Jews from Europe
should consider moving notwithstanding.
But if it removes Vikhoryev from its
electoral list and charges him under Russian law, as it certainly could, then
both the Kremlin and United Russia will lose support from Russian nationalists,
many of whom are as anti-Semitic as the United Russia politician. And that is something
the center may not want to do in advance of upcoming Duma elections.
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