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Posted: April 04, 2003
The face of current anti-Semitism in Russia has been
changing: On the one hand, state officials no longer
dare to come forth with anti-Semitic statements. On
the other hand, there appeared an officially registered
political party whose platform is openly anti-Semitic.
State-sponsored anti-Semitism is not relevant for contemporary
Russia, but grass-roots anti-Semitism still remains
a very significant problem and has become an integral
part of life in Russian society. The following is an
overview prepared by ADL's Moscow Office.
Violent Attacks:
There were approximately the same number of serious
anti-Semitic incidents in Russia in 2002 as reported
in 2001. However, incidents in 2002 were more violent
than in the previous year, in some cases mimicking the
methods used by terrorist organizations. The most frightening
example of this phenomenon was the spate of "booby-trapped"
anti-Semitic signs.
In 2002, at least nine cases of vandalism of synagogues
and Jewish cemeteries; more than seventeen attacks against
Jews and premises owned or rented by Jews, including
those of Jewish organizations, cultural centers, etc.
were reported. In each of these cases, police recorded
the incidents and opened investigations, but only in
two cases were perpetrators found. However, as is typical
in Russia, the perpetrators of these acts were charged
with hooliganism, with the anti-Semitic component of
the attacks ignored by police and prosecutors, despite
the fact that Russia has strong hate crimes laws in
effect.
In the cases of the booby-trapped signs, anti-Semitic
posters appeared along Russian highways or streets.
In a number of cases, when motorists stopped to remove
the offensive signs, an explosive device attached to
the sign exploded. In other cases, harmless wires were
attached to signs, to give the appearance of an explosive
device. In the summer of 2000, at least three people
were injured in such incidents. There were 15 such incidents
in total.
The first such explosion occurred on May, 27th on the
Kiev highway near Moscow. Twenty-eight year-old Tatiana
Sapunova, driving back to Moscow from her dacha, noticed
a sign with the inscription "Death to the Kikes" posted
along the highway. She stopped her car and tried to
remove the sign, setting off an explosion and inflicting
serious injuries and burns on her face. In June and
July, seven such signs were discovered on the roads
and streets throughout Russia. One more fake device
was found on October 28, on highway near Sergiyev-Possad,
outside Moscow.
Politics and Government
On September 2002, the Justice Ministry registered a
new political party - the National Great Power Party
of Russia (NDPR), whose leaders have inveighed against
"the common enemy, the Yid." The Justice Ministry scrutinized
the NDPR and found no legal reason to deny its registration.
At the same time, the NDPR and its official registration
have been under attack in the news media, as statements
by NDPR leaders are blatantly anti-Semitic and xenophobic
(NDPR's co-chairman, Boris Mironov, was ousted from
his government post of press minister in 1994 after
making statements such as, "If Russian nationalism is
fascism, then I am a fascist."; the party's senior executive
Viktor Korchagin - who is also director of the Vityaz
publishing house, which has produced several editions
of Hitler's Mein Kampf - has been repeatedly prosecuted
for "kindling nationalist discord"). Some experts argue
the ministry had no choice but to register the party,
saying that the "the law should be the same for everyone".
With its registration by the Russian Justice Ministry,
the NDPR, became the first openly extremist party to
be granted state registration, which allows for participation
in regional and national elections, under the new law
on political parties adopted last year.
The registration caused an uproar in the Russian media,
especially after the broadcast of an excerpt from a
video of the NDPR's inaugural congress held in February
this year, in which one leader called for the fight
against "the common enemy - the Yid." The party's official
Web site includes the epigraph, "It must become the
law of life in Russia - not an ounce of power to Yids."
The Ministry of Justice responded to queries by the
media saying the registration documents were in accordance
with the current law. Now that the party has been registered,
the ministry promised to check its activities and close
it down should it violate any laws or regulations. However,
in an interview published in Moskovskie Novosti on December
10, Boris Mironov felt free to acknowledge that he dislikes
Jews, a feeling he justified with a rhetorical question:
"What Russian person can like them after what they did
to Russia?" He rejected the slogan "Russia for ethnic
Russians," because it sets Russians and other "native
peoples" such as Tatars and Buryats against each other.
He defined "non-native peoples" as groups represented
by foreign states, such as Israel, Armenia, Azerbaijan,
and Georgia. Mironov advocated stripping "non-native
peoples" of the right to vote, even if they were born
in Russia and their ancestors lived in Russia for centuries,
on the grounds that they are "genetically disloyal."
Some fear that the NDPR might run for parliamentary
elections this year or try to merge with other parties.
So far, the nationalist vote has been absorbed by Vladimir
Zhirinovsky's Liberal Democratic Party and, to some
extent, by the Communists (the leader of Communist,
Gennady Zyuganov recently told one of radical-nationalists
newspapers about the "unsolved Jewish question"). Both
parties are now represented in the Duma.
Anti-Semitic themes - often unchallenged by local authorities
- have figured in most of the high-profile local election
campaigns in the last few months. Last summer in Dzerzhinsk
(Nigniy Novgorod region) Vladimir Brikker faced a tide
of anti-Semitic propaganda in the final week of a tight
race for mayor. This example is not an isolated case.
Parliamentary elections are scheduled for December 2003
and there is a strong probability that the nationalistic
and anti-Semitic propaganda will be used in the electoral
campaigns of some candidates.
Extremism:
There also appeared to be a new boldness among extremist
leaders. While speeches by these figures about the number
of Jews in different government structures or Jewish
conspiracy theories are nothing new in Russia, in 2002
some extremists began calling for action such as exiling
Jews from Russia, or stripping them of the right to
vote.
As in past years, there are a large number of radical-nationalist
newspapers distributed throughout Russia. There are
at least 90 outlets where strong xenophobic or national-radical
messages were published in 2002. But in comparison with
previous years, there is some positive action being
taken by law enforcement in countering anti-Semitic
propaganda. In 2002, some radical outlets, such as Russkiy
Hosyain, were closed by the Ministry of the Press, and
some were charged with violating Article 282 of Criminal
Code (inciting ethnic hatred). There were seventy -one
Article 282 cases passed to the courts and 32 people
were sentenced. These numbers include all types of ethnic
hatred, not only anti-Semitism. In contrast, in 1999
the number of cases passed to the courts was 4.
While there have been positive improvements in the prosecution
of those propagating hate material, there are many cases
in which law enforcement and the courts fail to act.
The most famous such example, "Pensioner Boris Stambler
vs editor Korchagin" has been going on for more than
a year. Boris Stambler - a Jewish, World War II veteran
- has for several years tried to have charges brought
against Mr. Korchagin, whose Rusich publishing house
has distributed volume after volume of illegal anti-Semitic
literature with titles like "The Jewish Occupation of
Russia" being a typical example. However, time after
time, Moscow prosecutors refused to bring charges against
Mr. Korchagin, arguing that "experts" had determined
that his writings did not incite hatred against Jews.
On April 5, 2002, the Moscow City Prosecutor's Office
opened a criminal case against Korchagin. However, the
case was dropped six months later due to lack of evidence.
In July 2002, the Ministry of the Press ordered that
his newspaper Russkie Vedomosti be closed for inciting
ethnic hatred. However, the Zamoskvoretsky district
court, seemingly not taking the Ministry's action seriously,
ruled that the Moscow city Prosecutor's Office was correct
to close the case. On November 10, 2002, the Zamoskvoretsky
Court declined the war veteran's appeal, in which he
asked that another criminal case be opened against Korchagin.
Mr. Stambler appealed again.
In December the Moscow City Court upheld the appeal
filed by Mr. Stambler. As a result, the Moscow City
Court has cancelled the ruling of the Zamoskvoretsky
Court and has ordered a new trial of the case. "I am
very happy about this ruling and see it as a personal
victory," Stambler said.
Another such case is being led by the Ulyanovsk Jewish
Community, against an editor of a local extremist newspaper.
On April 24, 2002, Seryubin Sergey, the editor of the
provincial state newspaper Provoslavny Simbirsk (Christian
orthodox Simbirsk), ran a number of articles, which
reveal the "human-hatred, racist and anti-Russian essence
of Judaism". To commemorate the anniversary of the glorification
of the holy martyr Gabriel Belostokskiy, who they allege
was "killed by kikes", the editor published excerpts
from "Monk Neofit's" book about the practice of ritual
murders of Christian babies by the Jews. Excerpts from
the book of Snetkov, The Last Hero, with a description
of the scene of "ritual murder of a Christian boy by
the Jews" was also published. While similar articles
had appeared in previous issues of Provoslavny Simbirsk
the Jewish community and local authorities only took
action this year.
The local prosecutor's office opened the criminal case
under Article 282 (inciting ethnic hatred) in the middle
of June, 2002 and the case was passed to the court.
In the months leading up to the court hearing, the investigator
received letters from across Russia expressing sympathy
with Serubin, and appealing to the investigators' conscience,
warning that the "kike`s yoke" is everywhere. On January
4 and 8, 2003 the preliminary hearings were held in
District Leninskiy Court. The court has ordered a new
investigation of the case.
Another trend among extremist groups is the move to
organized mass actions. In most cases, local authorities
have not intervened in the convening of these demonstrations.
On January 26, about 70 activists of the National Great
Power Party of Russia (NDPR) picketed the Moscow building
of World Congress of Russian Jewry. This action was
directed against the WCRJ's plans to protest the party's
official registration. "We don't like non-Russians to
teach us how to live and what to do," declared the co-leader
of NDPR, Stanislav Terehov.
On February 8, the party held another protest in the
center of Moscow in support of the people of Iraq and
against "USA aggression and international Zionism."
The well-known co-leaders of the NDPR, Mironov and Terehov,
and Korchagin, the director of a fascist publishing
house led the demonstration. They held placards reading:
"Russia for Russians", "Death to the Zionism", "Kikes
get out!" Mironov called on Russians not to vote "for
Kikes" in the coming elections.
ADL Moscow Office
March 2003
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