German Anti-Semitism Watchdog Calls on Germans to Wear Kippahs

Kippah Gerrmany

“I call on all citizens of Berlin and across Germany to wear the kippah next Saturday,” said Felix Klein.

By United With Israel Staff and JNS

Germany’s commissioner on combating anti-Semitism is now calling on Germans to wear a kippah, the Jewish skullcap, in public on Saturday, the Jewish Sabbath, as a sign of solidarity with the country’s Jewish population.

The call by Felix Klein came after an interview was published this past Saturday in which he had warned that it was probably too risky to wear a kippah in public in Germany. “I cannot recommend to Jews that they wear the skullcap at all times everywhere in Germany,” he told the Funke media group.

Klein’s latest comments, also to Funke, followed criticism by Israel’s President Reuven Rivlin, Israel’s ambassador to Berlin, and ultimately by Chancellor Angela Merkel’s spokesman of the commissioner’s earlier warning.

“The state must see to it that the free exercise of religion is possible…and that anyone can go anywhere in our country in full security wearing a kippa,” Merkel’s spokesman Steffen Seibert said at a news conference, as cited by the AFP news agency.

In the comments published Tuesday, Klein said: “I call on all citizens of Berlin and across Germany to wear the kippah next Saturday if there are new, intolerable attacks targeting Israel and Jews on the occasion of Al-Quds Day in Berlin,” according to AFP.

The so-called Al-Quds Day marks the anniversary of Israel’s reunification of Jerusalem in 1967, including its capture of Judaism’s holiest site, the Temple Mount, on which Muslims built a mosque after the Second Jewish Temple was destroyed.

For some Muslims, the anniversary of Jerusalem’s reunification is a day of protest.

Israel, for its part, marks the occasion as Jerusalem Day, with prayers, marches, and other celebrations, which falls this year on Saturday night and Sunday.

One of Germany’s leading dailies printed a “do-it-yourself kippah” cutout on its front page on Monday as an act of solidarity with the Jewish community.

Ahead of the publication, which occupied about a quarter of the front page, Bild editor-in-chief Julian Reichelt wrote: “If only one person in our country cannot wear [a] kippah without endangering himself, the answer can only be that we all wear a kippah. The kippah belongs to Germany!”

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Source: United with Israel