Biden warns against rise of anti-Semitism, efforts to downplay Hamas attacks

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A visitor takes pictures of a giant screen bearing the portraits of the people killed during the Oct 7 attacks by Hamas.

Portraits of people killed during the ongoing battles between Israel and Hamas at the national library in Jerusalem on Jan 25.

PHOTO: AFP

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United States President Joe Biden on Jan 26 marked International Holocaust Remembrance Day, warning against what he called an alarming rise in anti-Semitism after

the Oct 7 Hamas attacks on Israel

and efforts to minimise what happened that day.

Mr Biden, who launched the first US national strategy to counter anti-Semitism in May 2023, said the need to remember the Holocaust and the “scourge of anti-Semitism” was more pressing than ever after the Hamas attack that killed 1,200 people, the biggest loss of life on a single day since Israel’s founding in 1948.

“In the aftermath of Hamas’ vicious massacre, we have witnessed

an alarming rise of despicable anti-Semitism

at home and abroad that has surfaced painful scars from millennia of hate and genocide of Jewish people. It is unacceptable,” Mr Biden said in a statement.

“We cannot remember all that Jewish survivors of the Holocaust experienced and then stand silently by when Jews are attacked and targeted again today,” he said, calling for forceful pushback against Holocaust denialism and “efforts to minimise the horrors that Hamas perpetrated on Oct 7, especially its appalling and unforgivable use of rape and sexual violence to terrorise victims”.

United Nations experts in January demanded accountability for

sexual violence against Israeli civilians

during the Oct 7 attacks, including allegations of rape, mutilations and gunshots to genital areas. Hamas denies the abuses.

US Senate Majority Leader Chuck Schumer in November said the rise in anti-Semitism since the start of the Israel-Hamas war was a “five-alarm fire” that threatened the safety of Jews worldwide and the future of Israel.

Mr Biden said his administration was continuing to condemn and fight anti-Semitism, while working to ensure the release of the remaining hostages held by Hamas, which kidnapped about 240 people on Oct 7.

He urged Americans to do their part to combat hate in all its forms.

“It is our shared moral responsibility to stand up to anti-Semitism and hate-fuelled violence at home and abroad and to make real the promise of ‘Never Again’,” Mr Biden said.

Mr Biden, a devout Catholic who was born in the middle of World War II, said he took his own children and grandchildren to a German concentration camp to show them “the depth of this anti-Semitic evil and the complicity of silence or indifference”.

Rights groups have reported

sharp increases in both anti-Semitic and anti-Arab and anti-Muslim incidents

since Oct 7.

The White House in November said it is also developing a national strategy to combat Islamophobia.

The effort has faced scepticism from some Muslim-Americans who are furious about Mr Biden’s continued political and financial support for Israel’s assault on Gaza, which has killed more than 25,000 Palestinians, and his failure to call for a ceasefire.

The Biden administration has rejected calls for a ceasefire but is urging Israel and Hamas to pause the fighting to allow the release of hostages and humanitarian aid to enter Gaza. REUTERS

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