tv Conflict Zone Deutsche Welle December 16, 2022 12:30am-1:01am CET
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again, well, maybe in color, weight and burn in south africa, people with disabilities more likely to lose their jobs independent, make black lives matter. shine a spotlight on racially motivated to leave mind. same sex marriage is being legalized in more and more country discrimination, inequality or part of everyday life. for many, we ask why? because life is diversity. to make up your own mind. d. w, need for mines rushes . jewish community has been watching the war in ukraine with mounting along, but most of kept silence, fearing state reprisals if they spoke out against the kremlin. and yet as the fighting intensified, a senior figure in the community felt that silence was immoral. so he fled moscow
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after 30 years, as the city's chief rabbi, in order to speak freely, and he joins me now from berlin. these pink eye scotch met president of the conference of european rabbis, and he wants all jews in russia to get out. now. his reasons, it is a the rise and anti semitism. b, the possibility of a closing of the iron curtain that it is, it's going to be impossible to leave. and number 3 are the hardest hitting sanctions which are going to damage the economy long term in complex zone. this week we ask you a few cranes. president ballade him is the landscape was right to criticize israel's response to the war. should you speak out whenever a universal values are threatened? and will historians look back on this war as a roman turning for russia or the start of a new dark age? rabbi pink us coach made welcome to conflict zone. tim,
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thank you for having me on your program. it's good to see you, your initial response to the february invasion if i can start with that. the february invasion of ukraine was basically to say nothing, not to support it, not to condemn it in order. you said not to get the jewish community into trouble. do you regret that initial response? you're considering the shark, her of for the single member of the community. i think girl, many of the citizens in russia, after actual invasion, most people actually thought her nothing is going to happened. i said the day before, with many diplomats and members of parliament and others. and the said, oh, who needs ukraine? we don't need ukraine. and so it was a shock, and it took time till it to register that we are in here from the all out war. you said later,
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you realised keeping quiet in such circumstances is morally wrong. and yet that was the clear choice you made in the immediate aftermath of the invasion. i'm wondering why was it out of habit? it was the we we got. so i would say in the last years of her current regime, are we in the community basically whom we're like to hold off for russian society. we're deep politicized. which means we did not comment on political issues and we did not term an and we did not get involved in politics in order not sir, not to get into trouble. because if you support a one way or the you do the other way. if you don't support the regime tenure, then you have problems. however, as some ver,
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we understood that with dealing here with her european war her with sir millions of refugees and jewish communities which was being destroyed after being so difficult to rebuild. after the communist regime, after the break up the soviet union, whom i came to the realization that not every one i'm or i want to say is openly that are not only can we stay silent, we have to do something about. so in that case, have recent events in russia and your response to them compelled you to rethink your attitude to morality. what is a moral response to an invasion of this kind? no, i don't think that i am. i think that so since the changes which
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have happened in russia have been, i would say a gradual that has not been from one day to the next. so it was so difficult to pinpoint to the moment that you had to say enough is enough. i can not stay silent anymore. and however, the, the change, the, the major change in the country of her m waking up the 24th of february in the morning and seeing with them out with mass arrests. and every last her independent media being shut down or we understood her does was a major change or we're living in a different country with different rules. you say you were living in a different country, but you lived in a country where president putin had invaded unoccupied crimea, in 2014,
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he'd fuel the war in the dumbass where some, 15000 people had died. so february 24th was a continuation of what had gone before, wasn't it? it was fully in line with the trajectory that his administration had been following . expanding russia's borders, clumping down on civil liberties at home, and killing enough political opponents for the rest to get the idea that that much had to be clear, wasn't it as possible? or when or with the crimea? not one person died doing or to take over the crimea. and her, i throw the question back to you. where was europe? where was a, who were, where was the united states in with the why didn't they push all these very punishing sanctions in 2014. why did their weight of 2022 good question. only put the question to them, but i'm, i'm asking you, were you not aware that rights and universal rights were being trampled and
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people were being repressed and killed in russia during that period? it was um, i would say that number one, the people who were repressed her was an in smaller scale them and the tim, i want to tell you the term boom. they're red line between a democracy and also terry newsome is not always clear. and when you pass from one system to the other, no, it's not always clear when is the red line passed? so whom is it when the no more free elections? or is it when some people, critical of the regime are being jailed? it's so it's not always clear to that, you know,
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it's where and you have for quite a few countries where you pass from a demarc democracy to an authoritarianism. and until totalitarianism are the lines clear, the lights are not always clear on in hand. site is, is there a lesson that you took away from this? that staying silent is not an option where universal rights are being trampled and people are being repressed. i think her thumb am in today's m situation where there were a country has been invaded and the millions and millions of refugees leaving this country. it is very important for every one to speak up. every one who can neither one can looking back. do you think if more
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people had spoken up and you talked about the western reaction you through the question back to me as if i was talking for the west. i'm not actually talking for the west, but, but if more people had spoken out both in russia and around the world, do you think that president putin might not have gone ahead with the full scale invasion? he launched in february i f. and i tend to think that if far as somebody who would have told on the 23rd of february or to the kremlin, that sir them reaction in our fir, the west of, for europe, the united states is going to be the one we have seen. i highly doubt that sir the crime and would have gone on no on with this war.
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so is the jewish community in russia now rethinking the practice of staying silent and keeping their head down and trying to stay out of trouble? should it you know, as well as i am, as i do that, are people who speak up a being fined or being arrested, or the business of being closed down. so it is very easy to go criticize to russian regime from the safety of london, or paris or berlin. it is much harder to do it if you live inside russia, your business is there, your parents, dear. you have children there. so it's a much easier to talk about it than actually to do it. but rabbi goldschmidt making the right moral decision can't always be a cost free exercise. can it take em? yes it, it is. every person has
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a free choice and every person has to take the right decision. so am i mom? am i am concerned about the future after jewish community in russia. and i'm not the only one concerned, thousands and tens of thousands of jews have left the country since the beginning of the invasion. and should those who and i think that by leaving they have i'm so the, by leaving they, everyone who left the country made a statement and, and, and should those who've left the country. what should that, what should their attitude be now? should they speak out? should they say whatever they need to say? i think that everyone in who has the possibility has to state and has to say what he thinks,
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what she thinks. and i am speaking to hundreds and thousands of members of my community and also of her, of her russians of other religions. i feel that i know, speaking with people outside of russia, i feel that is very little support for this war. a prominent politician for the minister nathan sharon's gate, who was a, as you know, a dissident who was jailed in the soviet union, refused. nick as they were called at the time. he says that if jews have the chance to get out of russia, they should take it, they should go. do you support that view? yes, i support the for your and for many reasons. and so the many reasons why jews to day and concern about the future in russia, it is a, the rise and anti semitism. b, the possibility of a closing of the iron curtain that it is going to be impossible to leave. the
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number 3 are the hardest hitting sanctions which are going to damage the economy. long term number for the possibility of the, of the there's going to be a general draft for the army and an end. and number 5 is der, widen repression of civil society. let me if i may take you back to the time when you made the decision, i'm in march to leave russia. you sent that after 2 weeks. so searching you left because you wanted to be able to speak out against the war and you'd been told the jewish community would suffer if you did that and stayed. can you clear up exactly what threats were aimed at you personally, and by whom? i think that um it was not only the possibility of speaking out a speaking out is important, but to ask, you know,
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judaism is the religion of deeds. it's not only a religion of thoughts or beliefs. it is the actual deed which is important for us and we call this deed a mitzvah. and speaking out, as has been secondary 1st and most important has been the feeling and the realization that we have to do something to help those thousands of refugees of our committees who had to leave to eastern europe. which us with sir, maybe with one suitcase who didn't have a roofer on the heads. and that's what we did. we established under the aegis of the conference of european rabbis this fund to an international fund to help ukraine refugees now been visiting. i left russia to visit in, in eastern european capitals and would have personal wor, so, and also in romania,
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all those thousands of jewish refugees and other refugees went there. and we have established programs for the integration of, for the help with those refugees. so speaking out has been secondary, the number one mit swelled at one number, one in deed which we had to do is to help. my question was about the threats that you personally received. how graphic, how clear were these threats? i think that if you are a clergyman living a certain country, you can identify as you understand when the, when are you getting messages from certain quarters and it doesn't always have to a personal or that can be communal as well. so what was said to you, and by whom i don't want to go into more details, the allowed the still many members of the community living in russia, continuing to work there with people in the clergy. we have rabbis with community
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leaders at this moment. i don't want to go into dieters one or 2 jewish leaders in russia did speak out and did refuse to tow the official line. couldn't you have done the same and, and, and stayed in russia. m if so, i don't think that i was been a i don't think i would been able to help and to establish the so pull structure to help refugees staying in russia. and i don't think i would have been able to communicate or to the world, to the jewish world, to deter and to the world at large the issues and challenges we are facing. didn't leading russia feel in any way like running away. i think that, ah, if i have been the only one making this decision,
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maybe you it i am i, i can tell you one thing out of a very good friend. she's are come. she's one of the leading journalists are in the opposition and her earnestly. she was quite absurd to the left, but saw a month later she left herself. so you felt vindicated. it's not a question or feeling of vindicated. it is a question of fur of him to day. we have tens of thousands of members of my community who are living outside russia. i would say, if we're talking about people who used to count hours, synagogues, i would say, even the majority is outside of russia. my committee is all over the world there. and then do by then israel, they london and in germany and sir, the immigration to israel from russia was her twice as high
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than from ukraine to the last her sister. and since to was dotted and i'm responsible for the wider community. and i was also believed it, i'll be able to help our community, which stayed on in russia better from the outside of dun from the inside. rabbi gulch made it seems the relations between senior jewish figures in russia and ukraine have been badly damaged by the events in recent months. um, in march ukraine's chief rabbi marcia as man roundly condemned leaders of the russian jewish community and said, your failure to denounce the invasion was tantamount to complicity. how hard is it going to be to repair those ties? i don't know. there were some leaders who supported innovation. i don't want to in express myself. i don't want to judge them. who am i to judge? i can tell you that my relationship with our ukraine and colleagues is wonderful.
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and did you call rabbi as man he says, when he said i'm talking to you. dear russians. dear jews, remember that one who is indifferent is an accomplice to war crimes, crimes against humanity. i stand with the holy tor and i tell you to wake up hardly any one he said has called me, do you understand the sense of abandonment that he had from the jewish community? i for sure. i was sure i can feel it in ukraine doesn't have only one she for rabbi, by the way, you know, we have quite a we have, i think 3 chief robinson ukraine and we are in touch with them. and i myself, a just 3 weeks ago spent a whole long weekend in the town of neptune in romania, with a 1200 refugees from odessa with the chief elbow. vanessa so ill,
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we're in touch with our colleagues from ukraine. and i also spoke a few days ago to a group of new immigrants from russia and ukraine in jerusalem. and he had over there in the room. he had about 4050 young people. and they came from moscow from other cities in russia, and from odessa and from ki, of, and from nicola, even from out of your book. and you should see those people just sitting together trying to help each other in the new country. they all left the country's walgreens, not because they wanted to, but because of the impossibility to stay and talking of helping the ukrainians president zelinski himself. a jew has had harsh words for what he sees as israel's inadequate response to the conflict. to israel's mediation efforts, he said that can be no mediation between good and evil. he has appoint,
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doesn't he i want to tell you those people who want to criticize as well for not going or not joining europe with sanctions against them. against russia. i want to remind them that is what is not buying. oil and gas from russia is, was not financing to war. it is you're buying gas and oil from russia is financing to warn russia, some of that criticism. rabbi goldsmith has come from inside israel itself. the former prime minister, air hood alma, for instance, he didn't think much of the government's reaction in february. there are times he said, when you have to decide who you are, what you stand for, you can't fool around. you can't fool yourself. if israel were like america trying to rally its allies, would we like our best friend saying, well, there are pros and cons and we've got other things to think about. he's not saying do the easy thing. he saying do the right thing. you have no sympathy with him when
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his views okay, the some ways they're to europe or is it is just trying to do the right thing. but it, obviously, it is impossible to leave elderly people or children in unheeded homes and middle of december and january the same way. israel cannot leave millions of people prone to attacks from rockets for his valor and from the iranian sponsor to guerrillas in lebanon and syria. so each country wants to join, wants to join the sanction regime or to criticize, however, each country has their priorities to to protect the citizens 1st. but rabbi goldsmith, ukrainians are fighting for their lives and the survival of their unit, treat state. and israel is saying, yeah, well, it's terrible, but we've got more important security concerns to worry about with iran and syria.
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you said in july, nowadays the world is looking at israel and the jewish people and expects us to be on the moral high ground. and i'm just wondering whether this position is the moral high ground you want to occupy within israel itself, you have a discussion among it might become an issue in the upcoming elections november among political leaders, to what extent israel should be involved should not be involved in this conflict, so this will m m, i would say m is a right now has taken a position, a yellow pete. the current prime minister of israel has taken position, criticizing russia. and i want to tell you term that or israel has a had problems because of it. russia decided to close. the jewish agency doesn't happen from one day to the next. there was a reason for it. do you regard the changes in russia as irreversible?
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rabbi goldschmidt will historians look back on this in your view as a wrong turn for russia or the beginning of a new dark age in the country. right now. i think that her rushes entering her appears of deep isolation. a new, almost her totally closed iron curtain with europe, not with asia, but with europe. and her i sinkter term does a d, the coming period is going to be very difficult. do you foresee ever going back? do you want to go back? as you know, we have to be optimists and i hope that one they'll be able to go back by pink us. goldsmith,
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