Author Topic: Swedish Jewess Lunderquist we have no problem in Sweden  (Read 809 times)

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Offline mord

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Swedish Jewess Lunderquist we have no problem in Sweden
« on: March 08, 2009, 09:54:18 AM »
http://www.ynetnews.com/articles/0,7340,L-3682710,00.html   







Swedish Jews undeterred by protests

While local Jews admit notable rise in anti-Semitic atmosphere after protest against Israel-Sweden tennis match, Israeli envoy blames riots on small groups of extremists, says public debate on Israel in media may have deterred many from protesting

Tal Rabinovsky
Published:    03.08.09, 13:51 / Israel Jewish Scene

Despite Saturday's anti-Israel protest in Sweden, in which rocks, eggs and firecrackers were hurled at police outside a sports arena in the city of Malmö during an Israel-Sweden tennis match, the country's Jews say they feel safe in the Scandinavian country.

 

Israeli Ambassador to Sweden Benny Dagan told Ynet following the incident that such protests were part of a wave of aggression coming over Europe. "There is a rise in anti-Semitic incidents, it's happening here in Sweden as well," the ambassador said.
Rude Behavior
 
 

However, Dagan said, the activists taking part in such protests come from a number of different camps, including extreme leftist organizations, neo-Nazis and Islamic bodies. "I don't think there's an organization that comes and operates systematically," he noted.

 

Elad Meier, a Bnei Akiva and Jewish Agency envoy to Sweden, told Ynet the protest was actually a failure for the organizers.

 

"There were a few neo-Nazi organizations that said they would do anything to stop the matches, but in the end a handful of 1,500 people showed up. Local media reported the security forces were prepared for protests of about 20,000 people," he said.

 
Jewish resident: I feel 100% safe

"I personally feel 100% safe. I have three children here and they go to school with a Star of David chain and no one ever says a word to them," said Sofia Lunderquist, of Malmö.

 

Lunderquist was one of the few Israel supporters allowed to watch the tennis match that was held without fans for security reasons.

 

"We were a rather large Israeli crowd of about 100 people. We made a lot of noise in good spirits. When we entered the arena, the protesters were on the other side – we didn't feel a thing.

 

"There were about 1,000 police officers and surprisingly, there was very little fuss. They have been preparing for this for two-three months already," she said.


Protestors clash with police in Malmö Saturday (Photo: AP)

 

But things aren't necessarily all rosy in the city of Malmo, that contains a large Muslim community.

 

"There has been a different air in the city since the war in Gaza, everything is so one-sided. It's legitimate to say that what Israel did is horrible, but they don't look in depth, and so, any ordinary Swede that doesn't really know or care just thinks, 'Ah, Israel, they did something horrible in Gaza'," Lunderquist said.

 

"I am trying to educate the Swedes I know to give them a different picture. Even if I don't agree with what Israel does, I give them more information. On the other hand, when I talk with Israelis, they don't understand the European side, which puts me in the middle."

 
'Public debate weakened protests'

Ambassador Dagan said, "We have decided not to hide behind the walls and closed offices but to be active every way we can – in the parliament, media, and universities."

 

According to Dagan, the tennis matches raised a public debate in Sweden like never before for such events.

 

"There were many articles in the newspapers, including editorials that condemned mixing sports with politics and isolating Israel in a bad light and picking on it, asking why people only protest against Israel while it's a democratic country and such means are never used against totalitarian countries."

 

Dagan said such debates "may have created a feeling that this is not the right thing to do, and it deterred people who are not extremists that were thinking of coming (to protest)."

 

The Jewish community of Malmö is made up of a few hundred Jews, and also includes a Chabad center headed by Rabbi Shneur Kesselman, who said Saturday's protest was not held by locals of the city, but by a group of outsider extremists from around Sweden and neighboring Denmark, who came to the city specifically for this purpose.
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"There are a lot of Palestinian and Lebanese immigrants here that call themselves Palestinians. They are just a large amount and this effected the local authority's decision to close the game to spectators," the rabbi said.

 

Kesselman added that two pro-Israel protests were also held in the city recently. According to the city's Jews, with local elections set for next year in Malmö, politicians are taking extra precautions due to the large immigrant communities.

This woman is a very dumb uneducated woman i see
Thy destroyers and they that make thee waste shall go forth of thee.  Isaiah 49:17

 
Shot at 2010-01-03

Offline mord

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Re: Swedish Jewess Lunderquist we have no problem in Sweden
« Reply #1 on: March 08, 2009, 10:20:42 AM »
How Andy Ram feels about sweden                              

Sad moment in Sweden

Tennis player Andy Ram dismayed by violent anti-Israel demonstrations during tennis contest

Andy Ram
Published:    03.08.09, 15:37 / Israel Opinion

In almost every respect, the events of the past week in Sweden are a sad moment for Tennis, for sports in general, and certainly for Israel. Never in my career as an athlete have I encountered such hatred and such blend of sports and politics.

 
Up until the last moment, the protestors attempted to prompt the cancelation of the David Cup match between Israel and Sweden. After we already landed here, their leader met with Swedish team captain Mats Wilander and asked him to call off the contest.

 
 
 
The Swedish players actually understand us and are quite embarrassed by what is happening, yet these events have completely changed my perception of Sweden, and it is doubtful whether I’ll want to come back here ever again.

 
The feelings within the Israel team are very grim. All the innocence that prompted us to play tennis has disappeared, and this match, which was supposed to be a beautiful moment of sports, has become completely worthless. Nothing here is reminiscent of the Davis Cup; what we have is a war atmosphere, tension, and the feeling that something very bad may happen at any moment.

 
I have never seen the kind of security that we are receiving here; not even in Dubai, where I played a few weeks ago. At any given moment, we are surrounded by police vehicles, undercover police officers, and anti-terror forces. Every morning, they take us from the hotel to the stadium via another route, through an underground parking lot, with part of the ride being undertaken in armored vehicles.

 
Proud to be Israeli

The venue of the contest, which was supposed to be filled to capacity with fans, is almost completely empty because of fears of riots. Several rings of fences have been erected around it to keep everyone away. The fences are surrounded by thousands of police officers, who on Saturday had to battle thousands of rioting protesters who were hurling all sorts of objects, shattering shop windows, and attempting to get closer to the venue.

 
Since we landed here, almost a week ago, we left the hotel only three times; we ate at a restaurant twice, and went to see some tourist site. Even then we were surrounded by a crazy security presence. We spend the rest of the time at the hotel or on the court and make sure to be very cautious.

 
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In recent years, the strength of our team has been its tight-knit spirit, and events such as the ones in Sweden boost our motivation. During such days, we are even prouder to be Israeli, and we shall do everything to restore our honor, which they try to trample here. In this respect, the best service we can do for ourselves and for the country is to win, and I believe we can do it.   



http://www.ynetnews.com/articles/0,7340,L-3682693,00.html
Thy destroyers and they that make thee waste shall go forth of thee.  Isaiah 49:17

 
Shot at 2010-01-03

Offline Lewinsky Stinks, Dr. Brennan Rocks

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Re: Swedish Jewess Lunderquist we have no problem in Sweden
« Reply #2 on: March 08, 2009, 11:44:22 AM »
She is a good widdle dhimmi for sure.

Offline mord

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Re: Swedish Jewess Lunderquist we have no problem in Sweden
« Reply #3 on: March 08, 2009, 11:52:35 AM »
She is a good widdle dhimmi for sure.
Indeed
Thy destroyers and they that make thee waste shall go forth of thee.  Isaiah 49:17

 
Shot at 2010-01-03

Offline Zionist Revolutionary

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Re: Swedish Jewess Lunderquist we have no problem in Sweden
« Reply #4 on: March 08, 2009, 12:21:49 PM »
Quote
Jewish resident: I feel 100% safe

"I personally feel 100% safe. I have three children here and they go to school with a Star of David chain and no one ever says a word to them," said Sofia Lunderquist, of Malmö.

Thats what people said during the Holocaust. They died because they didn't see the writing on the wall.

Offline Spiraling Leopard

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Re: Swedish Jewess Lunderquist we have no problem in Sweden
« Reply #5 on: March 08, 2009, 01:12:19 PM »
Apes riot at davis cup:


Offline mord

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Re: Swedish Jewess Lunderquist we have no problem in Sweden
« Reply #6 on: March 09, 2009, 06:45:44 AM »
Article about Swedish anti Antisemitism                




Neutral Sweden's mixed World War II legacy is still debated byhistorians. On the one hand it supplied Nazi Germany with iron ore and ball bearings and allowed the Wehrmacht to use the Swedish railway system to transport soldiers. On the other hand, spurred on by the Danes, it accepted Danish Jews marked for mass murder by the Nazis. Ultimately, the good name of Sweden was redeemed by the unparalleled heroics of one of its own - Raoul Wallenberg, who, using the cover of a Swedish diplomat, helped save tens of thousands of Hungarian Jews destined for Auschwitz, only to disappear into the Soviet Gulag. For decades, no Swedish government had the courage to demand his return from the jaws of the neighboring Russian bear.
Masked anti-Israel protestors...

Masked anti-Israel protestors clash with police outside the Baltic Arena in Malmo, Sweden, Saturday.
Photo: AP

While this Swede will forever be revered by the Jewish nation, it is brutally clear in 2009 that Jews and especially those uppity ones from Israel are of little concern to Swedish authorities, as their policies become more reminiscent of apartheid South Africa or Berlin in the 1930s than a 21st-century Scandinavian democracy.

INTERNATIONAL SPORTS strive to be free of politics and prejudice. But here they provide real-time proof of the poisoning of Swedish public life by biases that have echoes in Nazi Europe's anti-Semitism. In Sweden's third largest city, Malmo, where a virulently anti-Israel Muslim community makes up a significant percentage of the 250,000 population, the City Council voted five to four to hold the scheduled Davis Cup match between Israel and Sweden in an empty stadium, behind closed doors.

The losers are tennis players and fans of every nationality. The winners are the "Stop the Match" campaign which prevailed on the council's Socialist-Left majority to quarantine Israelis and Jews behind an apartheid police cordon to protest Israel's actions in the recent Gaza war.

The Malmo travesty comes on the heels of a huge international outcry after Dubai barred Shahar Pe'er from the Barclay Dubai Tennis Tournament in the UAE. Dubbed the apartheid tennis tournament, and threatened with having the games withdrawn from it, Dubai was forced to issue a visa for Andy Ram.

That controversy has had zero impact in Sweden however, as authorities announced that an Israeli tae kwondo delegation, consisting of 45 athletes and five coaches, en route to Trelleborg for the Swedish championship, was told to stay home due to Muslim threats. Not even tae kwondo - Korean for "the art of kicking and punching" - can provide protection from Sweden's supine complicity in leading today's anti-Israel bullies.

Spare us the alleged "public safety" nonsense. The same 7,000 anti-Israel demonstrators in downtown Malmo would have chanted the same slogans and the few dozen who attacked the police vans for the benefit of media coverage would have tossed the same projectiles had the stadium been packed with tennis fans on Saturday.

No the security card was invoked not to protect but to stigmatize Israeli athletes as pariahs.

None of this is about sports. It's about Jews.

FOR DECADES, Sweden has allowed demagogues like Ahmed Rami , whose Radio Islam is a 22-language flagship of Holocaust denial, Jew-hatred and demonization of the State of Israel, to poison the well among the nation's Muslim minority.

Over-the-top vilification anti-Israel rhetoric is a hallmark of a large swathe of the Swedish political establishment.

"Israel is an apartheid state. I think Gaza is comparable to the Warsaw Ghetto... I'm surprised that Israel... can do the exact same things the Nazis did," charged Ingalill Bjartén, the vice-chair for the Social Democratic Women in southern Sweden. "I don't think Israel is a democracy worthy of the name. It's a racist apartheid state," said the Left Party's Hans Linde, calling for a boycott of Israel. A leading Social-Democrat, Urban Ahlin, deputy chair of the Committee of Foreign Affairs, implored Stockholm to encourage the EU to suspend its cooperation agreement with Israel.

On the right, Carl Bildt, Sweden's foreign minister, after visiting Gaza charged Israel with intentionally targeting economic infrastructure and called its policies "neither morally nor politically defensible." In 2004, when a Europewide poll revealed that 59 percent of respondents identified Israel as "the greatest threat to world peace," a Swedish government conference on preventing genocide was coordinated with a Stockholm museum exhibit, entitled "Snow White and the Madness of Truth," that glorified an Islamic Jihad homicide bomber who mass murdered 22 Israeli Jews and Arabs at a Haifa café.

IN 2005, a US State Department report documented that anti-Semitic incidents against Sweden's tiny Jewish community spiked to over 100 a year after 2000, with attacks on Jewish shopkeepers and members of the Jewish Burial Society in Malmo, arson and vandalism of a Jewish cemetery, a swastika painted near the Jewish community building in Gothenburg, three Arab men disrupted the Rosh Hashana service shouting "I'll kill you, Zionists!" at the Great Synagogue in Stockholm where a pro-Israel street demonstration was violently disrupted by counterdemonstrators and members of Hizb ut-Tahrir handed out leaflets near a mosque that urged the liquidation of Jews in Palestine.

A 2006 poll showed 30 percent of all Swedes harbored moderate to strong anti-Semitic attitudes.

In 2008-2009 since the Gaza war broke out, slogans including "murderers... You broke the cease-fire" and "don't subject Palestine to ethnic cleansing" have defaced the Israeli embassy in Stockholm, while in Helsingborg synagogue windows were broken while an arson fire blazed outside.

Sweden is among the European countries with laws against Holocaust denial and defamation of minorities. Yet to judge from recent events, such laws are a dead letter regarding offenses against Jews. Though Swedish schools teach Holocaust education, according to polls one-third of Swedish young people doubt that the Holocaust occurred. One can only imagine what Swedish Holocaust hero Raoul Wallenberg, who saved thousands of Hungarian Jews, would think. It's time for Sweden to change sides and come out against, not for, the new war against Israel and the Jews.

Rabbi Abraham Cooper is associate dean of the Simon Wiesenthal Center and Museum of Tolerance. He has been involved in efforts on behalf of Raoul Wallenberg from the 1980s. Dr. Harold Brackman, a historian, is a consultant for the Simon Wiesenthal Center. 



http://www.jpost.com/servlet/Satellite?cid=1236269377485&pagename=JPost%2FJPArticle%2FShowFull
Thy destroyers and they that make thee waste shall go forth of thee.  Isaiah 49:17

 
Shot at 2010-01-03