BERLIN — On his visit to Germany, Israeli President Moshe Katsav has had reminders of the awful past — and the promising future.
Speaking Monday on a visit to a memorial at the Sachsenhausen concentration camp, Katsav said Germans and Jews share a responsibility to warn against genocide.
That came a day after Katsav helped dedicate a new synagogue in Wuppertal, an event that he saw as a sign of hope for the future of Jewish life in Germany.
At Sachsenhausen, Katsav said the Shoah was “a trauma for both the Jewish people and the German people.”
All people, and especially Germans and Jews, have the duty to “ensure that this never happens again,” said Katsav, facing the ruins of the crematoria and bowing his head.
Katsav’s three-day trip provided a study in the contrasts of budding Jewish life in Germany against the backdrop of the Holocaust.
Eclipsed by the ceremonious events was a small neo-Nazi demonstration against Israel, which ended up drawing some 35 right-wing extremists to Berlin on Monday.
They were far outnumbered by shouting counter-demonstrators, many of whom waved Israeli flags. The mood of the pro-Israel demonstrators was nearly gleeful, despite the bitter cold.
The invitation to Katsav from German President Johannes Rau was seen as underscoring Germany’s support for Israel, despite heated debates here over whether to deliver weapons to the Jewish state.
Katsav’s visit included meetings with Chancellor Gerhard Schroeder, Foreign Minister Joschka Fischer, Jewish leaders and heads of the main political parties.
It also included a historic moment: On Sunday, Katsav became the first Israeli president to participate in the dedication of a synagogue here when he and Rau unveiled the new synagogue at Wuppertal. Germany’s Jewish population has tripled to 100,000 since the fall of communism, due to immigration from the former Soviet Union.
Later, in Berlin, Katsav told Jewish leaders he was worried about anti-Semitism in Europe but optimistic about the future of German-Jewish relations. He did not share the pessimism of his predecessor, Ezer Weizman, who upset the Jewish community during his 1996 visit when he said all Jews should leave Germany for Israel.
While celebrating the rebirth of Jewish life in Germany, Katsav took issue with German popular and political attitudes toward Israel.
In Wuppertal and in Berlin, he said he did not understand “how one could equate Palestinian terror and our fight against terror,” and accused Palestinian Authority President Yasser Arafat of “doing nothing” to stop “the hate aimed at Israel.”
Pro-Israel demonstrators echoed Katsav’s frustration at prevalent anti-Israel attitudes here.
“It is important to show our solidarity with Israel and to protest against anti-Semitic criticism of Israel,” said student Katya Grote, 24, a member of Young Democrats, Young Leftists.
“It is not wrong to criticize Israel, but when Israel is described as ‘unrepentant’ and ‘vengeful,’ and when Israel is compared to the Nazis, this is relativizing history, this is Holocaust denial.”