Israel’s most senior diplomat in Ukraine has faced an onslaught of anti-Semitic abuse and calls for protests outside his country’s embassy after he condemned a march to remember a Nazi collaborator in the Ukrainian capital.
Joel Lion, Israel’s ambassador to the troubled Eastern European state, tweeted his concern over a thousand-strong march in Kiev, honoring the 112th anniversary of the birth of nationalist leader Stepan Bandera. “We strongly condemn any glorification of collaborators with the Nazi regime,” Lion said. “It is time for Ukraine to come to terms with its past.”
The procession made headlines on New Year’s Day, with demonstrators carrying torches and placards honoring Bandera, a wartime leader of the Organization of Ukrainian Nationalists. His supporters see him as a founding figure of the country’s independence movement, while others hold him accountable for a series of ethnic pogroms against ethnic Poles and Jews, and partially responsible for the Holocaust in the region.
Also on rt.com Ukrainian nationalists and neo-Nazis stage torchlight march in Kiev to mark Nazi collaborator’s birthday (VIDEO)However, Lion’s intervention has drawn sharp criticism from Ukrainian ultranationalists with social media users accusing the diplomat of being “a disgrace to the Jewish people” and insisting he “stay out of our Ukrainian heroes.” One commenter added that, underneath the traditional Jewish kippah head covering, the Ambassador had “a Russian star.”
Evgeniy Karas, a far-right leader who has fought against pro-Russian rebel groups in the east of Ukraine, called for action in response to Lion’s comments. On his Telegram channel, he suggested that his followers meet outside the embassy the following day. Additionally, he insisted that the Israeli envoy was “the ambassador for the Holodomor,” the Soviet-era famine that saw millions starve to death in Ukraine, Russia and Kazakhstan.
Considered by some as a deliberate policy choice by Joseph Stalin’s USSR, the Holodomor has been the subject of a series of anti-Semitic conspiracy theories. Historian Victoria Khiterer, a founding member of a holocaust research organization at the site of the Babi Yar massacre, has written that Jewish people became a target of ire when rural workers sought refuge from starvation in cities and towns that were also struggling with food shortages, leading to tensions between local communities.
Also on rt.com EXCLUSIVE: Ultranationalist organizations are radicalizing Ukraine’s young people, and the Kiev government is paying them for itAn RT investigation in December uncovered how ultranationalist groups that continue to honor Bandera and his fighters are receiving funds from the Ukrainian government to expose young people to their ideology. One camp, in which participants as young as 18 fight in hand-to-hand combat for up to 60 hours, describes itself as being held “not only to honor the memory of fighters for the freedom of Ukraine” but to be “a forge of followers of UPA soldiers.” Organizers boast on their website that “proof of this is public activity and the participation of ‘graduates’ in the modern Russian-Ukrainian war.”
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