Greek prime minister in shul visit vows crackdown on neo-Nazis

Greek Prime Minister Antonis Samaras vowed to crack down on neo-Nazi groups.

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THESSALONIKI, Greece (JTA) — Greek Prime Minister Antonis Samaras vowed to crack down on neo-Nazi groups.

Samaras was speaking Sunday at a ceremony marking the 70th anniversary of the first deportations of Thessaloniki’s Jews to the Auschwitz-Birkenau death camp.

The Greek government will enact legislation that will be "completely intolerant to violence and racism," Samaras said at the city’s Monastiriotes Synagogue in what was said to be the first-ever visit by a sitting prime minister to a synagogue in Greece.

Noting that with neo-Nazi parties on the rise again in Europe, he said governments have to "be very careful not to let them gain ground as they did in the 1930s."

"We have to be very careful to remember the message of ‘Never again.’ The fight against neo-Nazis is more important than ever," Samaras said.

In recent months, Greece has seen a dramatic rise in the power of the neo-Nazi Golden Dawn party, which swept into parliament with 18 seats in last year’s election. Greek and international Jewish groups have condemned Golden Dawn as racist and anti-Semitic.

Also speaking at the ceremony, Moshe Kantor, the president of the European Jewish Congress, called on the Greek government to "completely eradicate the ultra-right and the neo-Nazi parties from the political horizon of Greece."

The ceremony commemorated the deportations that sent 49,000 of the city’s 55,000 Jews to Nazi death camps. The events also were marked Saturday with a silent march from the city’s Liberty Square to the Old Railway Station.

The Jewish community of Thessaloniki was a vital center of Sephardic Jewry for 450 years following the expulsion from Spain. Known as the "Flower of the Balkans," it was the center of Ladino culture in the region.

Following the deportations, Jewish property was looted, synagogues were destroyed, priceless Ladino libraries were shipped to Germany and the cemetery headstones were used as construction material.

Also Sunday, as part of the commemorations, the World Jewish Congress is set to hold a special meeting in Thessaloniki in an effort to support vulnerable Jewish communities.
 

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