After Copenhagen attack, Netanyahu urges European Jews to come ‘home’

Israeli Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu, centre, was among one million marchers in Paris on Jan. 15, in tribute to the victims of the Charlie Hebdo attacks

JERUSALEM — Israeli Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu called on Jews in Europe to move to Israel in the wake of an attack on a synagogue in Copenhagen.

“Extremist Islamic terrorism has struck Europe again, this time in Denmark. We send our condolences to the Danish people and to the Jewish community in Denmark,” Netanyahu said Feb. 15 at the start of the weekly cabinet meeting. “Jews have been murdered again on European soil only because they were Jews and this wave of terrorist attacks – including murderous anti-Semitic attacks – is expected to continue.

“Of course, Jews deserve protection in every country but we say to Jews, to our brothers and sisters: Israel is your home. We are preparing and calling for the absorption of mass immigration from Europe. I would like to tell all European Jews and all Jews wherever they are: Israel is the home of every Jew.”

Israel’s foreign minister, Avigdor Liberman, in a statement released Feb. 15 said that the terror attacks in Copenhagen “demonstrate what we have said for years: Israel and the Jewish people have been victims of this terror primarily because they are at the forefront of the terror war being waged against the west and the entire free world.”

Liberman added that “the international community must not satisfy itself with declarations and rallies against this terror, but must go beyond the boundaries of what is politically correct and wage all-out war to root out Islamic terror.”

European Jewish Congress President Moshe Kantor on Feb. 15 called on European authorities to go on the offensive against radical Islamists.

“Last night’s terrorist attack on a synagogue in Denmark demonstrates that defensive measures to protect the public, and the Jewish community in particular, are not enough,” Kantor said in a statement issued hours after the Copenhagen attacks. “The authorities must change the paradigm and take the battle to the radical Islamist enclaves, prevent the next attack and bring the terrorists and their supporters to task.

“Islamic terrorists are targeting Jews specifically in their homes, markets, places of business and houses of worship. Unless serious action is taken to prevent these attacks, every Jew in Europe is at risk,” he said.

Cantor said that in order to win the war on terror and anti-Semitism, European authorities “must immediately establish a pan-European task force with legal authority and significant budgetary resources dedicated to stopping this threat. Intelligence gathering, surveillance and protection must be amassed and shared by all nations and terrorists needs to be hunted down before they act.”

He said the current wave of European anti-Semitism is “more and more violent and endangers Jewish existence. The threats against Jews and the inability of governments to defend them are forcing Jews out of Europe,”

World Jewish Congress President Ronald Lauder urged the Danish government to step up efforts to protect its Jewish community.

“We are confident the Danish government will take all necessary measures to bring those responsible for these attacks to justice, and we urge them to help secure the local Jewish community against anti-Semitic violence,” he said.

The suspected gunman was killed Sunday in a shootout with police.

Denmark’s ambassador to Israel, Jesper Vahr, said in a statement Sunday that his country considers the terror attacks “to be an attack on our democracy, freedom of expression and religious freedom in Denmark. Danes are united in their determination not to yield to terror and violence but to insist on the fundamental values – democracy, freedom of expression, religious freedom and tolerance – that constitute the cornerstone of our society.”