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Germans Don Jewish Skullcaps to Protest Anti-Semitism

The protest was a response to the assault of two young men wearing skullcaps in an upscale neighborhood in Berlin. 

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Germans of various faiths donned Jewish skullcaps and took to the streets Wednesday in several cities to protest an anti-Semitic attack in Berlin and express fears about growing hatred of Jews in the country.

The kippa protest was triggered by the daytime assault last week of two young men wearing skullcaps in an upscale neighborhood in the German capital. The attack, in which a 19-year-old Syrian asylum-seeker is a suspect, drew outrage in Germany and sharp condemnation by Chancellor Angela Merkel.

It is the latest of several anti-Semitic incidents that have many Jews wondering about their safety in Germany, which has tried to atone for Nazis' killing of 6 million European Jews in the Holocaust more than 70 years ago.

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The rising tensions have come at a time when Germany is grappling with an influx of more than 1 million mostly Muslim migrants, along with the rise of a nationalist party, the Alternative for Germany, which was elected to Parliament last year. Its leaders are known for their openly anti-Muslim stance, but their anti-Semitism is less apparent.

Across Europe, anti-Semitism has been on the rise in recent years, and thousands of Jews – mostly from France – have moved to Israel.

More than 2,000 people – Jews, Christians, Muslims and atheists – put on kippas in a show of solidarity in Berlin.

The yarmulkes were of all varieties — silky and knitted, leathery, embroidered and patterned. Holding them so the wind wouldn't blow them away, both men and women cheered when Berlin Mayor Michael Mueller told them, "Today, we all wear kippa. Today, Berlin is wearing kippa."

Jewish community leaders said it was the biggest such display in public since before World War II.

Elard Zuehlke, a 26-year-old non-Jewish Berliner, said he came to the rally in front of the city's synagogue on Fasanenstrasse because "it cannot be that in Germany there is any kind of anti-Semitism — not in schools, not in public, not at work, not in politics, nowhere."

"This cannot be happening. Germany has to live up to its special responsibility," he said.

Reinhard Borgmann, a 65-year-old Jew who lost several great-uncles in the Holocaust and whose mother only survived because she hid from the Nazis, said he was pleased that dozens of organizations had turned out to support the demonstration.

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As Jews, we want to be able to move freely, whether with kippa or without. We want to be able to practice religion in peace and not be discriminated against and not live in fear. And this event tonight is a sign and an important one.
Reinhard Borgmann

Three people who protested separately against anti-Semitism in the Arab immigrant neighborhood of Neukoelln ended their demonstration earlier after a one person took away their Israeli flag, police said.

Beyond that, hundreds of people also rallied in Cologne, Erfurt, Magdeburg and Potsdam.

(Published in an arrangement with Associated Press.)

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