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Anti-Semitic notice in the mountain station: Swiss presenter causes scandal

2024-02-13T18:21:44.489Z

Highlights: Anti-Semitic notice in the mountain station: Swiss presenter causes scandal.. As of: February 13, 2024, 7:03 p.m By: Julia Hanigk, Kilian Bäuml, Julia Stanton CommentsPressSplit There is currently a stir in Switzerland over a discriminatory notice at a mountain station. Jewish guests are no longer allowed to rent equipment there. A notice written in Hebrew stated that sports equipment would no longer be loaned to Jews. The Graubünden cantonal police have started investigating discrimination and incitement to hatred.



As of: February 13, 2024, 7:03 p.m

By: Julia Hanigk, Kilian Bäuml, Julia Stanton

Comments

Press

Split

There is currently a stir in Switzerland over a discriminatory notice at a mountain station: Jewish guests are no longer allowed to rent equipment there.

Update from February 13th, 6:31 p.m

.: An anti-Semitic notice at a mountain station near Davos continues to cause a stir.

A notice written in Hebrew stated that sports equipment would no longer be loaned to Jews.

Notice causes scandal in Switzerland: presenter causes uproar with statement

The Swiss presenter Natasha Ruf expressed her solidarity with the letter.

Ruf moderates, among other things, the

SRF

program “Signes” in sign language.

As

blick.ch

reports, I wrote as a comment on an Instagram post from the news portal

Watson

:

“In my opinion, that’s okay, otherwise it’s the job of the Jewish-Orthodox guests to behave respectfully towards society.” They feel “the extreme dominance of the Jewish-Orthodox guests,”

blick.ch

continues.

Shortly afterwards, according to the portal, the lines were deleted again.

The SRF then distanced itself from the moderator's statements when asked by

blick.ch

: “This comment does not correspond to the views of SRF or to the journalistic guidelines.

SRF clearly distances itself from the statements.” It also says: “The employee formally apologizes for her comment” and that the SRF will seek a conversation with Ruf.

A study came to the conclusion that there is also anti-Semitism in Munich.

The notice in a mountain hut shocked Switzerland, because they no longer want to lend anything to Jews.

© Imago/Screenshot/Montage

Because of discriminatory writing: Cantonal police are investigating

Update from February 12th, 11:12 p.m.:

Writing at a Swiss mountain station causes horror beyond the country's borders.

Legal action is also not ruled out.

“The Graubünden cantonal police received a corresponding message on Sunday afternoon.

Since it is an official offense, the Graubünden cantonal police have started investigating discrimination and incitement to hatred,” the Kapo confirmed to

20 Minutes

.

In the meantime, the operator also spoke up and apologized; he has since taken down the letter.

As

blick.ch

reports, he chose the wrong words.

“It has absolutely nothing to do with anti-Semitism,” explains the operator.

According to him, Jewish guests should also be allowed to come.

Nevertheless, he maintains that Jewish guests often leave their sleighs behind and don't bring them back.

“We no longer want the daily hassle and are therefore exercising our right to decide who can rent our property and who cannot.”

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Letter horrified: no rentals to Jewish people

First report from February 12th, 12:28 p.m.:

Davos — In the Swiss ski resort of Pischa near Davos, the anti-Jewish rules of a mountain station are shocking.

A notice there, written in Hebrew, currently informs people that sports equipment will no longer be loaned to Jews.

It literally says: “Due to various sad incidents, including the theft of a sled, we no longer rent sports equipment to our Jewish brothers.

This applies to all equipment such as sledges, airboards, ski jacks and snowshoes.

Thank you for your understanding." 

Discriminatory notice: 21-year-old Jewish guest turned away from mountain station

As the Swiss media portal

20 Minuten

reports, a 21-year-old Jewish guest was turned away by an employee at the mountain station counter.

“I pretended I couldn’t read Hebrew and asked if we could rent the airboards.

After the woman asked the manager, she denied the request,” the man said in the interview.

He is deeply saddened by the company's decision.

He and his family were actively discriminated against because of their religion.

The general secretary of the Swiss Association of Israelite Communities was shocked by the incident: “The fact that such a letter is publicly hung on a Swiss mountain is shocking.

The content is highly discriminatory and anti-Semitic.” Bad experiences with individual customers are not a reason for generalizations.

The notice also caused horror on platform X (Twitter).

Zurich local councilor Jehuda Spielman shared a picture of the notice on the platform.

According to Spielman, there are probably other anti-Jewish notices at the mountain station.

The anti-Semitism commissioner for North Rhine-Westphalia, Sabine Leutheusser-Schnarrenberger, speaks in an interview about how she assesses hatred of Jews and extremism in her district.

Hill station defends anti-Jewish notice: “We don’t want the daily hassle anymore”

The Pischa mountain restaurant defended the decision even after the criticism and rejected allegations of discrimination.

“We no longer want the daily hassle and are therefore exercising our right to decide who can rent our property and who cannot,” the restaurant said in a statement to

20 Minutes

.

Apparently Jewish guests increasingly left sledges and other equipment on the slopes and did not bring them back.

“The fact that we no longer want to rent anything to them has nothing to do with faith, skin color or personal preferences, but only with the fact that we are no longer interested in these daily discussions and frictions,” it continued.

The managing director of the Davos Klosters destination, Reto Branschi, said that it was an unfortunate formulation.

“The notice can hurt the feelings of the Jewish guest group as a whole and that shouldn’t be the case.

It does not represent the attitude of the destination and the tourism providers in our place.

Davos Klosters and its services are open to all guests.”

Anti-Semitic incidents have also been increasing in Germany since the Hamas terrorist attack on Israel: recently, a Jewish student was beaten up by a fellow student.

The act was presumably anti-Semitic and sparked a debate in Germany.

The anti-Semitism commissioner is now calling for the universities to intervene.

(jus)

Source: merkur

All news articles on 2024-02-13

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