ACTIVITY
The Shechita Case
In 2017, the Flanders and Wallonia regional councils in Belgium adopted legislation which stipulated that from 2019, any slaughter that has not been preceded by animal stunning will be banned. The reason given for this ban was based on considerations of “animal welfare,” but the implications are grave for Jewish ritual slaughter according to the rules of kashrut. The Coordinating Committee of Jewish Organizations in Belgium (CCOJB) filed a lawsuit in response to this legislation.
Belgium’s Constitutional Court decided that it needs to determine whether the ban on religious slaughter is compatible with European law. European legislation allows for religious slaughter as an exception to the rule of prior stunning, provided that religious slaughter is carried out in an approved slaughterhouse. Accordingly, Belgium’s Constitutional Court referred the appeal against the kosher slaughter ban for additional review by the European Court of Justice (CJEU).
In light of this development, the Association believes that this is a legal case with significant implications that may affect all European Jews. We are therefore considering joining this legal case and are consulting an Israeli lawyer specializing in EU law before deciding how to proceed.
Belgium
University of Turin Case
Starting in 2015, the University of Turin hosted a series of openly anti-Israel and antisemitic seminars and conferences on Israel and the Arab-Israel conflict. These were organized by “Progetto Palestina” (Palestine Project), an anonymous student movement that is very popular on Facebook. The University granted University Credits (CFU) to the students who participated in the seminars.
Adv. Barbara Pontecorvo, who is an Association member and also heads the Solomon-Observatory of Discriminations based in Rome, last year took legal action against the University of Turin. As a result, the Court explicitly confirmed the illegitimacy of the recognition of credits. This year, the Center assisted Adv. Pontecorvo, at her request, including financially, to continue her legal action against the University. Adv. Pontecorvo filed a special legal action asking for an administrative remedy with the office of the President of the Republic and the Ministry of Education
On May 31, 2019, Adv. Pontecorvo filed an additional brief with the Office of the President of the Republic and the Ministry of Education, stressing the illegitimacy of the academic credits granted by the University of Turin. She also demanded the cancellation of the credits already granted.
On July 9, 2019, Adv. Pontecorvo and her Association filed a brief with the Office of the President of the Republic, asking that Project Palestine Association be removed from the Registrar of the student associations of the University.


Italy
The Castle Hill Publishers Case
Castle Hill Publishers is a company that specializes in publishing and disseminating literature on Holocaust denial. The company was originally registered in England, but today it operates through a website that originates from a server that is probably located in the United States. Castle Hill founder Germar Rudolf, who in the past was imprisoned in Germany for Holocaust denial, now lives in the United States where he is married to an American citizen. He continues to distribute Holocaust denial literature.
To address this issue, the Center contacted, with the help of attorney Alan Sachs, two English lawyers, Anthony Julius and Trevor Asserson, who specialize in criminal law in England in general, and the Holocaust in particular. Anthony Julius informed us that in the absence of Holocaust denial as a criminal offense in English law, we would have difficulty moving forward in legal proceedings. He believes it would be more effective and relevant to work with the ISPs and social media companies to prevent the spreading of the Holocaust denial materials through their Internet platforms. A similar approach was advocated in Adv. Yishai’s conversation with Trevor Asserson and several other lawyers from his office.
The Center continues to be in touch with them and is exploring options for action, especially regarding the prevention of Holocaust content distribution through the Internet.



Belgium
Twitter (Germany)
The decision to take action against Twitter in Germany is related to
Germany’s strong legal basis for dealing with this issue, with the help of a law that came into effect in October 2017 requiring companies like Twitter to remove antisemitic content within 24 hours of being brought to their attention or face possible fines. The Association hired a lawyer in Germany specializing in Internet law to assist with this matter.
Since August 2019, the Center sent the lawyer more than 20 sets of files that contained antisemitic tweets, and in accordance with the procedure laid down in German law, he forwarded them to Twitter for removal. About 30 percent were removed immediately, and the plan is to follow the German law procedure regarding the remaining files. In general, the continuation of the process entails an appeal to the relevant German authorities arguing that Twitter has refused to remove antisemitic tweets. German law imposes heavy fines on such violations.
The Center is continuing, through professional data mining, to find additional materials that we will send the lawyer for further legal action against Twitter.



Germany
The Enforcement Authorities Project
Many Antisemitic incidents do not receive proper attention from enforcement agencies. This Association project is designed to create a conglomerate of lawyers who act on our behalf in various countries. The idea is that following the occurrence of an Antisemitic event, the lawyers will petition the relevant authorities and ask them to fulfill their duty to investigate and prosecute those who committed the Antisemitic acts. We have recruited lawyers in Germany and in France, and we expect to engage a lawyer in Hungary in the near future. In Germany we are working with Senior Prosecutor Claudia Vanoni, who was appointed as antisemitism commissioner of the prosecution of the Federal State of Berlin and we have already submitted five requests to open criminal investigations. We want to expand this project to additional countries and hope to secure funding for this purpose in the near future.



Germany
The Lukov Parade
Extremist right-wingers hold an annual parade in Sofia, Bulgaria in memory of General Hristo Lukov, who led the pro-Nazi Union of Bulgarian National Legions in the 1930s and early 1940s. Attempts have been made to prevent the parade from being held, but without success. The cancellation of the parade by the Mayor of Sofia in 2017 was also rejected by the Bulgarian court.
At the request of the Community Security Department, the Center led discussions with a local lawyer working with the Jewish community in Sofia, Adv. Magdalena Valova, as well as with other relevant parties, and examined the full range of options available for action. Although we were unable to prevent the parade in 2019, we did formulate a legal course of action that will prevent the parade in 2020 if the W.J.C. decides to implement the plan with us.




Bulgaria
Neo-Nazi NS Wrestling Club
The NS Fight Club is associated with the “National Resistance” group—a Bulgarian neo-Nazi organization. We are working with Adv. Valova on legal action to shut down this club. The W.J.C. is currently exploring a political way to handle the matter and we expect them to contact us if needed.




Bulgaria
The VK Social Media Network
VK is a Russian online social media and social networking service based in St. Petersburg that is available in numerous languages. Social network research showed that antisemitic activists who were blocked on mainstream social networks were using VK in various European countries. Accordingly, the W.J.C. asked us to use the mechanism we set up in Germany (described earlier) to file complaints about the use of VK.
Our attorney filed complaints about antisemitism and Holocaust denial in August 2019, and we are awaiting the outcome of these proceeding.




Bulgaria
Poland
Legal representation of members of the Jewish Religious Community in Poland in civil case against dr. Ewa Kurek, a notorius antisemite, for her negationist public speeches (also on youtube) and publications, also spreading antisemitic prejudice and hatred.
Dr. Kurek is a Polish Holocaust historian. In 2016, she circulated a petition calling for exhumation of the victims of the Jedwabne pogrom. In 2018, she received an award from a private U.S.-based Polish organization that was to have been presented to her at a Polish consulate in New York. Following media criticism, the presentation ceremony was cancelled. Some of her public lectures and interviews are titled „How the Jews created a fairytale of Holocaust”.
In November 2019 her new book Powrót do Jedwabnego (“The Comeback to Jedwabne”) was published, with dozens of public places refusing her and other two co-authors to organize promotion events at their premises. The book includes direct questioning of the official Institute of National Remembrance Prosecutor’s investigation results that proved Polish perpetration of the Jedwabne Pogrom.
In 2006, her habilitation dissertation titled Poza granicą solidarności: Stosunki polsko-żydowskie, 1939–1945 (“Beyond the Border of Solidarity: Polish-Jewish relations, 1939-1945”) was rejected by John Paul II Catholic University of Lublin. It had nonetheless been published as a book, and attracted some notoriety and criticism in media, as Kurek wrote that in the first years of the war Jews “had fun in the ghettos”, in which they enjoyed autonomy negotiated from the Germans.




