WJC President Ronald S. Lauder extends deep thanks to Bulgarian government for quelling neo-Nazi Lukov March
NEW
YORK – World Jewish Congress President Ronald S. Lauder expressed his
personal gratitude on Saturday to the political and judiciary
authorities in Bulgaria, including Prime Minister Boyko Borisov and
Sofia Mayor Yordanka Fandakova, for putting a long-awaited end to the
annual torch-lit demonstration that generally draws thousands of
neo-Nazi marchers from across Europe to celebrate Holocaust-era General
Hristo Lukov, whose movement sent more than 11,000 Jews to their deaths
in Treblinka.
This year, the organizers of the march agreed to obey a Supreme
Administrative Court decision to uphold a municipal court order limiting
the event to only flower-laying at Lukov’s home. The Sofia Municipal
Police also reportedly advised the organizers of the march that any
person who violated this order would be stopped. In the end, only some
60 supporters were in attendance.
“For the first time in more than a decade, the Jewish community of
Bulgaria has been spared its yearly day of fear and apprehension from
shameful flame-wielding thugs who parade through the streets to glorify
the very ideology that brought the near destruction of the Jewish
people,” Lauder said. “At this frightening time of rising antisemitic
activity across the world, this is a moment of true victory for the
Jewish community, the people of Bulgaria, and all promoters of justice
and tolerance worldwide.”
“The World Jewish Congress is deeply grateful to the officials within
the Bulgarian political and judicial sectors, including Prime Minister
Boyko Borisov, Foreign Minister Ekaterina Zakharieva and Deputy Foreign
Minister & National Coordinator against Antisemitism Georg Georgiev,
Sofia Mayor Yordanka Fandakova, Prosecutor General Ivan Geshev, and the
many others have been sincerely responsive to our concerns over this
inciteful demonstration,” Lauder added.
“Our partnership to ensure the safety and security of the Bulgarian
Jewish community has always been extremely positive and receptive, and
the government’s proactive efforts in recent years in mobilizing to ban
the march despite the many legal obstacles is a clear testament to its
true support and friendship,” Lauder added. “Their cooperation last year
with the WJC and the Organisation of Jews in Bulgaria, Shalom, in
convening the first-ever March for Tolerance to oppose this scourge was
another critical demonstration of their dedication to helping us work to
quell these flames of hatred, and it was an action that spoke louder
than words. This year, only a few dozen neo-Nazi thugs showed up. Next
year, let’s hope that the month of February will pass without a single
disturbance of this kind.”