Belgian Shoah museum cancels event honouring activist who promotes BDS
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Belgian Shoah museum cancels event honouring activist who promotes BDS

Kazerne Dossin memorial pulled the plug on the event in a Catholic organisation was to honour Brigitte Herremans, who said Israel’s supporters “vastly inflate” antisemitism

azerne Dossin Memoriaal, Mechelen, Belgium (Wikipedia/Romaine - https://creativecommons.org/licenses/by-sa/4.0/deed.en)
azerne Dossin Memoriaal, Mechelen, Belgium (Wikipedia/Romaine - https://creativecommons.org/licenses/by-sa/4.0/deed.en)

Belgium’s main Holocaust museum canceled its plan to host an award ceremony for a promoter of sanctions against Israel who said Israel’s supporters “vastly inflate” antisemitism.

The Kazerne Dossin memorial pulled the plug on the event this week in which the Pax Christi Catholic organisation was to honour Brigitte Herremans of the Broederlijk Delen aid and relief agency, the CCOJB Belgian-Jewish group announced Thursday. In 2016, Herremans was banned from entering Israel.

Multiple Jewish groups complained that Kazerne Dossin, a former transit camp in Mechelen from which Belgian Jews and Romani were sent to concentration camps, was an inappropriate venue for  honouring a campaigner against the Jewish state. Pax Christi was to confer on Herremans the title of “ambassador of peace.”

In 2017, Pax Christi called on the European Union to “suspend economic relations” with Israel until it “respects International law.”

The Kazerne Dossin museum did not say why it canceled its participation in the event, which the Flemish Forum of Jewish organisations has called “scandalous.”

Asked about the rise in antisemitism in Europe in a 2016 radio interview, Herremans said, “When you sometimes hear criticism from certain pro-Israel circles, also in Belgium, then I think that mostly they try to vastly inflate this business to distract” from how Israel “wants to do only as it pleases in the Palestinian territories.” She also has called for sanctions on Israel and on Israelis visiting Europe.

Betsalmo, a pro-Israel group that also protested the event, wrote in a statement: “Nowhere is appropriate for celebrating boycotts and antisemitism, least of all Holocaust museums.” The group added that “We are glad reason has prevailed.”

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