The Jerusalem Post reports:
Belgian Jews marked the first anniversary of a shooting attack on the
Brussels Jewish Museum, which left four people dead, and many are
asking if the community is any safer today. [...]
Both
France and Belgium have deployed large numbers of troops to guard
Jewish sites across their respective countries and have called for zero
tolerance for hate crimes. However, there is a sense that such efforts can only go so far.
Speaking
to The Jerusalem Post not long before his death last week, Hebrew
University anti-Semitism expert Prof. Robert Wistrich said he believed
another attack was inevitable.
Troops can only stayed deployed
for so long and “once they go we will have another violent incident,”
he said. “The fundamental causes have not changed in any way and that
will surely happen. We can say with near certainty it will happen again there.” [...]
A
third of Jews polled in 2013 by the EU’s Agency for Fundamental Rights
admitted to refraining from wearing religious garb or Jewish symbols
out of fear, with 23% saying they avoided attending Jewish events or
going to Jewish venues. Following last year’s attack in Brussels one
community leader there told the Post that while European Jews are “more
doubtful” about their future than they were 20 years ago, “we are
watchful [but] we don’t live in fear.”
However, speaking to the
Post a year later, some Belgian Jews indicated that they are indeed
uneasy, despite the beefed up security surrounding them.
Given
the difficulty in preventing attacks by lone gunmen, the
intensification of anti-Semitic and anti-Israel sentiments among Muslim
immigrants and a relatively small but significant and increasing
number of returning European jihadis who fought in the Middle East, it
is likely that further attacks will occur despite all efforts to prevent
them.
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