By Bloomberg / Politics.hu
A planned demonstration by bikers in Budapest under the slogan "Give Gas" that coincides with a Holocaust memorial march amounts to a call for genocide and should be banned, a Hungarian Jewish group said.
The name of the 21 April rally, which would pass in front of the capital’s main synagogue, “unequivocally refers to the tortuous deaths of more than 400,000 of our compatriots killed in Auschwitz with poisonous gas and is a call to repeat these harrowing deeds,” the Jewish umbrella group Mazsihisz said in a statement on its website. The bikers, who describe themselves as “patriotic,” called it a “simple demonstration,” according to a posting on their Facebook page.
The name of the event, “Adj Gazt!” can be understood to mean “Put on the gas” – i.e., accelerate – as well as in its more literal sense of “give gas”. Noting that the motorcyclists want to pass by Budapest’s Jewish quarter, Mazsihisz said that “in our country we will not tolerate the indifference to our pride and honor, whether we are Catholics, Calvinists or Jews, or belong to the majority or minority. Let us show one by one that we shall put an end to this base era”.
Anti-Semitism has been on the rise in Hungary, with the radical nationalist Jobbik party now the third-biggest party in Parliament. Jobbik lawmaker Márton Gyöngyösi last November called for a list to be drawn up of Jewish legislators and government members who pose a “national security risk.” More than 500,000 Hungarians, mostly Jews, were killed in the Holocaust, according to the Budapest-based Holocaust Memorial Center.
The motorcycle protest, coinciding with the annual “March of the Living,” is “obviously provocative,” Antal Rogan, head of Prime Minister Viktor Orbán’s parliamentary group, said in a statement yesterday. It was “extraordinarily tasteless” and he “deeply condemned” it, Rogan said.
Last month, the government decorated television journalist Ferenc Szaniszlo, whose program was fined for anti-Semitic and anti-Roma messages. The government asked the journalist to return the award after protests by Israel and the US.
Jewish groups criticized the government last year for expanding the reading curriculum for schools to include books by Jozsef Nyiro, a member of Parliament during World War II and an ally of Ferenc Szalasi, a former head of the fascist Arrow Cross party who was executed for war crimes. Parliament speaker Laszlo Kover, who co-founded the ruling Fidesz party along with Orbán, organized a reburial ceremony for Nyiro last year. The government has denied seeking to legitimize anti-Semitic views.
Stung by the international criticism, the government invited members of the International Holocaust Remembrance Alliance to visit in July and sent officials to the US to meet with Jewish groups. In January, European and Israeli officials from the Inter-parliamentary Coalition for Combating Anti-Semitism met with officials in Budapest.
Orbán “panders to the far-right fringe of Hungarian politics,” Ronald S. Lauder, president of the World Jewish Congress, said in an article published by 'Süddeutsche Zeitung' on April 4, which was posted on the organization’s website. The WJC will hold its Plenary Assembly next month in Budapest in a “strong signal” that Hungary is on a “dangerous track,” Lauder said.
Orbán had accepted an invitation to participate in the meeting, MTI state news service reported this weekend, citing Bertalan Havasi, the premier’s press chief.