Gil Ofarim, a little-known 39-year-old singer, has become a lightning rod for the issue of latent antisemitism in Germany after he went public with a social media video earlier in the week in which he described how staff members at the hotel appeared to ignore him while he stood in the check-in line and then, when he asked why he was being overlooked, they told him to conceal his Star of David if he wanted to get a key to his room. The employees denied the incident. The hotel suspended the employees pending the results of a police investigation.
“He told me to put my star away to be allowed to check in,” Ofarim said in a short video that went viral after he filmed himself in the Leipzig hotel lobby right after the incident took place. Close to tears, the singer added: “Is this for real? Is this Germany in 2021?”
The confrontation in Leipzig has triggered a wider discussion about an alarming trend in recent years in which antisemitism has become socially acceptable in some circles in Germany. As memories of the Holocaust have faded, especially in the formerly Communist eastern parts of the country where Leipzig is located, the younger generation may feel less burdened by the crimes of their grandparents.
This story is from the October 10, 2021 edition of The Independent.
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This story is from the October 10, 2021 edition of The Independent.
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