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Home Jewish World

Neo-Nazis attempt to set fire to Hungarian Jewish community center

Around 50 members of radical Sixty-Four Counties Movement burn flags, graffiti Auróra Jewish community center in Budapest. Police reportedly slow to intervene. Building sustains minor damage in attack.

by  JNS and Israel Hayom Staff
Published on  10-25-2019 11:14
Last modified: 10-25-2019 12:00
Neo-Nazis attempt to set fire to Hungarian Jewish community centerTwitter

The Aurora community center following the neo-Nazi attack | Screenshot: Twitter

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Some 50 neo-Nazi activists have burned flags and graffitied a Jewish community center in Budapest.

No injuries were reported in the incident, as the building was empty at the time of the attack. The center did, however, sustain minor damage when the neo-Nazis attempted to set it ablaze.

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According to reports, local police were slow to intervene.

The neo-Nazis in question are believed to belong to the Sixty-Four Counties Youth Movement, the country's most prominent radical right-wing group.

This was not the first time the extremist group has targeted the Auróra center. Two years ago, seven black-clad members of the organization hung posters of Hungarian American billionaire George Soros with his face crossed out on the building's exterior and spray-painted anti-Soros graffiti on its walls.

Later, members of the Sixty-Four Counties group posted a video online in which they claimed that "the Jewish center promotes deviant circles and the gypsy community's media center. The groups that use Auróra, whether Jewish or not, are far from being invulnerable. We will come to 'say hello' once more."

According to Adam Schonberger, the director of the Conservative Marom Jewish association and the man who founded the 2014, these were isolated incidents. He said that relations with the local community were positive on the whole.

Marom owns and operates Auróra in conjunction with its outreach to young, unaffiliated Hungarian Jews and others.

The Auróra is also home to Roma, LGBTQ, and other activist groups critical of the Hungarian government.

The radical Right in Hungary has grown increasingly brazen following Prime Minister Viktor Orbán's rise to power and the legislation of anti-liberal laws in the Central European country. Much of its rage has been directed at migrants who enter Hungary in order to get into the European Union.

Parts of this article were reprinted with permission from JNS.org.

Tags: Anti-SemitismBudapestHungaryJewsneo-NazisVictor Orban

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