The deadliest post-Holocaust attack on Jews was an outside job. While commemorating the 1994 AMIA bombing this week, those fighting Jew-hatred in Latin America vowed not to let homegrown anti-Semitism go unchecked.
The second Latin American Forum for Combating Anti-Semitism met this week in Buenos Aires, in conjunction with the 28th anniversary of the suicide bombing of the Argentine Israelite Mutual Association (AMIA) Jewish community center. The July 18 attack, which killed 85 people and wounded 300 others, is largely believed to have been carried out by Hezbollah, with Iranian backing.
Pastor Mario Bramnick, president of the Hispanic Israel Leadership Coalition (HILC), told JNS that the forum was broadly attended and productive, including by 40-plus governmental leaders.
“We have different working groups, dealing with [getting countries to adopt] the IHRA [International Holocaust Remembrance Alliance] working definition of anti-Semitism, on combating anti-Semitism on social media, interfaith relations in combating anti-Semitism. We will be putting a plan together with all of the action items that we will be giving to all the different groups that were represented there,” said Bramnick.
‘We have similar enemies’
Ruth Cohen-Dar, the Israeli Ministry of Foreign Affairs’ director of the Department for Combating Anti-Semitism, told JNS that while scenes of violence against Jews are not as common in Latin America as what is seen in other parts of the world, it is no less concerning.
“The focus is more on social media, more on the desecration of cemeteries and synagogues. This is a part of the world that is far physically from Israel, but not distant from our point of view,” she said. “The government of Israel is focused on every community in the Diaspora.”
World Jewish Congress president Ronald S. Lauder addressed the forum by video, urging government leaders to not only pass more anti-hate legislation but to enforce it.
“Every country should appoint an anti-Semitism commissioner to formulate national policies to counter Jew-hatred,” he said. “Every government body, both local and national, should have strong laws against hate crimes and hate speech. And most important, these laws must be enforced. Every elected official should be crystal-clear that they stand with the Jewish people.”
Both Bramnick and Cohen-Dar noted the importance of the multifaith effort to combat Jew-hatred in the region.
“We feel that there have been great alliances in the last decade between Christian and Jewish organizations, and leadership of the pro-Israel movement. Those alliances should be utilized now in combating anti-Semitism together. Anti-Semitism is not just anti-Jewish. It is anti-Christian, anti-Western values, anti-Judeo-Christian values,” said Bramnick. “Those forces are also a concern for Christians. We have similar enemies.”
The forum also brought together heated soccer rivals. The presidents of the popular River Plate and Boca Juniors clubs signed a commitment to combat hate in soccer with both pledging to adhere to the IHRA definition. They were greeted on stage by Cohen-Dar, who received the jerseys of both rivals.
She noted that will “put the IHRA definition on the agenda for millions of people. Those clubs have tens of millions of followers in Argentina, and their players have declared a commitment to promoting coexistence, and fighting anti-Semitism and hate.”
While weeks ago, Argentine Ambassador to the United States Jorge Argüello announced that his country would create a position charged with combating anti-Semitism, multiple Argentine governments have failed to bring those responsible for the AMIA bombing to account with past allegations of a government cover-up adding to the frustration of victims’ families. Some of them gathered in Buenos Aires on Monday for a memorial service, which was also attended by bombing survivors, members of the Jewish community, members of the security forces, U.S. State Department Special Envoy to Monitor and Combat Anti-Semitism Deborah Lipstadt and U.S. Ambassador to Argentina Marc Stanley.
Multiple sources told JNS that no Argentinian government officials were spotted while clarifying it didn’t mean there were none in attendance.
In 2020, Argentine President Alberto Fernández reaffirmed his government’s commitment to bringing to justice those responsible for the attack.