Become a Member
Opinion

Hungary’s Jews do feel fear and they have good reason

"Why did we need to come here to be safe?” a Hungarian student at the University of Surrey asked Alexander Goldberg, the chaplain for Jewish students.

November 22, 2018 13:29
An anti-Soros poster in Hungary
3 min read

Like Monica Porter, who wrote in last week's JC,  I’ve many friends in Budapest. I’ve worked with the Jewish community and love the beauty of the city, including the stunning Dohany Synagogue.  However, I cannot share Porter’s optimism about Victor Orbán whose nationalist, populist and nativist politics are sliding into antisemitism.

The University of Surrey is perhaps an unlikely Hungarian Jewish community but until recently its Jewish Society has been run by a succession of Budapest-born students, who if they hadn’t been able to enter the UK as EU citizens, might have well claimed political asylum.

I recall one student coming into my study asking me whether she could study Judaism and Jewish history: “I don’t know much about my own culture but I need to understand it and understand why they hate us. Why did we need to come here to be safe?”.

Many told me they’d left a country where antisemitic attitudes were common. According to the latest published global survey by the Anti Defamation League around 40% of Hungarians hold antisemitic views. This compares to 12% in the UK, 16% in Germany and 17% in France.