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12 Cheshvan 5765 - October 27, 2004 | Mordecai Plaut, director Published Weekly
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NEWS
Ongoing Cemetery Desecration in South Africa Cause Concern
by D. Saks

Jewish leaders in South Africa are expressing concern that isolated Jewish cemeteries in the small rural towns are being singled out for vandalization. This comes in the wake of the desecration of the Vereeniging Jewish cemetery last month, in which forty gravestones -- more than a fifth of the total -- were severely damaged, many beyond repair. The attack was a recent occurrence, since a former resident had visited the cemetery only a few weeks prior to this and found everything in order. Other recent acts of vandalism have been recorded in Riversdale and Heidelberg, and also in Cape Town.

The South African Jewish community has often expressed its thankfulness at the fact that, compared with other Diaspora communities, levels of antisemitism in their country are relatively low. However, the frequency of the attacks on country Jewish cemeteries is beginning to undermine this confidence.

Rabbi Moshe Silberhaft, spiritual leader to the country communities, is among those who believe that the targeting of specifically Jewish cemeteries for destruction indicated that the incidents cannot be written off as pure vandalism. He acknowledged that in most recorded cases of cemetery desecration there had been no direct evidence of antisemitism, such as offensive graffiti, and that in addition, adjoining general cemeteries had also sometimes been targeted. The fact remained, however, that vandalizing non-Jewish graves was by comparison relatively rare and in addition such graves had seldom been damaged to the extent that Jewish ones had been. This strongly suggested that Jewish graves were indeed being singled out specifically because they were Jewish.

Jewish country cemeteries are very vulnerable because today very few Jews still live in the South African rural districts. It therefore falls on the Country Communities Department of the S. A. Jewish Board of Deputies, which is based in Johannesburg, to take over the upkeep of the country Jewish cemeteries. There are well over 200 of these spread out around the country, amounting to some 20,000 graves in total.

Vereeniging, which is still run by its own committee, does not fall under the jurisdiction of this department. Rabbi Silberhaft nevertheless had made a point of visiting its Jewish cemetery when he was in the area, and prior to the attack he had become concerned about the deteriorating situation there. Among other things, he noted that the surrounding fence and the doors and door frames of the ohel had been stolen.

The most serious incident of cemetery desecration to have taken place in recent years in South Africa occurred in Lichtenburg in late 1999. At that time, nearly all the tombstones in the Jewish cemetery, along with a handful of graves in the adjoining general cemetery, were badly damaged. The culprits -- three white teenagers -- were subsequently caught, charged and convicted and the cemetery was afterwards restored by the S. A. Jewish Board of Deputies. To minimize future vandalism, as well as normal day-to-day weathering, the new stones were laid flat in a bed of concrete. A number of other country Jewish cemeteries, such as Aliwal North's, have also been restored in this way under Rabbi Silberhaft's supervision.

 

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