Israeli President to Hungarian PM: Neo-Fascism Is a Threat to the World

Neo-Fascism is a threat to the entire world, Israeli President Reuven Rivlin told Hungarian Prime Minister Viktor Orban on Thursday as the two met in Jerusalem.

Orban noted in his meeting with Rivlin that Hungary is host to one of the largest Jewish communities in Europe, adding that the government seeks to protect all its citizens regardless of religion or origin. "Jews receive protection by the government," he said. "There is zero tolerance for anti-Semitism."

Rivlin meanwhile told Orban that Israel is making efforts to make it clear that there is no religious war in the country. "We have no war between the religions and we are very proud of the freedom of religion," he said.   

Orban, who was recently reelected to a third consecutive term, is considered a European Union nationalist lightning rod. He has led a policy of restricting democracy in his own country. Since his reelection in 2010, after having previously served as prime minister from 1998 to 2002, he has waged a legislative offensive to impose restrictions on civil society, the media and the justice system. He gerrymandered voting districts in a move that helped him remain in power.

Earlier, Orban and Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu praised ties between Hungary and Israel ahead of a meeting.

Keep updated: Sign up to our newsletter

Email*

Please enter a valid email address

Sign up

Please wait…

Thank you for signing up.

We’ve got more newsletters we think you’ll find interesting.

Click here

Oops. Something went wrong.

Please try again later.

Try again

Thank you,

The email address you have provided is already registered.

Close

Speaking before the meeting, Orban told Netanyahu that he believes "excellent ties between Israel and Hungary" are in large part the result of personal ties between the leaders – and that he thinks "this is because both countries have a patriotic leader."

The Hungarian leader also asserted that "modern anti-Semitism" is on the rise in western Europe while decreasing in eastern Europe, adding that Hungary has zero tolerance for anti-Semitic statements.

Netanyahu meanwhile told him that they both understand the threat that radical Islam poses to Europe, Israel and Arab countries. "Iran is the greatest threat and we are the front-line protecting Europe as well," Netanyahu said. The prime minister also thanked Orban for Hungary’s support for Israel on the international stage. 

On Thursday, Orban is slated to tour the Yad Vashem Holocaust Remembrance Center, then plant a tree in the Grove of Nations, located in the Jerusalem Forest. In the evening he will dine with Netanyahu and his wife, Sara, at the prime minister’s official residence, while his entourage eats with Energy Minister Yuval Steinitz.

On Friday morning, Orbán will visit the Western Wall, then fly back to Hungary. He has no planned meetings with senior Palestinian Authority officials.

>> Orban is coming to Israel to meet his soulmate Netanyahu. Here’s how he’s taking down Hungary’s democracy ■ Analysis: Orban blamed all of Hungary’s problems on a Jew – and won, big time

A nationalist lightning rod

As part of Orban’s battle against human rights organizations in Hungary, Orban introduced legislation nicknamed the “Stop Soros” bill, to criminalize these groups’ efforts to help asylum seekers. George Soros, a Jewish billionaire born in Hungary, supports many of the country’s liberal organizations. After Orban won reelection in April, Netanyahu called to congratulate him on his victory. Orbán’s right-wing Fidesz party won decisively, capturing two-thirds of the seats in parliament. As a result, Orban now has a majority that would enable him to amend the constitution.

Under Netanyahu’s leadership, Israel has drawn closer to central European countries, such as the Visegrad Group – Hungary, Poland, the Czech Republic and Slovakia – an alliance Israel partly aims to use to weaken the European Union consensus on Palestinian and Iranian issues. Apart from their improved ties with Israel, the Visegrad countries have increasingly been at odds with western Europe, first and foremost Germany, over the massive migration wave of 2015 and global terrorism, in a way that has cast doubt on the shared liberal values on which the EU is based. Under Orbán, Hungary has spearheaded this battle.

Opposition slams visit

Opposition Knesset members meanwhile condemned the visit, and Hungarian Holocaust survivors are expected to stage a protest during Orbán’s visit to Yad Vashem Holocaust Memorial on Thursday.

“After he plundered the memory of the victims of the Holocaust in the agreement with Poland, today Netanyahu will honor Hungarian Prime Minister Orban, who praised the anti-Semitic Nazi collaborator in the annihilation of the Jews of Hungary,” Yesh Atid chairman MK Yair Lapid tweeted Wednesday.

Meretz chairwoman MK Tamar Zandberg addressed Orban in Hungarian on her Twitter account, posting: “Those who praise collaborators with the Nazis, those who persecute human rights groups and the opposition in their country – are not welcome here.”

MK Ksenia Svetlova (Zionist Union) said: “Netanyahu, who uses the term ‘Auschwitz borders’ to instill fear in the hearts of the Jewish people,” is now rehabilitating “the dark history in countries where the leaders and the people collaborated with the Nazis and murdered Jews.”

Apparently for Netanyahu, the ends justify the means,” Svetlova said, adding: that “the ends are clear: damaging the European Union [by means of] closer ties to Eastern European countries that define themselves as illiberal democracies.”