Wednesday, February 28 2007 @ 02:40 PM PST
Contributed by: Anonymous
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Middle EastThe teenagers in Petah Tikva's Gan Yehonatan club stress that they are not Nazis. "We're punks!" they say.
"People think all new immigrants are anti-Semites. That's not true at all," one of the teenagers says, referring to anti-Semitic incidents in town, like last year's desecration of a large synagogue. "We don't like the ultra-Orthodox but we wouldn't paint swastikas on synagogues either," he says.
By Moti Katz
The teenagers in Petah Tikva's Gan Yehonatan club stress that they are not Nazis.
"We're punks!" they say.
<snip>
The boys admit uncomfortably that they are familiar with the Nazi-Russian youth in Petah Tikva.
"There are groups of neo-Nazis - not here at the club, though. They exist in every town in the country," says one youth.
Some of the youths regard Israelis with anger and distrust. They are a close-knit group, but complain that Israelis treat them with contempt and see them as stereotypes. Most of all, they say they don't belong. The reports of vandalism and attacks on ultra-Orthodox residents have intensified this feeling.
When asked what they know of Nazi and anti-Semitic groups, they act embarrassed. Gradually, however, they open up and talk about the "Nazi skinheads" and terror they impose on other groups.
<snip>
One group at odds with the Nazi skinheads is the "good" Nazi skinheads, as the youngsters call them. The good skinheads are not Nazis or Jew haters - "they are radical right wing Islamophobes who believe in the working class," a youth says.
More:
http://www.infoshop.org/inews/article.php?story=20070228144008750