16.12.2013. 18:38 |
Židovi u Azerbejđanu
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Jewish life in Azerbaijan, highlight of the General Assembly of the European Jewish Parliament
by: Yossi Lempkowicz Updated: 14/Dec/2013
Židovski život u Azerbejđanu- predstavljen na Generalnoj skupštini Europskog židovskog parlamenta
Azay Guliyev, Member of the Parliament of Azerbaijan, will be the main speaker at Monday's special session of the European Jewish Parliament on Jewish life in the Caucasus Republic.untry.
BRUSSELS (EJP)---Under the framework of the second annual General Assembly of the European Jewish Parliament, on Monday in Brussels, a special session will feature Jewish life in Azerbaijan as an example for Europe of a successful Jewish-Muslim coexistence and as an answer to growing anti-Semitism on the Continent. During the session, participants will discuss how the Azerbaijani model of religious tolerance is applicable for other parts of the world, too.
Brussels (EJP) Specijalna sjednica Generalne skupštine Europskog židovskog parlamenta je prikazala karakteristike židovskog života u Azerbejđanu kao primjer za Europu o uspješnom židovsko-muslimanskom suživotu i kao odgovor na rastući antisemitizam na kontinentu. U toku sjednice učesnici će diskutirati kako se taj model religiozne tolerancije može primijeniti na druge dijelove svijeta.
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‘’Unlike many other countries in the world, there is no discrimination, no social hostility and no organized manifestation of anti-Semitism in Azerbaijan,’’ stresses Willy Fautré, Chairman of Human Rights Without Frontiers(HRWF), a Brussels-based NGO which led a fact finding mission that visited Azerbaijan, a country in the Caucasus where about 10,000 Jews live today within a majority population of Shi’a and Sunni Muslims (96%).
‘’Anti-Semitism is non-existent in Azerbaijan,’’ says Moisey Bekker, a representative of the religious community of Georgian Jews in the country...
Based in Brussels, the European Jewish Parliament is a body composed of 120 elected members from 47 countries across Europe. Initiated by the European Jewish Union (EJU) and co-chaired by Vadim Rabinovich and Joël Rubinfeld,, it considers itself as ‘’an innovative forum voicing the thoughts, beliefs and ideas as well as concerns of European Jews.’’
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