Israeli PM visits Shanghai' former Jewish ghetto

Israeli PM visits Shanghai' former Jewish ghetto
Updated on

Summary Israel's Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu on Tuesday visited Shanghai's former Jewish ghetto.

 

SHANGHAI (AFP) - Israel s Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu on Tuesday visited Shanghai s former Jewish ghetto to acknowledge the Chinese city s past role as a haven for refugees fleeing Nazi persecution.


Netanyahu, who arrived a day earlier at the start of an official visit to China, toured the Shanghai Jewish Refugees Museum which includes a former synagogue that served the community, a museum official said.

 

"Seventy years ago, only Shanghai opened the door to provide a sanctuary to Jewish refugees," Netanyahu was quoted by Shanghai s Liberation Daily newspaper as saying.

 

From the early 1930s, tens of thousands of Jewish refugees who fled Europe made Shanghai their home.

 

In 1943, the Japanese authorities who had occupied Shanghai ordered an estimated 20,000 Jewish refugees into a "designated area" in the city s northern district of Hongkou, where they lived alongside Chinese residents.

 

Their movements were restricted but they were never targeted for extermination, despite requests from officials of Nazi Germany, Japan s ally at the time.

 

"We hope to develop closer cooperation with China, so we can take pride not only in 70 years ago but also in the future," Netanyahu said.

The Israeli prime minister is due to meet Chinese President Xi Jinping and other top officials in Beijing later this week, following a visit by Palestinian leader Mahmud Abbas.

 

China s foreign policy supports Palestinian statehood but at the same time Beijing has built business links with Israel since the two countries established diplomatic ties in 1992.

 

Netanyahu previously visited the Shanghai ghetto in 1998 during an earlier term as Israel s prime minister.

 

Wang Jun of Tongji University, which has a programme with Tel Aviv University to explore redeveloping the area, said the link between Shanghai and the Jewish people could serve as a base for future Sino-Israeli political and economic cooperation.

 

"Shanghai protected tens of thousands of Jewish refugees. For Israel, for the Jewish people, the significance is exceptional," he said.

 

Browse Topics