The International Holocaust Remembrance Alliance adopted a definition of what anti-Semitism means at their conference in Bucharest from May 23 to May 26.
Mihnea Constantinescu, IHRA’s chairman, said: “All IHRA member countries share concern that incidents of anti-Semitism are steadily rising and agree that IHRA’s member countries and indeed IHRA’s experts need political tools with which to fight this scourge. IHRA’s 31 member countries–24 of which are EU member countries–are committed to the Stockholm declaration and thereby to fighting the evil of anti-Semitism through coordinated international political action. … By adopting this working definition, the IHRA is setting an example of responsible conduct for other international fora and hopes to inspire them also to take action on a legally binding working definition.”
Mark Weitzman, chairman of IHRA’s committee on anti-Semitism and Holocaust denial which proposed the adoption of the definition in 2015, said: “In order to begin to address the problem of anti-Semitism, there must be clarity about what anti-Semitism actually is. This is not a simple question.”






























