As hundreds injured in Catalonian riots over referendum, city’s 15,000 Jews will celebrate festival as usual, community leader says

A man clashes with Spanish Guardia Civil guards outside a polling station in Sant Julia de Ramis, where the Catalan president was supposed to vote, on October 1, 2017, the day of a referendum on independence for Catalonia banned by Madrid. (AFP PHOTO / Raymond ROIG)
A man clashes with Spanish Guardia Civil guards outside a polling station in Sant Julia de Ramis, where the Catalan president was supposed to vote, on October 1, 2017, the day of a referendum on independence for Catalonia banned by Madrid. (AFP PHOTO / Raymond ROIG)

 

JTA — Violence between police and pro-independence protesters in Barcelona will not disrupt holiday services there, a leader of the Jewish community said.

Victor Sorenssen, a leader of the Jewish community of the capital of Catalonia, an autonomous region with its own language and many residents who seek independence from Spain, said the city’s Jewish congregations will not “be affected by something that is essentially a political discussion.”

Sorenssen said this following riots on Sunday, during the poll in which more than 460 people were injured in clashes with police, who were under orders to prevent a referendum of independence organized by the Catalonian government, even though a top court in Spain had ruled it was illegal.

Illustrative: Building a sukkah. (Gershon Elinson/Flash90)
Illustrative: Building a sukkah. (Gershon Elinson/Flash90)

 

Community events, including Sukkot celebrations and Simchat Torah, are, at present, to go on as scheduled despite the tension around the referendum, Sorenssen added. He said he was not aware of injury to any of the community’s members in the clashes, he added.

Like the Catalonian population at large, the Jewish community is also divided on the independence issue, Sorenssen said, prompting the Jewish community to “not make any statement or declaration” on the issue at hand.

“The Jewish community is a religious and a cultural institution and we respect all the different approaches and points of view of our members that range from pro-independence to being against,” he explained.

Barcelona has approximately 15,000 Jews, out of 45,000 living in Spain, according to the European Jewish Congress.

As reported by The Times of Israel