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In Belgium, repair shop will not serve Jews

ANTWERP — The owner of a car repair shop in Belgium said he will not serve Jewish clients to protest Israel’s position over Russia’s war on Ukraine.

The repair shop of Ludo Eyckmans in Stabroek, Belgium. (Google Maps)

The Forum of Jewish Organizations, a group representing Flemish-speaking Belgian Jews, said it will take legal action against Ludo Eyckmans, the owner of the shop in Stabroek near Antwerp.

Denying service to individuals based on their faith, race or sexual orientation is illegal in Belgium.

“As of today, our Jewish clients are no longer welcome for maintenance of their cars or solving electronic problems,” Eyckmans wrote in an email that he sent to Belgian media earlier this month, according to the Jewish group.

He cited Israel’s “failure to recognize war crimes” by Russia’s army in Ukraine.

Israeli Foreign Minister Yair Lapid recently asserted that “Russian forces committed war crimes” in Ukraine, but Prime Minister Naftali Bennett has not come down so harshly on Russia.

Israeli leaders are balancing complex interests in the conflict, including Russian involvement in neighboring Syria and the safety of Jews in both countries.

Bennett’s caution has led some to believe he can play a role in brokering talks between Russia and Ukraine, but this hasn’t happened. Bennett’s position has also yielded criticism of Israel from those who would like to see Israel take a firmer stance.

The Forum of Jewish Organizations wrote to Eyckmans to say that Jews in Belgium do not determine Israeli foreign policy, a spokesperson for the group, Hans Knoop, said. Eyckmans did not reply to requests for comment.

Several business owners and service providers have denied service to Jews in Belgium in recent years in connection with their view of Israel’s actions.

In 2014, amid exchanges of fire between Israel and Hamas in Gaza, police removed a sign from a Belgian cafe saying that Jews were not allowed following a complaint by an anti-Semitism watchdog.

Also that year, a Belgian physician refused to treat a Jewish woman with a fractured rib, suggesting she visit Gaza to get rid of the pain.

Separately, a store employee in Antwerp allegedly refused to serve a Jewish customer “out of protest,” as he reportedly said in 2014.



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