President Sergio Mattarella on
Tuesday led condemnation after some of Lazio's ultra fans used
Anne Frank's image to insult followers of city rivals AS Roma.
"The face and pages of the diary of Anne Frank, her story of
suffering and her death at the hands of Nazi barbarism, moved
the world," Mattarella said.
"Using her image as a sign of insult and threat, in addition
to being inhuman, is alarming for our country, which was
infected 80 years ago by the obtuse cruelty of anti-Semitism".
Stickers with images of Anne Frank manipulated to show her
wearing a Roma shirt were attached on the Curva Sud of the
Stadio Olimpico during Lazio's 3-0 win over Cagliari on Sunday.
The ultras of the Roman club were in the stand of their
rivals because their own Curva Nord was shut because of previous
incidents of racism.
Efraim Zuroff, the director of Jerusalem's Simon Wiesenthal
Centre, on Tuesday blasted the slur as "disturbing, miserable,
repugnant".
"There are no words to condemn such a shameful gesture,"
Zuroff said.
"It is trivialization of the Shoah, transforming an inhuman
tragedy into a simple squabble between fans".
Zuroff said he understood the "symbolic impact" of Democratic
Party (PD) leader Matteo Renzi's proposal for Serie A players to
wear the Star of David on their shirts this week.
But he added that "it does not add awareness - it would be
better to have the players visit Auschwitz".
European Parliament President Antonio Tajani also expressed
condemnation.
"I cannot fail to firmly condemn what happening in Rome,
where a group of hooligans used the image of Anne Frank to
offend the fans of another club," Tajani said during a plenary
session in Strasbourg.
"It was a serious deed. Everyone has the right to practise
their religion and the Jewish community is part of out union. "I
think anti-Semitism should remain exclusively a horrible
experience from our past".
Italian Soccer Federation (FIGC) prosecutors are set to open
a probe into the incident.
Lazio Chairman Claudio Lotito led a delegation including
players Wallace and Felipe Anderson to lay flowers at Rome's
synagogue on Tuesday.
There were no official representatives of Rome's Jewish
community present.
"It was not arranged," sources from the community said. "In
addition to gestures, concrete initiatives by all the clubs are
needed".
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