After an Arab-Israeli man wearing a skullcap was attacked in Berlin, the assailant has now been sentenced to four weeks' detention. The case sparked outrage in Germany, with thousands rallying against anti-Semitism.
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A 19-year-old Syrian national was found guilty on Monday of serious bodily harm and verbal abuse after attacking two people in April who were wearing kippas, traditional male Jewish head coverings also known as yarmulkes.
Germany's Jewish Council welcomed the court's decision, saying that the court obviously "hasn't followed the absurd excuses and justifications of the defense." Felix Klein, Germany's anti-Semitism commissioner, also hailed the court's relatively quick decision on the case, saying that whoever carries out anti-Semitic acts or uses anti-Semitic expressions "is outside of society and must reckon with the consequences of the rule of law."
How the court ruled:
A Berlin court sentenced him to four weeks of juvenile detention. However, it also ruled that he'd already served the time during his pre-trial detention, meaning the 19-year-old will be released.
He will also be placed under special supervision by carers for one year.
Berlin-based reporter Frederik Schindler reported that the court also ordered the teen to take part in a tour through the House of the Wannsee Conference — where the Nazis planned the deportation and the murder of European Jews. The judge did not reportedly explicitly name anti-Semitism as a motivating factor behind the attack.
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Attack in broad daylight: On April 17, an Arab-Israeli man and his German-Moroccan friend were attacked while wearing skullcaps and walking down the street in the Berlin district of Prenzlauer Berg. A video of the incident shows the attacker striking at one of the men with a belt while shouting "Yahudi," the Arabic word for Jew. The 21-year-old Israeli man who was attacked told DW that he is not Jewish. He said he decided to put on the skullcap to test whether it was dangerous to wear one openly in Berlin.
'I just wanted to scare him:' The 19-year-old suspect admitted to the assault during his testimony before the court last Tuesday. "I am very sorry, it was a mistake on my part," the defendant said in German. "I didn't want to hit him, I just wanted to scare him." He told the court that drugs also played a role in the attack: "I got stoned, my head was tired." The 19-year-old has denied, however, that the attack was motivated by anti-Semitism.
Outrage over anti-Semitism in Germany: The attack was condemned by religious leaders and politicians in Germany. The incident also sparked protests in Berlin and several other German cities where thousands of people wore skullcaps to protest anti-Semitism. The skullcap worn by the victim was later put on display in Berlin's Jewish Museum as part of a campaign against anti-Semitism.
Yarmulke, mitra or veil: religious head coverings across the globe
Followers of various religions wear special head coverings to express their faith and show humility and dignity. Yarmulkes, mitras, veils and turbans are made of a great variety of materials.
Image: picture-alliance/dpa/D. Dyck
Yarmulke
European Jews started wearing the yarmulke, or kippa, in the 17th and 18th centuries, turning the skullcap into a religious symbol. Pious Jews are expected to cover their heads, but the fabric isn't that important, and a hat or scarf is acceptable, too. Jewish Halacha law requires men and boys to cover their head when they pray, visit a synagogue or a Jewish cemetery or study the religion.
Image: picture alliance/dpa/W. Rothermel
Miter
The miter is the ceremonial headdress worn by bishops, mainly in the Roman-Catholic Church. It goes back to the 11th century, with the tall, peaked hat deeply cleft on the sides and adorned with two ribbons at the back symbolizing the Old and the New Testaments.
Image: picture alliance/dpa/P. Seeger
Dastar
Members of the Sikh faith, a monotheistic religion founded in India's northern Punjab region in the 15th century, wear a dastar. A dastar is usually worn by men, with orange being a popular color. Underneath the cloth headwear, which is re-knotted every morning, Sikh men let their hair grow freely.
Image: picture-alliance/dpa/D. Dyck
Chador
In Farsi, the word chador means "tent," and that is what this garment worn by observant Muslim women in some parts of the Middle East resembles. Usually black, it covers a woman from the head down, hiding the shape of the body, revealing only the face. The chador is worn over a woman's regular clothing.
Image: picture-alliance/dpa/M.Kappeler
Nun's veil
Nuns almost always wear a distinctive veil to complete their religious garment, the habit. Novices' veils are white, while professed nuns usually wear a black veil, or one in their habit's color. Depending on the religious order, veils come in different sizes and shapes. Some are elaborate and cover the woman's entire head; others are simply pinned to the sister's hair.
Image: picture-alliance/dpa/U. Baumgarten
Headscarf
Is a woman's headscarf a religious headdress, or a symbol of oppression? In the West in particular, that continues to be a matter of heated debate. It is certainly the most well-known female head covering. Turkish women (as in this photo) tie headscarves differently from women in Arabic countries.
Image: picture-alliance/dpa/G. Schiffmann
Sheitel
The ultra-Orthodox Hasidic Jewish community in New York has strict rules for married women, who are required to shave their hair and wear a wig, the "sheitel." In her 2012 bestseller memoir "Unorthodox," US author Deborah Feldman describes growing up in the ultra-religious group.
Image: picture-alliance/Photoshot/Y. Dongxun
Birett
A bit of cloth, strips of cardboard and a tassel — voila, the birett, a head covering worn by Roman Catholic priests since the 13th century. In the Netherlands, Germany, Britain and France, the hat has four corners. In many other countries, it has three.
Image: picture-alliance/dpa/D. Ebener
Birett
A bit of cloth, strips of cardboard and a tassle — voila, the birett, a head covering worn by Roman Catholic priests since the 13th century. In the Netherlands, Germany, Britain and France, the hat has four corners. In many other countries, it has three. If you remember the character Don Camillo (played by French actor Fernandel in a series of films in the 1950s and '60s), you know the hat!
Image: Picture-alliance/akg-images
Tagelmust
The cotton scarf that can be up to 15 meters long is worn by Tuareg Berber Muslim men throughout western Africa. The tagelmust covers the head and is pulled over the mouth and nose against wind-born sand in the desert. The turban-style headdress is worn by adult men only. When indigo blue, the tagelmust's dye can rub off on the skin, hence the Tuareg being called the "blue men of the desert."
The Jewish shtreimel hat is made of velvet and has a wide fur trim, usually sable. Married men wear the hat on Jewish holidays and for religious festivities. The eye-catching headgear originated in Hasidic communities in southeastern Europe, a tradition that became nearly extinct in Europe after the Holocaust.
Image: picture-alliance/NurPhoto
Hats and bonnets
The Amish are a conservative Christian group in North America that originated in the tradition of the Anabaptist movement in Switzerland and southern Germany. The first Amish fled to the US in the early 18th century to escape religious persecution. They live simple lives, and shun modern technology and conveniences. The women wear plain bonnets; the men wear straw or felt hats.