Flap leaves only U.S. flag flying
Tariq Malik
Only the American flag flies at Old World Village for now.
The banners of four other countries reflecting the shopping center’s
German theme have been taken down, at least until a policy decision is
made by the village’s board of directors on displaying international
symbols.
But it’s not at all what resident and shop owner Michele Weiss
intended.
To honor her Jewish heritage, Weiss tried to display an Israeli flag
on one of the five poles along Center Drive during High Holy Days, which
started Sept. 29 and concluded with Yom Kippur on Monday.
Old World officials took the flag down because they said Weiss hoisted
it during the night without the consent of her fellow merchants or the
neighborhood board of directors, which chooses which flags to display.
“That is public land, not private,” said Old World restaurant manager
Bernie Bischof, whose family built the village 23 years ago. “The flags
are chosen by our homeowner’s association, otherwise it’s breaking our
rules.”
Weiss believes differently.
“I think it’s because we’re Jewish,” she said, saying that she and her
mother, Pat, have been targeted because of their faith and ethnicity.
“We’ve had problems since the day we came here.”
Weiss, 32, and her mother own Michele’s Boutique and a vacant
storefront. They live above them. Since 1986, she said, they have
experienced prejudice and anti-Semitic attitudes from their neighbors and
management, from not being able to get entry keys to being restricted
from setting up display tables in front of her shop.
Bischof said prejudice has nothing to do with it and that display
tables are prohibited as a village policy to improve the center’s look.
But, the Weisses believe there has been a history of prejudice that
has set an ill tone for the shopping center.
In 1986, village founder Josef Bischof was forced to pay $2.4 million
to store owners for fraud and allegedly harassing tenants by singing Nazi
songs. Three years later, a conference of the Institute of Historical
Review, which questions the Holocaust, held a conference in the center
despite protests by shop owners.
Bischof again came under fire in 1997 because of a sign he posted in
Santa Barbara County that suggested county supervisors there should
receive the “Auschwitz treatment” for restricting development on his land
in the area.
Other shop owners said they haven’t experienced prejudice.
“I’ve lived here 11 years and have never seen any discrimination,”
said Donna Burgard, who runs a physical therapy business in the village.
“I understand the protocol for flag display is to fly all countries at
the same height, and it would be nice to fly the flags of all countries
out there, but there isn’t enough flag poles.”
Nothing, she added, prohibits shop owners from displaying their flags
on their own property.
While the Weisses claim to have been attacked verbally and through
telephone messages because they are Jewish, other shop owners say they
received similar criticism from the Weisses because they are German.
In a special meeting Saturday, three of five directors on the
neighborhood board agreed to take down the flags, with the exception of
the American flag, from the front of the village and wait until a full
board can determine a final flag policy.
Ultimately, they added, they may only display the U.S., state and city
flags in front.
“What we have to do is make sure that we pay respect to all countries
and make sure that flags are displayed correctly and properly,” said Jim
Burgard, one of three Old World board members present during the meeting.
In the meantime, the Jewish High Holy Days are over, leaving the
Weisses disappointed they could not salute their ethnicity and appeal to
a broader public than the foot traffic by Michele’s store.
“I think it’s so sad . . . we had a German holiday [Oktoberfest] and a
Jewish holiday, and to have the flags flown together would have been a
wonderful sign of unity,” said Marj Rankine, owner of a Scottish shop in
the village. “But we shot ourselves in the foot.”
Board members in attendance agreed with Rankine and agreed to put her
in charge of flags when a decision has been reached by the full
neighborhood board at the Oct. 26 meeting.
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