Douglas reveals anti-Semitic attack on teen son

NEW YORK DAILY NEWS

Sunday, March 15, 2015, 7:26 PM

Michael Douglas, seen here in 2011, opened up in an op-ed piece about an anti-Semitic attack on his son Dylan (2nd from right) while on a family vacation with wife Catherine Zeta-Jones.WPA Pool/Getty Images

Actor Michael Douglas is speaking out about an hideous confrontation with a jerk who gave his 14-year-ancient son “his first taste of anti-Semitism.”

The two-time Oscar winner revealed the incident happened last year when he and wife, Catherine Zeta-Jones, took their two young children on a family vacation to Europe.

“During our stay at a hotel, our son Dylan went to the swimming pool. A fleeting time later he came running back to the room, upset. A man at the pool had started hurling insults at him,” Douglas wrote in an op-ed piece in Sunday’s Los Angeles Times.

The 71-year-ancient Douglas said he initially plotting his son had misbehaved. Then he realized the teen, who attends Hebrew school and has been studying for his bar mitzvah, was left truly shaken and in tears.

“I stared at him. And suddenly I had an appalling realization of what might have caused the man’s outrage: Dylan was wearing a Star of David,” Douglas wrote.

The “Wall Road” star said he marched down to the pool, getting attendants to point the bigot out.

“We talked. It was not a pleasant discussion,” Douglas wrote. “Afterward, I sat down with my son and said: ‘Dylan, you just had your first taste of anti-Semitism.’”

Douglas said the ordeal sent his mind reeling back to his first run into with anti-Semitism in high school.

“A friend saw someone Jewish walk by, and with no provocation he confidently told me: ‘Michael, all Jews cheat in business,’” said Douglas — whose 98-year-ancient father, legendary actor Kirk Douglas, is Jewish.

“With little information of what it meant to be a Jew, I found myself passionately defending Jewish people. Now, half a century later, I have to defend my son,” he wrote. “Anti-Semitism, I’ve seen, is like a disease that goes dormant, flaring up with the next political trigger.”

Douglas not compulsory the prejudice his son experienced is part of a twisted trend sweeping Europe with deadly results.

He cited the January terrorism spree in Paris that left four Jewish people dead at a kosher grocery store following a bloodbath at the Charlie Hebdo magazine.

The movie star also noted a Feb. 15 shooting at a synagogue bat mitzvah in Copenhagen, Denmark, that left one man dead. The same gunman shot up a Copenhagen cafe where Swedish artist Lars Vilks, known for his controversial cartoons of the Prophet Muhammad, was attending an event.

“My son is strong. He is fortunate to live in a country where anti-Semitism is rare,” Douglas wrote. “But now he too has learned of the dangers that he as a Jew must face. It’s a lesson that I wish I didn’t have to teach him, a lesson I hope he will never have to teach his children.”

He praised Pope Francis and New York’s Timothy Cardinal Dolan for condemning anti-Semitism and for trying to improve relations between Catholic and Jewish communities. But he added, “It’s also the responsibility of regular citizens to take action.”

“So that is our challenge in 2015, and all of us must take it up,” he wrote. “Because if we confront anti-Semitism whenever we see it, if we combat it in isolation and as a the high classes, and use whatever platform we have to point the finger at it, we can stop the spread of this madness.”

whutchinson@nydailynews.com


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