Facing survivor, Yom Kippur synagogue shooter in Germany shows no remorse in court July 30, 2020Stephan Balliet sits in the regional court at the beginning of the second day of the trial in Magdeburg, Germany, Wednesday, July 22, 2020. (Ronny Hartmann/Pool via AP)(Ronny Hartmann/Pool via AP)Facing survivor, Yom Kippur synagogue shooter in Germany shows no remorse in courtAmerican survivor of Halle synagogue attack confronts neo-Nazi gunman in German courtroom.By Ben Cohen, The AlgemeinerIn a dramatic exchange in a German courtroom on Tuesday, an American Jewish academic came face-to-face with the neo-Nazi gunman who attacked a synagogue in the city of Halle on Yom Kippur last year.Ezra Waxman — a research fellow at the Technical University of Dresden — had been among the 51 worshipers trapped inside the synagogue’s main sanctuary on Oct. 9, 2019, as the heavily-armed Stephan Balliet attempted to blast his way inside.Now a co-plaintiff in the legal proceedings against Balliet, Waxman was the first of the attack’s survivors to directly address questions to the accused, as the trial entered its third day at the High Court in the city of Magdeburg.Waxman began by asking Balliet to explain how the latter’s anti-Semitic beliefs about Jews applied to him specifically. When Balliet replied by talking about Jews in general, Waxman interrupted him, telling the neo-Nazi, “I’m not asking generally, I’m asking you about myself.”In another exchange, Waxman asked Balliet — whose lonely personal existence has been a focal point of the trial — whether he would have carried out the attack if he had children or a girlfriend. Balliet answered that the attack would have been “less likely.”Read Germany implies it won't arrest Netanyahu if he visits because of its Nazi historyDuring separate questioning from lawyers in the case, Balliet expressed no remorse for the attack while affirming his fundamental beliefs. At one point, he explained that he would not describe himself as a “Nazi” or a “fascist,” but simply as an “anti-Semite.”When asked whether he would have shot the children present in the Halle synagogue had he penetrated the building, Balliet’s answer was instant.“Yes, so that my children won’t have to do so in the future,” he replied.The court also heard the contents of a letter written by Balliet’s mother to her daughter that expressed similarly anti-Semitic and racist views.In the letter — written, the court was told, before a failed suicide attempt — Balliet’s mother blamed German society for her son’s deed, citing the anti-Semitic conspiracy theories also espoused by him.The 28-year-old Balliet is being tried for an anti-Semitic hate crime that includes two counts of murder and 68 counts of attempted murder.Two people were killed in the aftermath of Balliet’s failure to breach the synagogue’s heavy door: a female passerby who confronted him and a male customer at a small kebab restaurant that was attacked by Balliet after he sped away from the synagogue in his car.Balliet was apprehended by police about an hour later, after he crashed his vehicle in a panicked attempt to flee from Halle. anti-SemitismGermanyStephan Ballietsynagogue shooting