One of UK's richest men wants German citizenship over 'hostility' to Jews
One of UK's richest men wants German citizenship over 'hostility' to Jews 8 hours ago Huw ThomasWales business correspondent "Britain is an uncomfortable place for Jews today," Cardiff-born billionaire Sir Michael Moritz has said.
The 71-year-old, who holds both UK and US passports, is the richest Welshman who has ever lived, with a wealth built on investments in companies like Yahoo and Google that made him billions during the dot-com boom of the early 2000s. In a memoir called Ausländer – the German word for foreigner or outsider – Sir Michael charts his family's treatment under the Nazis.
Sir Michael's parents had escaped Germany and settled in Cardiff, where he attended the now-closed Howardian High School in Penylan.
"There was no shortage of Evans' and Thomas', but we were the only Moritz.
"And to me, that was as if – in the margin, in big black capital letters – it said Jew. "
"It's all these anecdotes that strike home more than anything else. " His comments come as reports of antisemitism incidents in the UK spiked after the synagogue attack. Sir Michael said he was now applying for a German passport, saying: "I think it's the one place in Europe where what happened [nearly] 100 years ago forms a very central part of the educational system, so you have generations that have been reared with that as part of their consciousness.
"Does that mean it will prevent dreadful things happening in the future?
No, but it gives me some mild form of reassurance. "
During a Welsh government trade trip to Silicon Valley, he said Morgan opened the conversation with: "So Michael, what's a nice Jewish boy like you doing in Silicon Valley?" The line, he recalled, instantly transported him back to his childhood in Cardiff, stirring "all of those feelings of not being Welsh, of being different.
Sir Michael said he did not respond at the time.
There was no need to get into a slanging match. but obviously it cut deep and I remember it. "
He also repeated criticism that boards of directors in the UK sometimes lacked the expertise to nurture new technology in the way that American companies, particularly in Silicon Valley, have achieved.
"It'll be fantastically liberating for creative types who can master all of these incredible tools. "I think for people in white-collar jobs, lower-skilled white-collar jobs, irrespective of the pursuit that they happen to be in, it's going to be a very disruptive, dislocating experience. "I think until the end of her days, she was convinced that I must have been a crook," he laughed. "I'm sure if I'd been sitting having a cup of tea with her in her living room here in Cardiff and there was a knock at the door and there was a policeman there, she would have said 'oh, you must be looking for Michael'
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