France in shock over Jewish
cemetry attack amid rising antisemitism
People attend a national gathering to protest antisemitism and the rise of anti-Semitic attack in the Palace de la Republique in Paris. |
rench officials and ordinary people across the political
spectrum are marching in Paris and dozens of other cities against antisemitism,
amid a dramatic rise in physical and verbal attacks against Jewish people in
France. The protests began just hours after French President Emmanuel Macron
headed to a Jewish cemetery in eastern France that was damaged overnight in the
latest anti-semitic incident that has shocked the nation.
By Stefan J. Bos
It resembled a scene from the 1930s or 1940s. Some 80 Jewish
grace have vandalized the cemetery in the small Alsace region town of
Quatzenheim. Swastikas were seen on several tombstones.
The overnight attack came just hours before in Paris, and
dozens of other French cities planned to march and rally against anti-Semitism.
French President Emmanuel Macron was heading to this Jewish
cemetery to express his outrage over the attacks. These and other anti-semitic
incidents also overshadowed a news conference Macron gave following talks with
Georgia's President Salome Zurabishvili.
President Macron said: "I want to say again here that
every time a French person because he or she is Jewish, is insulted, threatened
— or worse, injured or killed — the whole Republic” is attacked. It is not for
the Jews to defend themselves but for the republic to defend them."
The cemetery assault came days after the French government
reported a significant rise in anti-Semitism last year: 541 registered
incidents, up 74 percent from 311 in 2017.
Large Jewish Community
The rising anti-Semitism in France, home to the world’s
largest Jewish population outside of Israel and the United States, was
underscored last weekend when hate speech was directed at prominent philosopher
Alain Finkielkraut during a march of yellow vest anti-government protesters.
In other recent incidents, swastika graffiti was found on
street portraits of Simone Veil — a survivor of Nazi death camps and a European
Parliament president who died in 2017. The word “Juden” was painted on the
window of a bagel restaurant in Paris, and two trees planted at a memorial
honoring a young Jewish man tortured to death in 2006 were vandalized, one cut
down.
Two youths were detained Friday after they allegedly fired
shots at a synagogue with an air rifle in a Paris suburb where a sizeable
Jewish community lives.
France also saw the murder of three children and a teacher
from a Jewish school in 2012 by an Islamic extremist in the southwestern city
of Toulouse.
Former French Presidents Francois Hollande and Nicolas
Sarkozy were set to join thousands of protesters and government officials on
the Paris streets to protest against anti-semitism amid reports that thousands
of Jewish people flee France every year.
President Macron was to deliver a speech at Wednesday’s
annual dinner by a leading Jewish group.
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