The Jerusalem Post

Chikli decries activists denying Jews entry to Paris university

- • By MICHAEL STARR

Diaspora Minister Amichai Chikli on Sunday denounced Pro-Palestinia­n activists allegedly denying entry of Jewish students to a Paris university on Tuesday.

The incident in which Comité Palestine de Sciences Po Paris and other pro-Palestinia­n activists reportedly refused to allow Jewish students to access Sciences Po University’s Émile-Boutmy amphitheat­er was, according to Chikli, “one of the worst we have seen in recent times.

“What we saw was the screening of Jewish students, to the cheers of a crowd of inflamed students, most of whom undoubtedl­y don’t understand the seriousnes­s of their actions,” the minister said. “Whoever thinks there is a big difference between denying the rights of Jews to exist for Jewish reasons and denying rights to exist as a nation – they are wrong and mistaken.”

Chikli said that warning signs could not be ignored, and reminded how demonizati­on and delegitimi­zation of Jews had previously ended in Europe.

Union des Etudiants Juifs de France (UEJF) said on Tuesday that Jewish and Zionist students were blockaded from the hall, which had been festooned with Palestinia­n flags during the Comité Palestine’s (Palestine Committee’s) “4 Hours 4 Palestine” event, which featured lectures about Palestinia­n perspectiv­es, refugees, and Judaism and anti-Zionism. Pro-Palestinia­n activists allegedly called for the establishm­ent of a Palestinia­n state “from the River to the Sea.”

The university administra­tion said on Wednesday that it contacted prosecutor­s about a criminal investigat­ion into “antisemiti­c incidents,” while launching its concurrent investigat­ion.

Sciences Po (officially the Paris Institute of Political Studies) said that it was committed to fighting against antisemiti­sm, and regretted that conflict in the Middle East had strained relations between student communitie­s to the detriment of a pluralism of ideas and healthy discourse.

Comité Palestine denied allegation­s

of antisemiti­sm in a Wednesday statement, saying that the far Right had unjustly targeted them with baseless accusation­s to frame them as an antisemiti­c group.

“No such incident transpired,” the committee said. “No student was prevented from entering the amphitheat­er because of their religious background. It is unacceptab­le that the administra­tion, instead of addressing the pressing issue of genocide in Gaza, chooses to deflect blame onto us without any investigat­ion into the matter and despite being present when the events transpired.”

The groups said students including members of the UEJF were allowed into the event, but that they had denied access to individual­s who they said had a history of harassment, intimidati­on, and posting videos of pro-Palestinia­n students online without their consent.

18th Paris Constituen­cy deputy Aymeric Caron praised the students for mobilizing against the “ongoing genocide in Gaza.” Former French politician and co-president of the Institut La Boétie think tank Jean-Luc Mélenchon said that a trivial matter had received national attention.

Gender Equality Minister Aurore Bergé said on social media Tuesday that asking people’s names and screening them at the entrance to the lecture hall was antisemiti­c. French National Assembly Deputy Violette Spillebout cited the incident on Thursday as part of a resurgence of antisemiti­c incidents throughout France as she met with Robert Ejnes, director-general of the Conseil représenta­tif des institutio­ns juives de France (CRIF – Representa­tive Council of French Jewish Institutio­ns).

CRIF President Yonathan Arfi said that the occupation of the lecture hall had replaced critical thinking and debate with violence and hatred and that the atmosphere of antisemiti­sm had to end or democracy would suffocate. The European Jewish Congress decried the incident as a “blatant act of antisemiti­sm.”

French Interior Minister Gérald Darmanin also condemned the Sciences Po incident in a meeting with Chikli, his office said Saturday night. The Israeli minister praised Darmanin for taking a “strong line in the fight against rising antisemiti­sm in France since October 7.”

Chikli said he shared informatio­n with Darmanin on the ties of several BDS organizati­ons with terrorist organizati­ons.

The Diaspora minister also met with former French Prime Minister Manuel Valls in Paris. Chikli said he was a “brave leader” for his support of Israel against Hamas and of European Jews against rising antisemiti­sm.

 ?? AMICHAI CHIKLI ?? (Marc Israel Sellem/The Jerusalem Post)
AMICHAI CHIKLI (Marc Israel Sellem/The Jerusalem Post)

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