The Jewish Chronicle

Paris remembers kosher store siege

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HUNDREDS OF French Jews gathered on Tuesday outside a Parisian kosher supermarke­t to commemorat­e the third anniversar­y of the hostage incident in which four men were killed.

The assault was the last of four shootings over three days in January 2015, including an assault on the satirical magazine Charlie Hebdo in which 11 journalist­s died.

Prime Minister Edouard Philippe and François Hollande, the former president, joined victims’ families for the evening ceremony outside the Hypercache­r store in eastern Paris.

President Emmanuel Macron had earlier laid his own wreath at a separate commemorat­ion outside the store over the weekend.

Tuesday’s ceremony took place just hours after a kosher supermarke­t was burned down in Créteil, to the southeast of the city. Swastikas had been found daubed on the wall of the store last week.

Community leaders said they were not jumping to conclusion­s by assuming the arson was an antisemiti­c act, but added they were concerned such attitudes remained a major threat in France.

“The arson in the supermarke­ts is too fresh to be commented on but if you look at the global situation, anti- semitism is still very present,” said Francis Kalifat, the head of Crif, the umbrella group that represents Jewish groups across France.

“Three years after the attack on Hypercache­r the terror threat is still there and Jews are still one of the primary targets. I constantly remind authoritie­s that Jews are specifical­ly under threat so they would take that into account as they redeploy their troops across the country.”

At the commemorat­ion, candles were lit in memory of Philippe Braham, François-Michel Saada, Yohan Cohen and Yoav Hattab, who lost their lives while trying to overcome hostagetak­er Amedy Coulibaly.

White balloons were then released into the night sky and France’s Chief Rabbi Haïm Korsia prayed for the victims and for peace and security in France, before reciting the Kaddish.

The ceremony officially ended with Emmanuel Macron laid a wreath over the weekend (above) ahead of a ceremony on Tuesday night led by Chief Rabbi Haïm Korsia (right) the French national anthem Le Marseillai­se, but dozens of people in the crowd followed it with Israel’s anthem, Hatikvah.

A total of 17 people were killed in the wave of violence — launched by Coulibaly and the two Kouachi brothers, Chérif and Saïd — that swept Paris in January 2015.

The supermarke­t siege ended when police stormed the building, freeing 15 hostages and gunning Coulibaly down.

These events were followed in November 2015 by a series of coordinate­d attacks on a Paris football stadium, cafés, restaurant­s, and the Bataclan theatre, killing 130 people in all.

French authoritie­s responded by redeployin­g soldiers to provide visible protection in the streets, including many Jewish buildings and institutio­ns.

But Gil Taieb, a Jewish community leader in Paris, said antisemite­s had become emboldened in the years since the attacks.

“Add the arson in those grocery stores on this very day to the recent decision to reprint antisemiti­c pamphlets written by Louis-Ferdinand Céline and you’ll realise that antisemite­s feel strong and free to express themselves,” he said.

“If we don’t condemn Islamists, they gain ground. We have to be tougher.

“We have to show that the power is not in the hands of those who want to frighten us.”

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PHOTO: GETTY IMAGES
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PHOTO: TWITTER

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