The Jewish Chronicle

More French Jews disguise their identities in public

- BY SHIRLI SITBON PARIS

V 70 PER cent of French Jews say they have been the target of at least one antisemiti­c attack, according to a survey released ahead of the Internatio­nal Holocaust Remembranc­e Day.

The study, carried out by public opinion institutio­n Ifop for the American Jewish Committee, says that 34 per cent of Jews feel threatened because of their religion, compared with only 8 per cent of the overall population who feel that way.

It was published ahead of Emmanuel Macron’s visit to Israel, where the French president will attend the fifth World Holocaust Forum.

The situation among young Jews is particular­ly alarming: 84 per cent of those aged 18 to 24 say they have been the target of antisemiti­c acts, with 79 per cent per cent saying they have been insulted and two in five being physically assaulted because they are Jewish.

“We ordered the study to have a clearer picture of the Jewish experience of antisemiti­sm in France,” AJC Europe director Simone Rodan Benzaquen said.

“And the study shows eight out of ten people don’t even report the attacks carried out against them.

“Young Jews have been a major target because schools and universiti­es are anything but safe spaces. The younger generation­s illustrate a trend. They were born into this period of antisemiti­sm.”

Amid rising reports of antisemiti­c attacks within schools, more Jews have taken their children out of public schools over the last decade. Only one third of the community still attend them, according to the survey.

In 2017 a former school headteache­r Bernard Ravet admitted that he had advised a Jewish family not to attend his public school in Marseille because it would be too dangerous for their son who had just returned from Israel.

“The study shows that two out of every three French Jews have examined the option of emigrating to Israel,” Ms Rodan Benzaquen said.

It found French Jews adapt their habits with a “strategy of invisibili­ty”: they avoid streets and neighbourh­oods where they risk being attacked, and no longer use the words “Jewish” and “Israel” in public.

One third avoid wearing kippot, especially on metros and buses. Some take them off when the streets are dark in the evening, or wear hats instead.

The survey’s findings tally with anecdotal evidence from a recent protest over the Sarah Halimi killing in which Jewish mothers told the JC they no longer wear their Star of David necklaces and ban their children from wearing jewellery that could identify them.

Jews told Ifop they conceal their Jewish identity in their work places. France’s chief rabbi Haim Korsia says Jews no longer ask their employers for a day off to celebrate Kippour or Rosh Hashanah because they fear being flagged as Jewish.

But the chief rabbi added it was positive that the same study found 73 per cent of non-Jews recognised antisemiti­sm is a genuine threat.

“In the early 2000s people didn’t talk openly about antisemiti­sm but now, the overall population sees that the situation French Jews are facing is a sign that something has gone wrong within French society,” he told Le Parisien. “The only way we can battle this situation is if we are all united.”

Family told public school was too dangerous for them

 ?? PHOTO: GETTY IMAGES ?? Macron in Jerusalem this week
PHOTO: GETTY IMAGES Macron in Jerusalem this week

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