The Jerusalem Post

European Jewish Congress calls for strong punishment for Jean-Marie Le Pen

- (Courtesy) • By TAMARA ZIEVE

inquiry. Over the past days, we have held numerous, difficult discussion­s with the leadership of the Faculty of Arts – Hamidrasha to clarify the boundaries of artistic expression in society, and specifical­ly within the sphere of a public institutio­n of higher education.”

In light of the controvers­y, the Faculty of Arts has decided to hold a public symposium on the subject at the start of the coming academic year.

The European Jewish Congress on Thursday called on the French judiciary to use the full weight of the law and impose the strongest possible punishment on Jean-Marie Le Pen, founder and former leader of the National Front party, for an alleged antisemiti­c comment he made in 2014.

When asked about Jewish singer Patrick Bruel’s criticisms of his party, Le Pen responded: “We’ll take care of that batch next time,” using the word fournée for batch. Many interprete­d the comment as a pun on the word four, meaning oven, as a reference to the Nazi gas chambers and the authoritie­s charged him with racial incitement, after the interview was filmed and posted on the National Front’s website.

Le Pen has denied that the remark had any antisemiti­c undertones.

Marine Le Pen, his daughter and incumbent leader of the National Front, rebuked her father for the comment calling it a “political mistake.”

Earlier this week, judicial sources announced that he would face trial. The European Jewish Congress was a civil party to the lawsuit.

Le Pen, 89, has routinely minimized the Holocaust and has been convicted of racism or incitement of racial hatred several times. In 1996, he was convicted of inciting racial hatred for saying the gas chambers used to kill Jews in the Holocaust were “merely a detail in the history of the Second World War.”

“Le Pen is an unrepentan­t antisemite and a very clear warning has to be sent to people like him that racism and bigotry will no longer be tolerated in France,” Dr. Moshe Kantor, president of the organizati­on, said. “We hope that if found guilty he will face the fullest punishment possible under French law.”

“We deeply appreciate President Emmanuel Macron’s strong words condemning antisemiti­sm and we hope that this will be followed by action against people like Le Pen.” Kantor added.

Earlier in the week, Macron spoke at an event in Paris to commemorat­e the 75th anniversar­y of the Vel’ D’Hiv round-up. At the event, Macron admitted French official culpabilit­y for the roundup and condemned modern-day antisemiti­sm including anti-Israel sentiment.

 ??  ?? AN ISRAELI STUDENT says she took these items from outside the Auschwitz camp, and not from inside or from the museum.
AN ISRAELI STUDENT says she took these items from outside the Auschwitz camp, and not from inside or from the museum.
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