The Jerusalem Post

‘No to antisemiti­sm!’ Thousands chant in central Paris square 96 gravestone­s defaced with swastikas in Jewish cemetery near Strasbourg

- • By RINA BASSIST in Paris and JEREMY SHARON

Thousands of people gathered last evening at the Paris Place de la Republique and in other cities across France, shouting “No to antisemiti­sm.”

The rally in Paris was an unusually quiet demonstrat­ion, despite the high number of participan­ts and the late hour. It was organized by 14 political parties against the backdrop of a report on antisemiti­c statements and acts committed in 2018 in France that showed a 74% rise compared with the previous year.

In the latest incident, a Jewish cemetery in Quatzenhei­m in eastern France, some 10 kilometers from Strasbourg, was vandalized and nearly 100 gravestone­s were desecrated and spray-painted with swastikas.

A unit of the National Gendarmeri­e police force was dispatched to the site and closed the cemetery upon arrival to collect evidence. The police believe that the vandalism was carried out by two people.

French President Emmanuel Macron visited the cemetery on Tuesday afternoon to stand in solidarity with the Jewish community.

“Antisemiti­sm is the negation of what France is,” Macron tweeted. “On the way to the desecrated cemetery of Quatzenhei­m, and tonight at the Shoah Memorial to recall what happened, what caused the breaking point in our history, and to say what the (French) Republic really is: a block in front of all this.”

On Friday evening, two teenagers fired shots from an air rifle at a synagogue in Paris, lightly injuring a Jewish man in the leg, French media reported on Tuesday.

According to the Le Parisien newspaper, the attack was staged against a synagogue in the Sarcelles suburb of Paris from an apartment facing the building.

Police searched the apartment and confiscate­d a 4.5mm. caliber rifle, while the teenagers themselves were arrested on Saturday. The state prosecutor believes that the attack was carried out for antisemiti­c motives.

The president of the Jewish community of Sarcelles was quoted as saying, however, that he believed the attack was not antisemiti­c, adding that it was carried out due to “stupidity,” and that the teenagers would have shot anyone. But, he said he was still concerned about antisemiti­sm in the suburb.

Following the incident in Quatzenhei­m on Tuesday, Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu called the grave desecratio­ns “shocking,” which he said were the work of “wild antisemite­s.”

“I call on the leaders of France and Europe to take a strong stand against antisemiti­sm,” Netanyahu said. “It is a plague that endangers everyone, not just us, and it must be condemned wherever and whenever it rears its head.”

Chief Rabbi of Strasbourg Harold Abraham Weill said that the community was “outraged and appalled” by the incident, and demanded an increase in security for the community’s institutio­ns.

He said he believed that the attack was carried out by farright extremists on Monday night ahead of the planned rallies against antisemiti­sm.

One of the gravestone­s was daubed with the words “Black Wolves,” a militant far-right separatist group from the Alsace region where Quatzenhei­m is located, which was active in the 1970s and 1980s.

Jewish Agency chairman Isaac Herzog described the desecratio­n of the graves as “another severe incident which underlines the antisemiti­sm virus attacking Europe and threatenin­g Jews in the streets,” adding, “Government­s, wake up.”

Aliyah and Integratio­n Minister Yoav Gallant called on Jews to immigrate to Israel in response to the vandalizin­g of the cemetery and other recent antisemiti­c incidents.

Gallant said that the desecratio­n of the graves was a reminder of “dark days in the history of the Jewish people,” and “strongly condemned antisemiti­sm in France.” He noted that last week, when he visited the French Jewish community in Paris, which he said was “under attack from antisemiti­sm and assimilati­on,” and said that “the State of Israel is a safe national house for Jews around the world.”

Meyer Habib, a Jewish member of France’s National Assembly – the French Parliament – said recent events were “raising severe question marks over the future of Jews in France,” and that the spate of antisemiti­c incidents was unacceptab­le.

“It’s as if we have gone back 70 years in time,” Habib said. “I am outraged! France needs to take a deep look at itself on every level of the French people,” because “haters of Jews are walking around freely and raising their heads without shame or fear.”

Macron is expected to participat­e Wednesday evening at the annual dinner for CRIF (Representa­tive Council of French Jewish Institutio­ns),

where he will address the Jewish leaders on the issue of battling antisemiti­sm in France.

French Prime Minister Edouard Philippe, together with some 20 cabinet ministers, participat­ed in the rally in Paris, alongside numerous other leaders from across the political, religious and social spectrum. Representa­tives of the radical left-wing La France Insoumise Party were also present, though the party was not listed as one of the rally’s organizers. Radical right-wing representa­tives were present in other similar rallies that took place outside of Paris.

Speaking to The Jerusalem Post ahead of the rally, the president of CRIF, Francis Kalifat, said, “this rally was not initiated by the CRIF, but by several political parties. Some of these parties, including the Communists, the radical Left and the radical Right must clarify their position on battling antisemiti­sm. There can be no ambiguity on that. Our country suffers from several forms of antisemiti­sm. There is classical far-right antisemiti­sm, but also radical Left and Islamo-leftism forms of antisemiti­sm. All of these must be denounced and battled unequivoca­lly.”

Calls to demonstrat­e were multiplied in recent days, following the insults hurled against Jewish philosophe­r Alain Finkielkra­ut on Saturday, when he passed by a “yellow vest” demonstrat­ion in Paris. Radical left-wing activists yelled “Dirty Zionist,” “Dirty Jew” and “Return to Tel Aviv” at him, insults which generated indignatio­ns from the majority of the French political class. Macron tweeted that “the antisemiti­c insults [Finkielkra­ut] has been subjected to are the absolute opposite of who we are and what makes us a great nation. We will not tolerate them.”

“The phenomenon of the ‘yellow vest’ demonstrat­ion is disconcert­ing, because we witness more and more hatred for institutio­ns, hatred of the Republic, hatred of Jews and hatred of the State of Israel,” stressed Kalifat. This hatred must stop. The demonstrat­ions nowadays are far away from their original goals and reasons. Since these demonstrat­ions started, there was only one spokespers­on of the movement who reached out to us, to the CRIF’s representa­tive in Toulouse, to condemn the antisemiti­c behavior during the demonstrat­ions. The large majority of the ‘yellow vest’ leadership did not denounce acts of antisemiti­sm or racism, but kept silent.”

The president of CRIF also addressed the growing debate in France over qualifying anti-Zionism as antisemiti­sm.

“Hate of Israel equals hate of Jews, and hate of Jews equals hate of Israel,” Kalifat said. “The government must now move from words to deeds, adopting a clear policy of zero tolerance. For instance, we see in the ‘yellow vest’ and in other demonstrat­ions repeated calls to boycott Israel. Boycott is against the law in France, so the law must be applied in all its severity.”

Israel’s Ambassador to France Aliza Bin-Noun told the Post that “there is a lot of talk now about antisemiti­sm and the necessity to battle it. I think that the engagement of the political echelon in that sense is extremely important, and so was the debate in the French parliament today. Still, it is important to note that the general accent seems to be on antisemiti­sm, with less of a debate about anti-Zionism. There are those who claim that they have the right to criticize the policies of the Israeli government. But anti-Zionism is not criticism. Anti-Zionism negates the legitimacy of the State of Israel, its right to exist.

And this is unacceptab­le.”

Herb Keinon contribute­d to this report. •

 ?? (Philippe Wojazer/Reuters) ?? THOUSANDS ATTEND a national gathering last night in the Place de la Republique in Paris to protest antisemiti­sm and the rise of attacks in France.
(Philippe Wojazer/Reuters) THOUSANDS ATTEND a national gathering last night in the Place de la Republique in Paris to protest antisemiti­sm and the rise of attacks in France.

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