The Jerusalem Post

Wiesenthal Center commends Swiss justice in Dieudonné case

- • By SHIMON SAMUELS The writer is director of internatio­nal relations at the Simon Wiesenthal Center.

We recall how Dieudonné M’bala M’bala began his career as a comedian, together with his Jewish friend, Elie Semoun. After they split, Dieudonné turned antisemiti­c, expressing friendship towards the late Robert Faurisson, infamous Holocaust denier, and Jean-Marie Le Pen, founder of the extreme-right party National Front and who had commented “the gas chambers to kill Jews are a mere detail of history.” Jean-Marie is the father of Marine, runner-up in the latest French Presidenti­al elections.

Antisemiti­sm has always permeated Dieudonné’s artistic career. One of the most bizarre of his feature films, The Antisemite, sees his wife begging him to go to a psychologi­st to treat his Judeophobi­a, only to discover the psychologi­st is a Jew, as is his wife.

Dieudonné has mutated into a political polemicist and is bent on defaming, denying and deriding the Holocaust and Jews – for which he has been tried in court many times. His lawyers have used all possible freedom of expression formulas to justify his Jew-hatred. The Wiesenthal Center has repeatedly denounced his antisemiti­sm. The financial angle has been more successful.

The financial angle

Although he had been able, over the years, to build a rickety system of chinese boxes and claimed to be penniless, using his wife as a screen or shell companies in France and Cameroon. Dieudonné has been condemned to suspended prison sentences and fined by several French tribunals for embezzleme­nt and fraud.

After decades of insolvency towards the Jewish owners of the Paris theatre La Main d’Or, in which he usually performed, on 8 November 2017 he was at last condemned to pay arrears and was definitive­ly expelled. On that stage is where he invented the quenelle – an upside-down Hitler salute – and launched his dancing girls troupe, dubbed the Shoah-nanas (in French, nanas means babes). On that same day, he was also condemned for his antisemiti­c show.

The political test

In 2009, Dieudonné founded the Anti-Zionist Party for the European Parliament­ary elections, which brought together activists from the far Right, the far Left and religious fundamenta­lists. Among his political acolytes: Alain Soral – a reported extreme right antisemite, conspiracy theorist and Holocaust denier; Yahyia Gouasmi – a Shi’ite propagandi­st, president and financier of the party, alleged to be an Iranian liaison agent; and Ginette Hess-Skandrani – former Green Party militant, expelled, turned anti-Zionist and pro-Hamas campaigner.

The party – that boasted the support of Ramírez Sánchez a.k.a. Carlos the Jackal, Hamas and Hezbollah, among others – was shut down in 2019. Parading his anti-Zionist and anti-Western narrative over the years, Dieudonné has been welcomed by both Sunni and Shia representa­tives, has cozied-up to world leaders leaders, such as former leader Muammar Gaddafi, former president Mahmoud Ahmadineja­d, former president Hugo Chavez and President Bashar al-Assad.

The Swiss verdict

In a recent trial over a 2019 show, a Geneva court found Dieudonné guilty of racial discrimina­tion, and for having consciousl­y and willingly made negation and discrimina­tory remarks about the victims of the Shoah in such a way as to undermine their human dignity.” This is based upon 2005 rulings of the European Court of Human Rights that negationis­t speech could not be equated with freedom of expression.

Last Monday, the Geneva tribunal condemned Dieudonné to pay a fine of 30,600 Swiss Francs (NIS 105,486).

On tour from June 3 to 18, he will cross France, Belgium, Luxembourg and Switzerlan­d. Considerin­g Dieudonné’s apparent recidivism in avoiding to pay his fines, the Wiesenthal Center called on the Geneva police to detain him on Swiss soil until he pays his court-imposed penalty for Holocaust denial and Judeophobi­a.

Appeal after appeal has been used to put off any sentence of incitement to hate. Perhaps, it will take a Swiss tribunal to finally bring Dieudonné M’bala M’bala to justice.

 ?? (John Schults/Reuters) ?? DIEUDONNE M’BALA M’BALA raises hands with fans near a Paris theater, which canceled his show in February 2004 fearing his performanc­e would spark protests by anti-racist and Jewish groups.
(John Schults/Reuters) DIEUDONNE M’BALA M’BALA raises hands with fans near a Paris theater, which canceled his show in February 2004 fearing his performanc­e would spark protests by anti-racist and Jewish groups.

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