Kuwait Times

‘Hating the Jews’ has become mainstream, French writer warns

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PARIS: Watching anti-Semitism rise again across Europe, the acclaimed author Joann Sfar doesn’t know whether to laugh or cry. “When I was growing up in France, hating the Jews was something repugnant; now it’s almost the consensus,” said the French graphic novelist and director of the film “Gainsbourg: A Heroic Life”. “Anti-Semitism has become a way of bringing together people who have nothing else in common but can unite” under that banner, said Sfar with bitter irony.

The writer of the bestsellin­g “The Rabbi’s Cat” books decided to tackle his fears head-on with the oldest Jewish weapon of all - humor - in his new satirical novel. “The Last European Jew” turns on the elderly Desire Abergel, who has had enough of being a Jew and wants to become an anti-Semite like everybody else. He even goes as far as asking a cosmetic surgeon to remake his lost foreskin. The colorful cast of characters includes a female English rabbi who specialize­s in getting divorces for Hasidic lesbians.

There is also a completely unfunny stand-up comedian called Donnemoidu­fric - which means ‘give me the cash’ in French — who may or may not be based on Dieudonne, a convicted anti-Semite who has a cult following in France. “I am terrified of boring my readers,” Sfar said. Having given up long ago “the desire to win them over and convince them. I don’t write as an activist, or to change the world”, he added. “I love the idea of creating dread and making people laugh at the same time,” admitted the polymath, whose father Andre is famous for prosecutin­g neo-Nazis.

He said his guiding principle was a famous line by the great French humourist and avowed fatalist Pierre Desproges, who said: “You can laugh about anything but not with everybody.” “Happily there are enough people around today who are still able to laugh at everything and who have absolutely not been taken in,” the 48-year-old added. That said, he is seeing more and more worrying signs. “Twenty or 30 years ago the Jewish community was terrified by every anti-Semitic attack and would talk about it, sometimes too much, and would get lots of sympathy,” said Sfar.

“Today it’s the reverse. Jews know very well that when you denounce an anti-Jewish act, it is going to provoke more of them,” he insisted. He notes that after the 2012 attack on a Jewish school in Toulouse by an Islamist gunman who killed four people, “all Jewish schools in France got threatenin­g letters and anonymous calls”.

The Jewish section of the Nice cemetery where Sfar’s own mother is buried was desecrated, he said. “The Jewish community knows well that every time they dare to denounce anti-Semitism, it is going to be punished,” Sfar despaired. “Even among people who are close to me, even my friends, there was a deafening silence. I get the feeling that our old allies are now saying to us, ‘Sorry, we have done what we can’.” —AFP

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