Enterprise-Record (Chico)

Protesters compare vaccines to Nazi horrors

- By Angela Charlton and Constantin Gouvy

PARIS >> A French Holocaust survivor has denounced anti-vaccinatio­n protesters comparing themselves to Jews who were persecuted by Nazi Germany during World War II. French officials and anti-racism groups joined the 94-year-old in expressing indignatio­n.

As more than 100,000 people marched around France against government vaccine rules on Saturday, some demonstrat­ors wore yellow stars recalling the ones the Nazis forced Jews to wear. Other demonstrat­ors carried signs evoking the Auschwitz death camp or South Africa’s apartheid regime, claiming the French government was unfairly mistreatin­g them with its anti-pandemic measures.

“You can’t imagine how much that upset me. This comparison is hateful. We must all rise up against this ignominy,” Holocaust survivor Joseph Szwarc said Sunday during a ceremony commemorat­ing victims of antisemiti­c and racist acts by the French state, which collaborat­ed with Adolf Hitler’s regime.

“I wore the star, I know what that is, I still have it in my flesh,” Szwarc, who was deported from France by the Nazis, said with tears in his eyes. “It is everyone’s duty to not allow this outrageous, antisemiti­c, racist wave to pass over us.”

Historian and former Nazi hunter Serge Klarsfeld also took aim at the analogy, stressing Monday that “the yellow star was a symbol of death that excluded Jews from society and marked them for exterminat­ion, while vaccines, on the other hand, save lives.” To equate the two, he told The Associated Press, is an “odious” comparison that serves to trivialize the yellow star.

French government spokesman Gabriel Attal lamented the “absolutely abject comparison­s” of vaccine rules to Nazi atrocities, and he urged other political leaders to speak out.

Attal later stressed the need for vaccinatio­ns despite some increasing­ly radical pockets of resistance.

“We are in a fourth wave,” he said after a Monday evening Cabinet meeting, a day before a bill goes to parliament to make vaccinatio­n passes to access public spaces, including restaurant­s, obligatory. It enters into force Wednesday for cultural and recreation­al venues, and early August for restaurant­s, bars and other places — once the fast-track law is in place.

The government is introduced a bill requiring all health care workers to get vaccinated against the coronaviru­s and requiring COVID-19 passes to enter restaurant­s and other venues.

At a large protest in Paris on Saturday against vaccine rules, one demonstrat­or pasted a star on his back reading “not vaccinated.” Another, Bruno Auquier, a 53-year-old town councilor who lives on the outskirts of Paris, drew a yellow star on his T-shirt and handed out arm bands with the star.

“I will never get vaccinated,” Auquier said. “People need to wake up,” he said, questionin­g the safety of COVID-19 vaccines.

Auquier expressed concern that the new measures would restrict his two children’s freedom and pledged to take them out of school if vaccinatio­n becomes mandatory.

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 ?? MICHEL EULER — THE ASSOCIATED PRESS FILE ?? A star that reads, not vaccinated is attached on the back of an Antivaccin­e protesters during a rally in Paris, Saturday.
MICHEL EULER — THE ASSOCIATED PRESS FILE A star that reads, not vaccinated is attached on the back of an Antivaccin­e protesters during a rally in Paris, Saturday.

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