With over 1,500 antisemitic incidents between Oct. 7 and mid-November – three times the reported number in the entire 2022 – more French Jews seek to escape the climate of fear
With over 1,500 antisemitic incidents between Oct. 7 and mid-November – three times the reported number in the entire 2022 – more French Jews seek to escape the climate of fear
I feel for anyone who feels unsafe in their homes and communities. I can’t imagine the weight of the decision to uproot yourself and your family to emigrate to another country for reasons beyond your control, especially discrimination.
It’s worth noting, though, that this article seemingly goes out of its way to obfuscate what qualifies as anti-semitic acts.
Palestinian solidarity is not anti-semitism, and there are abundant indicators (from this article and its links) they’re being conflated in France.
There are more sources that report on the rise in anti-semitism:
France - The Guardian
Germany - AP News
World - Reuters
All your sources rely on the same primary source: the interior ministry. And I don’t see a breakdown of the acts. In a number of articles, graffiti of stars of David across buildings in France was categorized as anti-Semitic, which seems really weird to me because they weren’t defaced or altered in any way, just stars of David. On its face I would think that was…pro-semitic.
Either way, I’m not denying there has been an uptick in anti-Semitism and that any and all anti-semitism is indefensible. But there also seems to be a deliberate effort to embellish the narrative by treating anti-Israeli or pro-Paletinian acts as anti-Semitic. Then people react to that narrative with fear, and their fear is used to further credit the narrative.
The insidious part is that these stories treat the narrative as support for Israel’s ongoing aggression.
Marking buildings with Stars of David is how the Nazis marked Jewish homes and properties.
There’s this article (The Guardian), which includes accounts from the police chief of Paris, and the mayor of Besancon.
But that’s unlikely to be what happened here: BBC
My reply was an explanation to what you wrote in this part and why it is considered antisemitic:
Also in the article that I have linked, the mention of this incident is immediately followed by this:
Yeah, that’s fair, I did not have that context originally. I should have quoted the article I linked, because the salient parts point out that it was strange the graffiti evoked the Israeli flag, which I had noticed originally:
I’m inclined to agree with the BBC’s conclusion:
I notice the Times of Israel doesn’t consider this months-old information when continuing to reference it as evidence of anti-semitism.
And regarding Palestinian solidarity being conflated with anti-semitism, according to this The Guardian article, it stems from people conflating Jews with Israelis:
It “stems” from a deliberate effort to conflate them by the likes of the ADL .
Your article itself says:
Your article itself also says that the police are the source for this assertion, and goes on to say
And if that weren’t enough, it’s already demonstrated that expressing support for Palestine is being conflated with antisemitism.
So the government bans support for Palestine, the police enforce that ban, and the police say antisemitism is rising among young Muslims.
All this from the same article, that you posted. Very weak sauce.