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France Vows Harsh Action After More Synagogues Burn
New York Times ^ | April 2 02 | DONALD G. McNEIL Jr.

Posted on 04/01/2002 8:45:03 PM PST by vance

France Vows Harsh Action After More Synagogues Burn

By DONALD G. McNEIL Jr.

A rising tide of anti-Semitic incidents prompted a sharp government reaction today after a synagogue in Marseille was destroyed by arson and another in nearby Belgium was damaged when five firebombs were thrown inside.

Prime Minister Lionel Jospin announced that 1,110 extra police officers would be deployed to guard France's synagogues and Jewish schools.

"Any act of anti-Semitism, no matter what the pretext, will be extremely firmly pursued and cracked down upon by the justice system," he declared from the steps of his Hôtel Matignon offices this evening after a meeting with Jewish community leaders.

Attacks on Jews and Jewish buildings have soared in the last year. They appear to reflect the growing radicalization and anger of France's large Muslim population, numbering about five million, as violence in the Middle East has increased and Israel has applied growing military pressure on Palestinians.

Three French synagogues were set on fire over the Passover-Easter weekend, which ended today, a public holiday. Besides the Orthodox Or Aviv synagogue in Marseille, which was burned to the ground, one in Strasbourg had its doors set ablaze the day after an anti-Israel demonstration, and in Lyon, 15 masked men crashed two cars through the gates of a synagogue and set them afire.

Shots were fired at a kosher butcher shop near Toulouse, though no one was injured, and a young Jewish couple were badly beaten in Villeurbanne, in the Rhone region.

The Central Jewish Consistory in Paris, in a statement sent to Agence France-Presse, compared the weekend's attacks to "the beginnings of a new Kristallnacht, with the government totally passive." Kristallnacht, or Night of Broken Glass, on Nov. 9, 1938, was named for the sweeping attacks on Jews and Jewish shops and places of worship incited by the Nazi Party.

Police officers, some carrying submachine guns, are now posted outside dozens of synagogues and Jewish schools, mostly in and near Lyon, Marseille, Paris, Strasbourg and Bordeaux.

Until recently, leaders of France's 600,000 Jews have said that they do not find France an anti-Semitic country. But they have complained that there has not been enough of a public outcry over earlier attacks, the anti-Semitic graffiti appearing on walls and the threatening phone calls received by rabbis.

Some Jewish leaders have argued that France's foreign policy is pro-Palestinian and effectively encourages attacks by young Arab thugs. Their Belgian counterparts complain that leftist politicians are increasingly anti-Israel.

The French government argues that it condemns all violence and bigotry and that its Middle East policy is even-handed. The Foreign Ministry has recently condemned both Israel's occupation of Yasir Arafat's compound and Palestinian suicide bombings.

The Palestinian Authority's representative in France, Leila Shahid, told a French radio station today that the Palestinian struggle was strictly national and that it is "unacceptable to attack Jewish religious sites or Jewish places of commerce in France or elsewhere."

President Jacques Chirac, on the campaign trail hoping to be re-elected, visited a synagogue in Le Havre to show his solidarity with French Jews.

"These acts are unimaginable, unpardonable and unspeakable and should be pursued and condemned as such," he said outside after the service. "They infuriate France and the French." He called on the government of his rival, Mr. Jospin, to do more to protect Jewish institutions.

Mr. Jospin, who returned today from a campaign stop in French territories in the Carribean, called his interior minister to the Hôtel Matignon and this evening announced that six companies of the national riot police would be guarding synagogues.

In Marseille this afternoon, several thousand Jews marched through the streets carrying the fire-damaged Torah scrolls from the Or Aviv synagogue in the Caillols neighborhood.

The scrolls were on stretchers covered with white cloths, and men in yarmulkes and the broad felt hats of Hasidic sects pushed through the crowd to touch them briefly.

The synagogue itself, a 20-year-old prefabricated one-story building frequented by 600 familes, was a crumpled mess of girders, concrete and corrugated iron today. This morning, congregants wept as the ark containing the Torah scrolls — cracked open and badly charred by the blaze — was carried outside and set upright on a burned kitchen chair.

Forensic specialists moved in and out of the bits of the building that still stood. The police did not officially give a cause for the blaze, but an all-news television channel reported that they had found evidence of arson.

The synagogue, in a wooded copse a bit remote from the rest of the neighborhood's low apartment buildings, burned very quickly and, to judge from the collapsed steelwork, intensely. A police patrol had apparently passed it just before midnight, only about an hour before the blaze and saw nothing suspicious, a commander said.

Congregants outside this morning were upset, pressing on the gates of the pale blue spike fence for news and denouncing the destruction, especially of the synagogue's library, as a sacrilege.

"I've lived with anti-Semitism because during the war, my parents died in Auschwitz," said Robert Mizrahi, honorary president of the synagogue. "Now I feel I'm living with it again. And I think it's absolutely necessary to try to stop it now, or we'll be overwhelmed."

Zvi Ammar, president of the Jewish Consistory of Marseille, pronounced himself "crushed and disgusted," as he stood outside the ruins. Another firebomb was thrown against the building's wall last year, witnesses said.

"We want to live in peace," Mr. Ammar said in a televised interview. "We want the state, the public authorities, to assure our security. We're citizens, too."

Yvan Ollivier, police prefect for the region, asked for calm and said he had assigned 120 officers to protect 59 local synagogues and schools. Mr. Jospin's announcement came later.

The grand mufti of Marseille, Soheib Bencheikh, condemned "these barbarous acts," adding: "Our natural and spontaneous solidarity with the Palestinian people, who submit to daily murders and humiliations orchestrated by Israel's bloody and vengeful leaders, cannot let us forget two undeniable truths: Jews and Arabs have shown, across their long history, an astonishing capacity to live together.

"And we are in France, a country ruled by secularism, where the only possible way to engage is in a calm and constructive dialogue."

In Brussels, the floors and pews of an Orthodox synagogue were damaged when five firebombs were thrown inside, the police said. The three-story building of brown brick and white Romanesque windows stands on a busy street in Anderlecht, a working-class neighborhood with a large Arab population. Cinders and broken glass could be seen on the sidewalk below the window smashed by the bombers, but the chandeliers inside were still lighted.

The mayor of Anderlecht, Jacques Simonet, told Belgian radio that he ascribed the attack to "a hostility which means that the Israeli-Palestinian conflict is exported to some of our tougher neighborhoods."


TOPICS: Crime/Corruption; Front Page News; News/Current Events
KEYWORDS:

1 posted on 04/01/2002 8:45:03 PM PST by vance
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To: vance
Oui, Oui... we shall use how say -- snide remarks on those who did this...
2 posted on 04/01/2002 8:50:48 PM PST by Naspino
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To: vance
Yes...they are going to put a nickle premium on 'petrol' for environmental 'cleanup'....
3 posted on 04/01/2002 8:56:18 PM PST by RCW2001
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To: vance
5000,000 potential suicide bombers or ten percent;Kosovo 2 is on the way
4 posted on 04/01/2002 8:58:52 PM PST by Governor StrangeReno
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To: vance
The Palestinian Authority's representative in France, Leila Shahid, told a French radio station today that the Palestinian struggle was strictly national and that it is "unacceptable to attack Jewish religious sites or Jewish places of commerce in France or elsewhere."

Translation: "Killing of Jews is only permissible in Israel"

5 posted on 04/01/2002 9:04:44 PM PST by Orion78
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To: vance
Harsh action?? Well, France can start by butting out as far as Moussasoui (or however you spell that terrorist's name) is concerned.
6 posted on 04/01/2002 9:04:48 PM PST by buzzyboop
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To: vance
Knowing the French, they will blame Ariel Sharon and call for sanctions against Israel. They dishonor themselves.
7 posted on 04/01/2002 9:07:52 PM PST by a_witness
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To: vance
What the Jew is being forced to relearn is the bitter lesson they learned from the Holocost, most of the world hates them!

That is because the god of this world,Satan, hates them (2Cor.4:4, Rev.12) This is why Israel was formed in the first place, so the Jew would always have a place of refuge.

In the years with the phony 'peace process' the Jews have been lulled into thinking that things had changed. They haven't.

Pray for the Peace of Jerusalem! They shall prosper that love thee (Psa.122:6)

8 posted on 04/01/2002 9:11:01 PM PST by fortheDeclaration
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To: RCW2001
This is good to see. France wakes up. Wonder if they'll serve Fruit Loops at the French Gitmo...
9 posted on 04/01/2002 9:15:31 PM PST by veronica
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To: vance
"Any act of anti-Semitism, no matter what the pretext, will be extremely firmly pursued and cracked down upon by the justice system," excepting, of course, any action by Vichy government officials and other Nazi collaborators."

"We further condemn Israel for not requiring the migration of every single European Jew to some non-Zionist entity. The terrible injustice of Israel's existence, and our local preference for muslim migrants causes our Palestinian friends immesurable grief."

10 posted on 04/01/2002 9:18:49 PM PST by Uncle Miltie
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To: fortheDeclaration
Even before there were Muslims in France, there was THE DRYFUS AFFAIR , and the French happily handing Jews over to the Nazis. Bedore all of that, there were anti-Semetic outbursts. This time, they'd best get a handle on it, ecuase their Muslims aren't all that crazy about Christians either.
11 posted on 04/01/2002 9:22:51 PM PST by nopardons
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To: veronica
I think the nickle premium is closer to reality...
12 posted on 04/01/2002 9:42:06 PM PST by RCW2001
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To: vance
I still ask this to anyone that knows the history. How the hell did France wind up with such an impressive nuclear arsenal?

If they have the guts to use them, they haven't much to fear.

If they don't have the guts to use them...everybody has much to fear as to whom they will surrender them to...

13 posted on 04/01/2002 9:45:48 PM PST by RCW2001
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Comment #14 Removed by Moderator

To: vance
"Our natural and spontaneous solidarity with the Palestinian people, who submit to daily murders and humiliations orchestrated by Israel's bloody and vengeful leaders..."

What a gasbag.

15 posted on 04/01/2002 10:07:33 PM PST by Humidston
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To: vance
What the mufti of Marseille said to French Muslims:

"And we are in France, a country ruled by secularism, where the only possible way to engage is in a calm and constructive dialogue."

What the mufti really meant, and his audience understands:

And we are in an infidel country, where we have to pay lip service to civilized laws and behavior because our numbers aren't large enough to mount a terror campaign here yet.

16 posted on 04/01/2002 10:08:10 PM PST by petuniasevan
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To: vance
Why trust the French? They betrayed Jews to the Nazis as fast as they could find them.

Why would they protect them now?

17 posted on 04/01/2002 10:10:06 PM PST by petuniasevan
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To: nopardons
Even before there were Muslims in France, there was THE DRYFUS AFFAIR , and the French happily handing Jews over to the Nazis. Bedore all of that, there were anti-Semetic outbursts. This time, they'd best get a handle on it, ecuase their Muslims aren't all that crazy about Christians either.

Amen!

18 posted on 04/01/2002 11:08:57 PM PST by fortheDeclaration
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To: ping jockey
lace wearin' frogs...

This must be where the FR Brain Trust is meeting tonight.

19 posted on 04/01/2002 11:40:43 PM PST by Fulbright
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