Is France Safe For Jews? (FrontPageMagazine.com) by Joseph Puder 03/27/12)
Source: http://frontpagemag.com/2012/03/27/is-france-safe-for-jews/
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The despicable murders in Toulouse, France, on Monday, March 19, 2012
that took the lives of Rabbi Yonatan Sandler (30), his two small
children, Aryeh (3) and Gavriel (6), and Miriam Monsonego, the eight-
year-old daughter of the Ozer Ha’Torah school’s principal by Mohammed
Merah (24), an Arab-Muslim French citizen, has raised anew the
question of whether France is a safe place for Jews.
When this writer asked Lyda Peltz, a French citizen born to Jewish
parents who came from North Africa, if France is safe for Jews, her
response was fast and furious, “France is no longer a safe place for
Jews.” Lyda, who moved to Israel several years ago, joined thousands
of other French Jews whose accented voices fill the streets of
Netanya, Ashkelon, and Eilat. She contends that the influx of
millions of Muslims into France enabled the anti-Semitism that
already existed to rise above surface and become legitimatized.
A spate of violent anti-Semitic attacks on Jews throughout France
during the 2008-09 “Cast Lead” Israeli operation in Gaza, aided in
great measure by the French media’s anti-Israel posture, prompted the
exodus of thousands of Jews from France. In the aftermath, terrorists
crashed two vehicles, one loaded with firebombs, into the façade of a
synagogue in Toulouse, France January 6, 2009, while a lecture was
going on. Fortunately, there was only physical damage and no one
suffered any injuries. This attack was, however, the second serious
terrorist attack on Jewish targets in France in less than a week.
A 29-year old Jewish man was attacked on January 4, 2009 at a Paris
subway station by a gang of 20 people who yelled “Palestine will
win.” They hit the man in the face and filmed the scene. Three days
later, a 15-year-old Jewish girl in suburban Paris (Villiers-le-Bel)
accused a gang of ten which included three of her classmates, of an
anti-Semitic assault. She had been thrown to the ground, kicked,
punched, and the attackers told her that they were “avenging
Palestinians.” On January 8, 2009, “Death to the Jews” was spray-
painted outside a primary school in Nice. On that same day, the ORT
Bramson High School in Marseille was attacked by vandals who threw
aerosol cans soaked with flammable liquid at the school building.
Prior to last Monday’s calculated murders, the brutal murder of Ilan
Halimi, a23-year-old Parisian Jew in 2006, was the country’s most
shocking. Halimi had been lured to an apartment by a female gang
member, and sadistically tortured to death by Arab and African Muslim
Frenchmen. One gang member admitted to having put out a cigarette on
Halimi’s face “because he did not like Jews.” The anti-Semitism of
this gang of barbarians went much further. According to one witness
the torturers recited verses from the Koran while Halimi was tortured.
On August 9, 1982, during the First Lebanon War, Arab terrorists used
grenades and machine guns in an attack that targeted Chez Jo
Goldenberg, the famous Jewish establishment located in the Marais
district of Paris. Six people were killed and 22 wounded.
The work of the French media and academia reveals that a majority of
members are not only leftist in their outlook, but anti-American and
anti-Israel as well and, elements are allied with radical Islamists.
Official policies of the French government since 1967 show they have
sought cooperation with the Arab world at the expense of Israel. The
actions of the media, academia and the government have all
contributed to the rise of anti-Semitism. However, the multi-
cultural and political-correct French elites, who have looked the
other way rather than face the violent excesses of many of the Arab
Muslim immigrants, and have not spoken out against the radical
Islamic imams who preach hatred against all non-Muslims and Jews in
particular, are ultimately responsible for the harvest of anti-
Semitism being reaped in today’s France.
Maria Sliwa’s May 17, 2003 article France and its Jews written during
the period when the Second Intifada was being waged against Israel,
asserted that of the approximate Jewish population in France of
650,000 (there are 6 million Muslims in France) a quarter “Are
considering leaving (France) in the wake of the attacks targeting the
country’s Jewish community.” Sliwa quoted Daniel Pipes of the Middle
East Forum as saying, “Anti-Semitism is not new in France. France
never purged itself of anti-Semitism, it just hid it.”
The murder of the Jewish children and rabbi on Monday, March 19,
2012, made headlines throughout Europe and the world this week, and
the French ambassador to Israel, Francois Bigot addressed the Israeli
Knesset’s (Parliament) Absorption and Diaspora Affairs Committee last
Tuesday declaring that “France will not rest until the perpetrator of
the atrocity in Toulouse is found.” Bigot added that “Hate crimes
went against the larger trend in France, which has seen a drop in
local anti-Semitism over the past couple of years. He said that in
2011 there were 380 anti-Semitic incidents as opposed to 900 in 2001.”
On the day of the attacks MK Yaakov Katz (National Union) called on
Jews to leave France, declaring “there is no Jewish future in
France.” Katz added that only in Israel is there a future for the
Jewish people, and that Jews should not entrust their fate to
Sarkozy, Obama or other world leaders.
During WWII the pro-Nazi Vichy government of France helped deport
75,000 French Jews to their death in Nazi concentration camps. The
French political right that included the Catholic clergy and
monarchists persecuted Jewish Captain Alfred Dreyfus in the famous
1894 trial. Numerous expulsions and forced conversions of Jews
occurred during the Middle Ages in addition to Jews in certain French
provinces being forced to wear a badge following the edict of the
Fourth Lateran Council in 1215. With these events as a partial
background, it is no surprise that Jews are sensitive to acts of anti-
Semitism in the land of Liberte, Egalite, Fraternite (France’s
national motto). And, to reaffirm Jewish suspicions, the March 21,
2012 Los Angeles Times referenced results from an ADL survey that
compared 2009 and 2012 attitudes towards Jews in France which
indicate that nearly half of the French people surveyed
hold “classical anti-Semitic notions.”
Former French president Jacque Chirac was reported by Israel Insider
to have said on March 1, 2002 that “I would like to say clearly there
is no upsurge in anti-Semitism in France.” Similar assurances have
been recently made by President Sarkozy. Protecting the Jews of
France requires, however, the protection of the Jews of Israel. And,
as long as Israel is vilified in the French media, abused in
academia, and betrayed by the French government, anti-Semitism will
not abate, and Jews will continue to be vulnerable to such despicable
attacks such as has occurred this week. And as long as Muslim
radicals in France are not dealt with in the severest way, violence
against Jews will continue, and France will not be safe for Jews.
(Copyright © 2012 FrontPageMagazine.com 03/27/12)
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