French Jews live in fear amid rising antisemitism
following Hamas attacks
Israel’s war against Hamas is exposing fault lines in
French society — home to the world’s largest Jewish community after Israel and
the US.
BY CLEA
CAULCUTT
OCTOBER 30,
2023 4:01 AM CET
https://www.politico.eu/article/french-jew-live-fear-antisemitism-hamas-attack/
SARCELLES,
France — In the usually lively “Little Jerusalem” neighborhood of Sarcelles,
the only people loitering are gun-toting French soldiers on patrol.
Since
Hamas’ deadly assault against Israel on October 7, this largely Jewish enclave
in the northern suburbs of Paris has gone eerily quiet, with locals keeping
their movements to a minimum, and with restaurants and cafés bereft of their
regular clientele — fearing an increasing number of antisemitic attacks across
France.
“People are
afraid, in a state of shock, they’ve lost their love for life” said Alexis
Timsit, manager of a kosher pizzeria. “My business is down 50 percent, there’s
no bustle in the street, nobody taking a stroll,” he said in front of a large
screen broadcasting round-the-clock coverage of the war.
France has
seen more antisemitic incidents in the last three weeks than over the past
year: 501 offenses ranging from verbal abuse and antisemitic graffiti, to death
threats and physical assaults have been reported. Antisemitic acts under
investigation include groups gathering in front of synagogues shouting threats
and graffiti such as the words “killing Jews is a duty” sprayed outside a
stadium in Carcassonne in the southwest. The interior minister has deployed
extra police and soldiers at Jewish schools, places of worship and community
centers since the attacks, and in Sarcelles that means soldiers guard school
pick-ups and drop-offs.
“I try not
to show my daughter that I’m afraid,” said Suedu Avner, who hopes the conflict
won’t last too long. But a certain panic has taken hold in the community in the
wake of the Hamas attacks, in some cases spreading like wildfire on WhatsApp
groups. On one particularly tense day, parents even pulled their children out
of school.
France is
home to the largest Jewish community outside Israel and the U.S., estimated at
about 500,000, and one of the largest Muslim communities in Europe. Safety
concerns aren’t new to France’s Jewish community, as to some degree, it has
remained on alert amid a string of terror attacks on French soil by Islamists
over the last decade.
Israel’s
war against Hamas is now threatening the fragile peace in places like
Sarcelles, one of the poorest cities in France, where thousands of Jews live
alongside mostly Muslim neighbors of North African origin, from immigrant
backgrounds, and in low-income housing estates.
Authorities
meanwhile are often torn by conflicting imperatives — between the Jews, who are
fearful for their safety, and the Muslims, who feel an affinity for the
Palestinian cause. During his visit to Israel and the Palestinian Territories,
French President Emmanuel Macron himself struggled to strike a difficult
balance between supporting Israel in its fight against Hamas, and calling for
the preservation of Palestinian lives.
A community under threat
For Timsit,
the threat is very real. His pizzeria was ransacked by rioters a couple of
months ago, when the fatal shooting of a teenager by a police officer in a
Paris suburb caused unrest in poor housing estates across France.
The attack
was not antisemitic, he said, but was a violent reminder. In 2014, a
pro-Palestinian demonstration protesting Israel’s ground offensive against Gaza
degenerated into an antisemitic riot against Jewish shops. “All you need is a
spark to set it off again,” said Timsit.
France’s
Jews have seen an increase in antisemitic attacks since the early 2000s, a
reality that cuts deep into the national psyche given the memories of France’s
collaboration with Nazi Germany in the Second World War.
“The fear
of violence [in France] appeared with the Second Intifada,” said Marc Hecker, a
specialist on the Israeli-Palestinian conflict with IFRI think tank, with
reference to the uprising against Israeli occupation in Palestinian
Territories.
“Every time
the situation in the Near East flares up, there’s an increase in antisemitic
offenses in France,” he added. The threat of antisemitic attacks has led to
increased security at Jewish schools and synagogues, and has discouraged many
French Jews from wearing their kippahs in some areas, according to Jewish
organizations.
In addition
to low-level attacks, French Jews are also a prime target for Islamists as
France battles a wave of terrorist attacks that have hit schools, bars and
public buildings, among other targets, in the last decade. In 2012, three
children and a rabbi were shot dead at a Jewish school in Toulouse at
point-blank range by Mohamed Merah, a gunman who had claimed allegiance to
al-Qaida. In 2015, four people were killed at a kosher supermarket near Paris.
While
Hamas, al-Qaida and ISIS networks are separate, Hecker warned that the scale of
Hamas’s attack against Israel has “galvanized” Islamists across the board, once
again sparking deep fears among France’s Jews.
Delicate local balance
Many of
Sarcelles’ Jews are Sephardic — that is, of Spanish descent — and ended up in
North Africa when Spain expelled its Jewish population in the Middle Ages. Most
came to France after having lived in the former French colonies of Algeria and
Tunisia. Sarcelles’ Muslim population therefore shares a cultural and
linguistic history with its Jewish community, and the two groups have lived
together in relative harmony for decades.
In his
office, the mayor of Sarcelles, Patrick Haddad, stands under the twin gazes of
Nelson Mandela and Marianne, the symbol of French republicanism, with pictures
of both adorning his wall, as he reflects on the thus-far peaceful coexistence
among the local population.
“There’s
been not a single antisemitic attack in Sarcelles since the attacks … It’s been
over two weeks, and we are holding things together,” he said, smiling despite
the noticeable strain. Relations between the city’s Muslims and Jews are
amicable, said Haddad, and locals on the streets are proud of their friendship
with people of a different religion.
“Relations
are easy, we share a similar culture, a lot of the Jews are originally from
Tunisia, Algeria, they even speak some Arabic,” said Naima, a Muslim retiree
who did not want to give her surname to protect her privacy. “My family, my
husband and my children respect the Jews, but I know many who are angry with
Israel,” said Naima, who moved to France from Algeria as a young adult.
“I’ve got
Muslim friends, we get along fine, we don’t go around punching each other,”
said Avner.
But for
many, politics — and the Israeli-Palestinian conflict — is off-limits, and
communities live relatively separate lives, with most Jewish pupils enrolled in
religious schools. Many Jews from Sarcelles have also chosen to emigrate to
Israel in recent years.
But
Israel’s image as the ultimate, secure sanctuary for Jews has been shattered
after Hamas killed more than 1,400 Israelis in horrific attacks, said Haddad.
“Where are
[Jews] going to go if they are not safe in Israel? People’s fears have been
magnified, they fear what is happening here, and they are anguished about what
is happening in the ‘sanctuary state’ for Jews,” he said.
In a twist
of the many tragic reversals of Jewish history, several French families have
returned from Israel since the Hamas attacks to find temporary shelter in the
relative peace of Sarcelles.
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