The 'New Anti-Semitism' in France, New York Times
They Spit When I Walked in the Street: The New Anti-Semitism in France, New York Times, July 27, 2018.
PARIS The solemn boulevards and quiet side streets of the 17th Arrondissement in Paris suggest Jewish life in France is vibrant: There is a new profusion of kosher groceries and restaurants, and about 15 synagogues, up from only a handful two decades ago.
But for residents like Joanna Galilli, this area in northwestern Paris represents a tactical retreat. It has become a haven for many Jews who say they have faced harassment in areas with growing Muslim populations. Ms. Galilli, 28, moved to the neighborhood this year from a Parisian suburb where anti-Semitism is pretty high, she said, and you feel it enormously. They spit when I walked in the street, she said, describing reactions when she wore a Star of David.
France has a painful history of anti-Semitism, with its worst hours coming in the 1930s and during the German occupation in World War II. But in recent months, an impassioned debate has erupted over how to address what commentators are calling the new anti-Semitism, as Jewish groups and academic researchers trace a wave of anti-Semitic acts to Frances growing Muslim population.
Nearly 40 percent of violent acts classified as racially or religiously motivated were committed against Jews in 2017, though Jews make up less than 1 percent of Frances population. Anti-Semitic acts increased by 20 percent from 2016, a rise the Interior Ministry called preoccupying.
In 2011, the French government stopped categorizing those deemed responsible for anti-Semitic acts, making it more difficult to trace the origins. But before then, Muslims had been the largest group identified as perpetrators, according to research by a leading academic. Often the spikes in violence coincided with flare-ups in the conflict between Israel and the Palestinians, according to researchers.
For the French government, the issue is deeply complicated, touching on the countrys rawest political nerves, as well as ethnic and religious fault lines. France has Europes biggest population of both Jews and Muslims, and Muslims face both discrimination in employment and in their treatment by the police.
French leaders fear pitting one side against the other, or even acknowledging that a Muslim-versus-Jew dynamic exists. To do so would violate a central tenet of France that people are not categorized by race or religion, only as fellow French citizens, equal before the law...More...
Read more, https://www.msn.com/en-us/news/world/%e2%80%98they-spit-when-i-walked-in-the-street%e2%80%99-the-%e2%80%98new-anti-semitism%e2%80%99-in-france/ar-BBL9qJP
People gather for a protest against anti-Semitism, in Creteil, east of Paris, Sunday Dec. 7, 2014, An attack on a French Jewish couple revived worries about long-simmering anti-Semitic sentiment in France.
https://www.timesofisrael.com/french-court-jails-three-for-notorious-anti-semitic-rape-and-robbery/
JI7
(89,252 posts)when it comes to banning hijabs .
but suddenly they can't speak out when it comes to some really really fucked up attacks against jewish people who are french citizens ? because they are afraid of offending people ? or is it their own biases/bigotry that is preventing them from doing so ?
it's not just the french but we see it in other places including the left in the US.
a total moral failure .
Behind the Aegis
(53,961 posts)I find it almost amusing, almost, how so many are "surprised" by the anti-Semitism increasing worldwide, when the fact is most people ignore anti-Semitism unless it suits their needs for the moment (usually to attack someone from the opposite camp). Burn down a synagogue in Poland? Well, did Israel do something recently (i.e. the past year)? If so, then people will claim it is an expression of protest. Uptick in anti-Semitism? Find a Jew to blame. It is disgusting, but so fucking predictable!