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Letter From France: Battle Against Anti-Semitism Enters New Phase Wi

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  • Letter From France: Battle Against Anti-Semitism Enters New Phase Wi

    LETTER FROM FRANCE: BATTLE AGAINST ANTI-SEMITISM ENTERS NEW PHASE WITH INCREASED LEGAL ACTION AND HARSHER PENALTIES
    By Shirli Sitbon

    The Jewish Journal of greater L.A, CA
    2007-09-14

    French Jews were relieved to learn of the arrest and conviction of
    Nizar Ouedrani, a man who assaulted a young Jew wearing a kippah in
    Paris last July, as the victim was walking toward a synagogue.

    The incident is one among dozens, but for the first time, Jewish
    leaders noted, the court opted for a severe sentence.

    On Saturday, July 21, two men and a boy were going to their synagogue
    on Petit Street when a man driving a truck honked at them and started
    shouting anti-Semitic slurs. When 24-year-old Yossef Zekri tried to
    calm the driver down, the latter jumped out of the car and started
    hitting him while shouting, "Dirty Jew, I'll finish you." Ouedrani
    hit Zekri on the head with a vacuum cleaner and ran away. He was
    caught the next day after police traced his license plate number.

    In court, Ouedrani testified he didn't realize his victim was a Jew,
    but failed to convince the judge, who sentenced him to nine months
    in prison (of which six months are suspended).

    "We believe that this ruling, the first to be as severe as we expected,
    is exemplary and will dissuade thugs from attacking our community,"
    Sammy Ghozlan, the head of the Vigilance Bureau Against Anti-Semitism,
    said.

    With the Ouedrani case, the battle against "new" anti-Semitism has
    entered a new phase.

    Until 2002, the left-wing government led by Lionel Jospin refused
    to even recognize the spectacular increase of anti-Jewish attacks
    triggered by the second intifada.

    Local Jewish organizations, strengthened by American Jewry, demanded
    President Jacques Chirac present a firm battle against anti-Semitic
    attacks.

    The French president and his new center-right Interior Minister
    Nicolas Sarkozy -- now France's president -- launched a plan to
    fight anti-Semitism, including reinforced surveillance of synagogues
    and unprecedented efforts on behalf of police to hunt down the
    attackers. The next phase was to get offenders to court. The French
    Assembly approved the Lellouche legislation, doubling the sentences
    for anti-Semitic and racist assaults.

    Jewish community leaders fought forcefully for serious sentences
    following dozens of symbolic rulings that failed to dissuade new
    aggressors.

    The Ouedrani ruling, the first severe court decision after an
    anti-Semitic attack, opens the door to a new phase of the battle
    against anti-Semitism. Authorities appear to have taken every possible
    measure and precaution, yet anti-Jewish attacks continue as if nothing
    had been done.

    "There are no new ideas on how to fight anti-Semitism, no new plan in
    the horizon," said policeman Michel Thooris, who follows anti-Semitism
    issues. "French Jews voted massively for Sarkozy hoping that he
    would put an end to hatred, but he has no new answers. It sometimes
    seems as though hearing about anti-Semitism is starting to annoy our
    leaders..." and the French in general, Thooris said.

    Simone Veil -- former minister, European Parliament speaker and current
    president of the Shoah Remembrance Foundation -- told me, as we were
    visiting the Shoah memorial with President Sarkozy, that certain forms
    of anti-Semitism denounced by schoolteachers could easily be countered.

    Since the beginning of the second intifada, French professors in
    troubled schools have complained that their Muslim pupils have
    been refusing to learn about the Shoah, claiming it was Zionist
    propaganda. The pupils have prevented professors from teaching
    the Shoah and the trend has extended to other lessons that involve
    Jews. Anti-Semitic assaults against Jewish pupils and teachers have
    also increased.

    "I actually noticed that Arab pupils failed to appear in class for
    courses on the Shoah long before the second intifada, but at the time
    I didn't understand what motivated them," said Irene Saya, the head
    of the teachers association PEREC (For a Republican and Civil School).

    In 2002, a dozen professors gathered their testimonies in a book
    called, "The Lost Territories of the Republic." Irene Saya said that
    nothing has changed in five years.

    "Jewish professors and pupils are subject to anti-Semitic remarks and
    it feels like there isn't much to do. Anti-Semitism isn't just going
    to disappear," Saya said. "The ministry created a special department
    for these issues but there are no official figures and no real measures
    to battle anti-Semitism in school."

    "The way I see it, the pupils who refuse to study are not at fault,"
    Veil said. "The teachers are the ones who should find solutions to
    this problem and find ways to teach what happened in WWII. But I
    think some of these professors don't really want to make that effort."

    Every year, the Shoah Memorial sends up to 10,000 adolescents from
    throughout France to Auschwitz.

    Troublemakers aren't invited. It also launched several projects
    commemorating the genocides perpetrated in Rwanda and against the
    Armenians.

    "Today, we have to talk about Rwanda if we want schools to keep on
    teaching about the Shoah," sarcastically observed the leader of one
    European Jewish organization.

    Obviously, most of those who combat genocide and fight racism do so
    genuinely, and their efforts often lead to positive results.

    "We have to be irreproachable at a time when revisionists are still
    trying to distort history," Veil said.

    Anti-Zionism and the boycott of Israeli products and skills are
    viewed by French Jews as another form of anti-Semitism. But, unlike
    other countries, France has successfully countered the phenomenon,
    launching the France-Israel Foundation in July 2005 to reinforce ties
    with the Israeli government and encourage collaboration in various
    fields, from literary exhibits to stem cell research.

    The foundation has prevented boycotts that would have isolated Israel
    in the intellectual and commercial fields. It instigated French
    investments in the Israeli film industry, for example, leading to
    the success of the Israeli Film Festival of Paris and to numerous
    productions and prizes, the latest ones being the awards granted
    at the Cannes film festival to two Israeli films, "Jellyfish" and
    "The Band's Visit."

    Israeli movies, once rare in French theaters, have become common and,
    at times, even popular.

    Those who supported the boycott against Israel, mainly within the
    pro-Palestinian association CAPJPO (Coordination of the Calls for
    a Fair Peace in the Middle East), are about to observe a new high
    in French-Israeli relations since the annual book fair -- the major
    cultural event of the year -- selected Israel to star the 2008 exhibit.

    Sarkozy is apparently looking for global answers, fighting boycotts
    with reinforced collaboration and battling racist extremists by
    offering new alternatives. In theory, every issue can fall into place.

    Since recent anti-Semitic attacks are perpetrated mainly by young
    Muslims, Sarkozy's plan to annihilate anti-Semitism consists of putting
    all his energy into solving the conflicts in the Middle East in order
    to avoid new tensions between communities.

    When inviting Hezbollah representatives to Paris in July, only a few
    months after he compared them to Nazis, Sarkozy hoped to get things
    moving, but assured the public he would not invite Hamas.

    Sarkozy, a great admirer of George Bush, has multiple initiatives in
    the Middle East.

    The man, who a few months ago was criticized for his Jewish descent
    by extremist leader Jean-Marie Le Pen, has already managed to reduce
    the National Front Party to nothing, attracting most of its voters
    and leaving it penniless after two major electoral defeats.

    Maybe the French president's plan to annihilate anti-Semitism isn't
    all that impossible. The Jewish community voted massively for that
    plan. Now, it is holding its breath.

    Paris-based journalist Shirli Sitbon's "Letter From France" will
    appear monthly in The Journal.
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