Paris Chief Rabbi: French Jewry is Reeling From String of Anti-Semitic Attacks
Error: Contact form not found.
by Dave Bender
After a month of assaults in France against Jewish targets, including a brutal rape during a home invasion, and shooting attacks against synagogues and other businesses, the Chief Rabbi of Paris, Michel Guggenheim, has told the Israeli religious journal Shvi’i that the crisis is having “a powerful effect on the community.”
The attacks, which have taken place against a wave of stabbing and vehicular terror attacks by radical Muslims in several cities in France, have shocked many in the nearly 500,000-strong community.
Guggenheim, who is currently visiting Israel for a rabbinical conference, acknowledged that “Paris police are taking very severe measures against the phenomena, and, of course, we have no complaints against the security forces.”
He added, however, that “to my great regret, the judges aren’t handing down sentences sufficient to cause the individuals to think twice or deter them from their deeds.”
“There is a law that was passed that exacts a severe price for racist or antisemitic attacks. What good does it do us if there’s no deterrence?” he asked.
When asked if it was safe to walk around Paris as an identifiable Jews, Guggenheim replied, “It’s totally possible – but only in certain neighborhoods, and at certain times. Jewish schoolchildren walk around these areas without a problem.”
But, he added, “the present antisemitism we’re dealing with in France, we haven’t encountered before, and I really hope it calms down; there are neighborhoods it’s really not worth your while approaching wearing a kipa [skullcap].
“It’s more like Ramallah than Paris,” Guggenheim concluded.
The situation has become so dangerous that French President Francois Hollande used his New Year’s Eve television speech to say that the fight against racism and antisemitism will be his national cause for 2015.
Some 6,000 French Jews emigrated to Israel in 2014 – double the number a year earlier, and the greatest annual number of the 300,000 who have made their home in Israel since its creation in 1948. Jewish Agency officials responsible for their aliyah say they are expecting upwards of 10,000 immigrants in 2015.
‘Center of Gravity for Global Terrorism’: US Lawmakers Spotlight Surging Jihadist Terror Threat in Africa
Iran’s Foreign Minister Arrives in Pakistan, Trump Expects Offer Satisfying US Demands
IDF Unveils AI-Powered Robotic Warfare System, Breakthrough Artillery Against Hezbollah
Antisemitic Incidents Hit Record High in Austria as New Report Warns of Rising Hostility Against Jews
New Anti-Israel PAC Backs Left-Wing Insurgent in New Jersey Congressional Race
Israel Votes in Favor of Iran Joining International Cheer Union: ‘The Iranian People Are Not Enemies’
London Gallery Cancels Antisemitic Art Exhibit After Pro-Israel Lawyers Intervene
Shabbos Kestenbaum: Administrators Have a Duty to Protect Jewish Students and Continue to Fail
Netanyahu Says He Was Successfully Treated for Prostate Cancer
Ukraine, Russia Swap 193 Prisoners of War Each in US, UAE-Facilitated Exchange






Show but Don’t Tell: Media Erase Hezbollah’s Presence in Lebanon
The Next Layer of Self-Defense We Are Ignoring
Iran’s Foreign Minister Heading to Islamabad, Raising Optimism for US Peace Talks
US Legal Adviser Says Iran War Justified by Tehran’s ‘Aggression’ Over Decades
Following the Rules Doesn’t Free You From Moral Responsibility



