Following Outcry, Paris Suburb Removes Plaques Renaming Street for Nakba
Error: Contact form not found.
by Israel Hayom / JNS.org

“Boycott Israel” spray painted on the street sign Yitzhak rabin garden in Paris, France. August 28, 2017. Photo: Serge Attal/FLASH90.
JNS.org – Less than a day after they were installed, the Parisian suburb of Bezons has removed signs renaming a central street “Nakba Lane,” following an outcry from Israel and local Jewish groups.
According to media reports, Bezons Mayor Dominique Lesparre unveiled the plaques renaming the street after the Nakba (Arabic for “catastrophe,” referring to the displacement of Palestinian refugees during Israel’s 1948 War of Independence) in a ceremony attended by city council members, members of the community and the local press.
A sign marking the road, located near city hall, read, “In memory of the expulsion of 800,000 Palestinians and the destruction of 532 villages by the war criminal [Israel’s first prime minister] David Ben-Gurion for the establishment of the State of Israel.”
Israel’s Ambassador to France Aliza Bin-Noun accused Lesparre, who represents the French Communist Party, of supporting “Palestinian terrorism and inciting hate.”
“These provocations are unacceptable given that Israel and France share a strong and sincere friendship, cemented by shared democratic values,” the embassy said in a statement.
Francis Kalifat, the president of the Representative Council of French Jewish Institutions, called the street’s renaming “false declarations, shockingly irresponsible and dangerous.” He said the move encouraged “antisemitic violence, which is now given false historical justification.”
Prior to the plaques’ removal, one council member said, “We decided to do this to mark 70 years to the Nakba. The silence on the subject is intolerable.”
This is not the first time that the Bezons local council has sparked controversy with its anti-Israel stance.
In 2013, the local council named Popular Front for the Liberation of Palestine member Majdi Rahima Rimawi an “honorary resident.” Rimawi was sentenced to life in prison for his involvement in the 2001 murder of government minister Rehavam Ze’evi.
Bezons has a sister-city agreement with the Ramallah-adjacent town of Bani Zeid, where Rimawi’s family lives.
UK Raises Threat Level to ‘Severe’ After London Antisemitic Terror Attack
Does Israel Hater Hasan Piker Have More Chutzpah Than American Jews?
This Year in Israel, Yom HaZikaron Was Different
What Has the War Against Iran Revealed About the Status of Countries Around the World?
Shocking: How Palestinian Propaganda Mirrors Language Directly From the Nazis
With Israel Facing PTSD Emergency, New App Seeks to Help IDF Soldiers Heal
As Political Lines Blur, Republican Jewish Coalition’s Matt Brooks Warns of a Deeper Shift Facing American Jews
Federal Complaint Alleges Antisemitic Housing Discrimination at Williams College
Democratic Nominee for University of Michigan Regent Refuses to Condemn Hezbollah
Jewish Student Leader Targeted in Two Antisemitic Incidents in Berlin





Norwegian Holocaust Center Defends Decision to Host Event Drawing Parallels Between Holocaust, Palestinian ‘Nakba’
‘Intifada Against British Jews’: Two Jewish People Stabbed in London Amid Soaring Antisemitic Attacks
Lebanon Must Reform its Army or Lose American Aid
Jewish Student Leader Targeted in Two Antisemitic Incidents in Berlin
Democratic Nominee for University of Michigan Regent Refuses to Condemn Hezbollah



