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The NEW Anti-Semitism
...an End Time Factor?
The "New" French Anti-Semitism
By Don Feder
FrontPageMagazine.com | August 23, 2004
Earlier this month, Jews were attacked at Auschwitz. Their assailants
weren’t Arabs, Germans, Poles or members of another group historically
associated with anti-Semitism, but Frenchmen – the children of liberty,
equality and fraternity.
The incident was part of a growing trend. Despite the protestations of
President Jacques Chirac, European anti-Semitism has a French address.
The Jews – students from the U.S., Israel and Poland – were touring the
museum at the death camp that’s come to symbolize the horrors of the
Holocaust. One of them, Tamar Schuri, had an Israeli flag wrapped around
her shoulders.
On spotting the banner, the Frenchmen began swearing at the Jews and
shouting anti-Semitic epithets. Maya Ober, a Polish Jew who lost family
members at Auschwitz, said one Frenchman, "told us to go back to Israel
and that we were stupid and should be ashamed to walk around with an
Israeli flag." A Frenchman grabbed Tamar’s arm. Observers said it would
have come to blows, if the groups hadn’t been separated.
It’s outrageous that Jews would be accosted for displaying the flag of
the Jewish state at a place where 1.5 million Jews were murdered. It’s
revealing that their assailants were French.
Within days of the Auschwitz attack, a Jewish cemetery in Lyon was
desecrated. Swastikas and anti-Semitic slogans were scrawled on
tombstones. In France, even dead Jews can find no peace.
Chirac heroically pledged "The perpetrators of this outrage are being
actively pursued." He’s probably assigned the bumbling Inspector
Clouseau (of Pink Panther fame) to the case.
Since the autumn of 2000 (the start of the Palestinians’ latest
terrorism campaign against Israel) a wave of anti-Semitism has swept
France -- Kristallnacht with Camembert.
Jewish cemeteries have been desecrated. Synagogues and day schools have
been firebombed. Snipers have shot at buses carrying Jewish students.
Rabbis have been attacked. Jews wearing skullcaps have been beaten in
the streets.
The number of anti-Semitic incidents in France increased from 320 in
2001 to 593 in 2003. In the first six months of this year alone, there
were more than 500 hate crimes directed at French Jews. Attacks on Jews
now account for over 80 percent of all bias-related offenses committed
in France each year.
Rabbi Joseph Sitruk, France’s chief rabbi, has asked Jews not to wear
skullcaps in public. ("I ask young Jews to be alert, to avoid walking
alone, to avoid wearing yarmulkes in the street or in the subway and
consequently becoming targets for potential assailants.") The Simon
Wiesenthal Center advises Jewish tourists to "exercise extreme caution"
when traveling to the land of Vichy.
In the face of this Perrier pogrom, Ariel Sharon recently urged French
Jews to emigrate to Israel. Chirac responded by telling the Israeli
prime minister that he wasn’t welcome in France. The old general – who’s
won more medals than the entire French army since the dawn of time – is
thus deprived of the opportunity to study military strategy in the home
of the Maginot Line.
Most of the attacks on Jews are the work of North African Moslems who’ve
flooded the country. (Its Moslem population is estimated at six to eight
million.) With 600,000 Jews (the third largest Jewish community in the
Diaspora), France truly is a happy hunting ground for followers of the
religion of peace. Since their homelands are largely Judenrein, it’s a
special treat for them to have real, live Jewish targets.
French indifference facilitates these crimes. The Moslems are the
beneficiaries of centuries of French anti-Semitism.
The intellectual father of French Revolution, Voltaire, wrote of the
Children of Abraham: "They are, all of them, born with raging fanaticism
in their hearts, just as the Bretons and Germans are born with blond
hair. I would not be in the least surprised if these people would not
some day become deadly to the human race." This observation came at a
time when European Jews cowered in ghettos.
Anticipating the Holocaust, 19th century French socialist Pierre-Joseph
Proudhon had his own solution to the Jewish problem – "either sending
back the Jews to Asia or exterminating them."
French anti-Semitism was the original impetus for Zionism. Theodor Herzl,
an assimilated Austrian Jew, was so shocked when he encountered Parisian
mobs shouting "Death to the Jews" during the Dreyfus Affair, that he was
moved to write Der Judenstaat ("The Jewish State), starting a movement
which would lead to the establishment of the State of Israel within 50
years.
The father of racist theory, Joseph-Arthur de Gobineau (1816-1882), was
a Frenchman whose advocacy of Aryan supremacy influenced Hitler.
In all of occupied Europe, the Nazis found no more willing accomplices
to the Final Solution than the French. The Vichy government rounded up
61,000 Jews and handed them over to the Nazis – almost all died at
places like Auschwitz.
By contrast, the Italian army (allied with Germany) saved Jews in its
zone of occupation in Southern France. The commander of these troops
said it was "against the honor of the Italian army" to allow the
deportation of Jews in territory it controlled. (The honor of the French
army is illustrated by the scapegoating of Capt. Alfred Dreyfus.)
The post-war era saw little improvement in the attitude of the French
government toward a people it’s never wanted and whose presence it
deeply resents.
On November 28, 1967 (shortly after the Six Day War) then-President
Charles DeGaulle told a press conference that the Jews are "an elite
people, self confident, and domineering." This from the leader of a
nation universally celebrated for its humility.
DeGaulle (who hated Americans as well), also charged that the Jewish
people were responsible for "provoking ill-will in certain countries at
certain times." Presumably, by breathing.
This animus cuts across the political spectrum. Francois Mitterrand,
socialist president of France from 1981 to 1995, reportedly shared the
sentiments of his predecessor regarding the Jews.
In 2001, Daniel Bernard, France’s ambassador to Britain, was overheard
telling guests at a cocktail party that the world’s problems were all
the fault of "that shitty little country, Israel." Why, the ambassador
wondered aloud, "should the world be in danger of World War III because
of those people" (diplomatese for "the Jews."). Ah, that Gallic charm.
For decades, a rabid anti-Zionism has infused French foreign policy.
(Recall that France financed the building of Saddam Hussein’s nuclear
reactor, destroyed by Israel in 1981.)
In the 1970s, France made a devil’s pact with the PLO. Arafat’s killers
would be allowed to operate on la belle pays (and plan attacks on Jews
from there) as long as they didn’t engage in terrorism on French soil.
The French are adept at looking the other way, while others die.
It took Paris roughly three years of arson, assaults , sniper attacks
and desecrations to finally admit that all was not well in its
multicultural paradise. Initially, it simply denied reality.
In 2002, Chirac professed to be shocked and saddened that anyone would
think there was anti-Semitism in France.
The President of the Republic assured us: "There is no upsurge in
anti-Semitism in France … nothing supports these statements" and that
"France and all of its authorities remain very vigilant in this domain,
and are extremely severe in punishing any of its manifestations,
whatever they may be."
Anti-Semites weren’t deceived. In the Spring of 2003, Parisians
protesting the US invasion of Iraq chanted, "Vive Chirac. Stop the
Jews!"
In 2001, the president of the Representative Council of the Jewish
Organizations of France wrote in Le Monde: "The leaders of the country
like to play down anti-Semitic acts. They prefer to see these as
ordinary violence. We are deluged with statistics designed to show that
an attack against a synagogue is an act of violence and not
anti-Semitism."
I’m only surprised Chirac didn’t also insist that there was no
anti-Semitism in France during the Dreyfus Affair or in World War II.
(It’s just a coincidence that all 61,000 of its citizens sent to the gas
chambers happened to be Jews.) The French have an expression: "The more
things change, the more they remain the same." In reality, there are few
matters the French care about less than the fate of Jews – in France or
anywhere else.
That the center of European anti-Semitism is also a hotbed of
anti-Americanism is no surprise. Like the Jews, Americans are indicted
for "arrogance."
America is charged with the unpardonable offense of unilateralism Pity
that old warmonger Churchill acted unilaterally after France was overrun
in 1940. And, just think, the British prime minister didn’t even have a
mandate from the League of Nations.
Like Americans, the Jews are resented for their success – which may be
contrasted with the ennui and quiet failure of old Europe.
There is the feeling, almost universal among the French, that if the
Jews and Americans were less assertive (i.e., rolled over and played
dead), all of the world’s problems would go away.
Those Jews/Israelis, why can’t they just give the Palestinians a state
-- and give themselves suicide borders in the process -- the French ask?
Similarly, it is asserted that if America would just leave tyrants (and
French trading partners) like Saddam Hussein alone, peace would reign
supreme.
If we’d just turn everything over to the international debating society
on the East River, instead of exercising our sovereign right of
self-defense, France and the rest of nonaligned Europe could go quietly
to the grave without having their three-hour lunches disturbed.
French hatred of Americans and Israelis is the rage of the impotent
toward those with an intact survival instinct.
Speaking of a survival instinct, or lack thereof, if demographic trends
continue, France will be a predominately Moslem nation in less than half
a century. (Vive le Prophet?) The birthrate of its native population is
1.4 children per woman, well below replacement level. For French
Moslems, it’s double to triple that.
The French will end up where the world-weary usually end up: with the
world grown weary of – and having discarded -- them. Frankly, it
couldn’t happen to nicer folks.
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Don Feder is a former Boston Herald writer who is now a
political/communications consultant. He also maintains his own website,
DonFeder.com.
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