France: Anti-Semitism slur used to attack the left

April 5, 2018
Issue 
Thousands took to the streets of France on March 28 to decry the murder of an 85-year-old Holocaust survivor that authorities have linked to anti-Semitism.

Mireille Knoll was brutally murdered in her Paris apartment on March 23. She was 85 years old with a disability and a Holocaust survivor. Police suspect anti-Semitism聽may have motivated the attack upon her; all prompting an emotional outpouring.

A mass silent procession known as a 鈥淲hite March鈥 was called for March 28, the same date as the national day of mourning for Arnaud Beltrame, the gendarme (military police) who died after substituting himself for a hostage during a terrorist attack on a supermarket in the town of Trebes.

However, the solemnity of the occasion was undermined by a crass declaration from聽Francis Kalifat,聽president of the Representative Council of Jewish Organisations (CRIF). Kalifat declared that La France Insoumise (France Unbowed) movement leader Jean-Luc Melenchon and its other members of parliament were not welcome at the march.

His rationale was that the far left promotes 鈥渉atred of Jews鈥 and聽鈥渉atred of Israel鈥. Kalifat concluded that neither France Unbowed nor the far-right National Front should attend.

Not surprisingly, the French left condemned this attempt to lump together the inheritors of the resistance to fascism with an organisation that has roots in collaboration with the Nazis. Knoll鈥檚 own son rejected the call by the CRIF to exclude the left from the event, saying all were welcome.

The CRIF is fiercely pro-Israel and falsely claims to represent all French Jews. It routinely equates legitimate criticism of Israel鈥檚 dispossession and oppression of the Palestinians with anti-Semitism.

This may be a morally bankrupt line of argument, but it has powerful backers. In July last year, French President Emanuel Macron declared anti-Zionism to be a 鈥渞e-branded form of anti-Semitism鈥.

Furthermore, France is one of the few countries in the world where publicly supporting the boycott, divestment and sanctions (BDS) campaign against Israel is classified as an illegal 鈥渉ate crime鈥, giving lie to its claim to be a bastion of free speech.

It has echoes in the repeated allegations by right-wingers in the British Labour Party that there is a problem with anti-Semitism in the organisation under Jeremy Corbyn鈥檚 leadership.

On the day of the march, a violent far-right Zionist group called the Jewish Defence League (LDJ) physically attacked representatives of France Unbowed. They also protected the delegation from the National Front, who were being heckled by the crowd.

Melenchon and his team chose to leave rather than have the confrontation overshadow the event.

The actions of the LDJ seem incredible, considering that National Front founder Jean-Marie Le Pen infamously declared the Holocaust to be a 鈥渄etail of history鈥. However, his daughter now has the reins of the party and she has toned down the anti-Semitism, kicked her father out of the organisation and is concentrating her fire on Muslim migrants.

Anti-Semitic attacks remain a real problem in France. But as in other Western countries, Jews have long since been replaced by Muslims as the main official scapegoat and 鈥渆nemy within鈥. They also work a double shift as the uncivilised聽enemy abroad.

The modern equivalent of 1930s anti-Semitism is Islamophobia 鈥 and that suits some defenders of Israel just fine.

In response to the CRIF, the pro-Palestinian, left-wing and secular French Jewish Union for Peace (UJFP) declared in聽a statement: 鈥淭he UJFP struggles and will continue to struggle relentlessly against anti-Semitism, while simultaneously rejecting these pathetic and obscene attempts at manipulation, and with the conviction that the fight against anti-Semitism must not be set apart from the general struggle against racism.鈥澛

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