Swastikas scrawled on graves at Jewish cemetery in France

Swastikas are scrawled on headstones and 80 graves are vandalised at Jewish cemetery in France just hours before mass rally against anti-Semitism

  • Vandals have targeted 80 graves at a Jewish cemetery in Quatzenheim, France
  • Officials say swastika was scrawled on several headstones at the burial site
  • French President Emmanuel Macron was due to visit the cemetery today
  • Vandalism happened as French cities geared up for mass rallies following a series of anti-Semitic acts that have shocked the nation

Swastikas have been scrawled on graves at a Jewish cemetery in France just hours before campaigners across the country were due to march against anti-Semitism.

Some 80 Jewish graves were vandalised overnight at the burial site in Quatzenheim, a small town in Alsace.

French President Emmanuel Macron was due to visit the scene today as Paris and dozens of other French cities geared up for mass rallies following a series of anti-Semitic acts that have shocked the nation. 

Swastikas have been scrawled on graves at a Jewish cemetery in France just hours before campaigners across the country were due to march against anti-Semitism

Some 80 Jewish graves were vandalised overnight at the burial site in Quatzenheim, a small town in Alsace

French President Emmanuel Macron, right, with France’s Chief Rabbi Haim Korsia, centre, leave the Jewish cemetery where tombs were tagged with swastikas in Quatzenheim, eastern France

Macron walks between graves that were desecrated with swastikas and anti-Semitic slogans overnight

Interior Minister Christophe Castaner tweeted his ‘outrage and disgust’ over the vandalism while Marie-Helene Schott, secretary at the town’s city hall, said swastikas were scrawled on several graves.

Today, former French Presidents Francois Hollande and Nicolas Sarkozy were set to join thousands of protesters and government officials on the Paris streets.


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The upsurge in anti-Semitism in France, home to the world’s largest Jewish population outside Israel and the United States, surged last weekend when a torrent of hate speech was directed at prominent philosopher Alain Finkielkraut during a march of yellow vest anti-government protesters.

The assault came days after the French government reported a big rise in anti-Semitism last year: 541 registered incidents, up 74 percent from 311 in 2017.

Interior Minister Christophe Castaner tweeted his ‘outrage and disgust’ over the vandalism while Marie-Helene Schott, secretary at the town’s city hall, said swastikas were scrawled on several graves

Prime Minister Edouard Philippe was to lead government officials at the main rally at Paris’s famed Republic Square. In addition to the marches, National Assembly President Richard Ferrand and the head of Senate, Gerard Larcher, will hold a moment of silence at the Shoah memorial in Paris.

‘Every time a French person, because he or she is Jewish, is insulted, threatened – or worse, injured or killed – the whole Republic’ is attacked, Macron said at a press conference in Paris after meeting with Georgia’s President Salome Zurabishvili.

Macron is not expected to attend the gathering at the Republic Square, but will deliver a speech at Wednesday’s annual dinner by leading Jewish group CRIF.

‘Anti-Semitism is deeply rooted in French society. We would like to think otherwise, but it is a fact,’ Philippe told L’Express magazine. ‘We must be totally determined, I would say almost enraged, in our will to fight, with a clear awareness that this fight is an old one and will last a long time.’

In other recent incidents, swastika graffiti was found on street portraits of Simone Veil – a survivor of Nazi death camps and a European Parliament president who died in 2017. The word ‘Juden’ was painted on the window of a bagel restaurant in Paris, and two trees planted at a memorial honoring a young Jewish man tortured to death in 2006 were vandalized, one cut down.

Two youths were arrested Friday after they allegedly fired shots at a synagogue with an air rifle in the Paris suburb of Sarcelles, where a large Jewish community lives. Sarcelles mayor Patrick Haddad told BFMTV on Tuesday that prosecutors believe the motive was anti-Semitism.

French President Emmanuel Macron was due to visit the scene today as Paris and dozens of other French cities geared up for mass rallies following a series of anti-Semitic acts that have shocked the nation

Political parties from across the spectrum will unite in Paris but Marine Le Pen’s far-right party will hold a separate event.

According to sociologist Danny Trom, author of the book ‘France Without Jews,’ thousands of Jewish people leave France every year because the rise of anti-Semitism.

‘This is a low-intensity war, perhaps, but let’s not forget the murder of children killed at close range by Mohamed Merah in a school,’ Trom told French magazine Telerama, referring to the murder in 2012 of three children and a teacher from a Jewish school by an Islamic extremist in the southwestern city of Toulouse.

‘It is without equivalent in the history of France,’ he said. ‘Jews have been present in France since the dawn of time. Now, the pressure is such that they are led to consider their country inhospitable.’ 

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