December 4, 2019
WESTHOFFEN, France (Reuters) – Scores of Jewish graves were found
desecrated in a cemetery in eastern France, police said, hours before
lawmakers adopted a resolution equating anti-Zionism with anti-Semitism.
Some 107 graves were defaced with anti-Semitic inscriptions in the
city of Westhoffen, while graffiti against Jews was also found in nearby
Schafhouse-sur-Zorn on Tuesday.
France has Europe’s biggest Jewish community – around 550,000 – and
anti-Semitic attacks are common, with more than 500 alone in 2018.
Earlier this year, politicians from across the spectrum joined marches against anti-Semitism.
They denounced a surge in attacks that some commentators blamed on
incitement by Islamist preachers, others on the rise of anti-Zionism –
opposition to the existence of Israel as a homeland for the Jewish
people.
Lawmakers in parliament’s lower house on Tuesday evening approved a
non-legally binding resolution modeled on the definition of
anti-Semitism set by the International Holocaust Remembrance Alliance
(IHRA).
The IHRA definition, which serves as an international guideline, does
not reference “anti-Zionism” but does say denying Jews their right to
self-determination is anti-Semitic.
The World Jewish Congress hailed France’s step.
“For too long too many have used the excuse that their obsessive
criticism of Israel stands exclusive from their otherwise positive
feelings for the Jewish people. Those days are now over,” it said.
Debate over the resolution split Macron’s ruling La Republique En
Marche party, with some opponents saying it could impede people from
criticizing the Israeli government.
https://www.oann.com/french-lawmakers-tackle-anti-semitism-as-jewish-graves-desecrated/