Alleged rape of girl, 12, in suspected antisemitic attack contributing to ‘very difficult climate’ as election looms
Many Jewish people are “questioning [their] future
in France”, a community leader has said, after a 12-year-old girl was
allegedly raped in a suspected antisemitic attack and fears deepen about
the rise of extremism before a parliamentary election this month.
“The
climate is very, very difficult for Jews,” Yonathan Arfi, the president
of the Representative Council of French Jewish Institutions (Crif),
said on Thursday. “People are very, very worried about the future,” he
said. “People are, I would say, questioning the future in France.”
On
Tuesday evening, two 13-year-old boys were charged with the rape of a
12-year-old Jewish girl in a Paris suburb. They were also charged with
issuing death threats as well as antisemitic insults and violence.
The
suspects beat the girl and forced her to have sex “while uttering death
threats and antisemitic remarks”, one police source told Agence
France-Presse.
The case has shocked France, drawing condemnation
from across the political spectrum as the country prepares for a
high-stakes parliamentary election.
“Words have effects, ideas have consequences,” wrote the French prime minister, Gabriel Attal. “The fight against antisemitism must be that of all republicans,” he said.
Raphaël Glucksmann, who led a French socialist list in the European parliamentary elections, warned in a social media post on Thursday that “any attempt to minimise the explosion of antisemitism is dangerous”.
Antisemitic incidents have spiked in France. A Crif report published in January
said there had been 1,676 antisemitic acts in 2023, compared with 436
the previous year, with a big increase after the Hamas attacks of 7
October and Israel’s subsequent assault on Gaza.
“The situation has deteriorated very significantly after 7 October,” Arfi said.
“You
have always the pressure to take a position regarding the conflict, and
it means being a Jew is being, in a way, a legitimate target for some
people,” he said.
The upcoming French elections, on 30 June and 7 July, have posed a dilemma for parts of the Jewish community in France.
Some
have raised concerns about antisemitism within the country’s far left
and the credibility of the far-right leader Marine Le Pen’s claims to
have detoxified her party.
In recent days,
high-profile figures including the Nazi hunter Serge Klarsfeld have said
they would vote for Le Pen’s National Rally in case of a runoff with
the left-green New Popular Front alliance, which includes the far-left
France Unbowed.
Le Pen has courted Jewish voters, seeking to
distance herself from the legacy of her father, Jean-Marie Le Pen, who
as leader was known for his antisemitic rhetoric. The 96-year-old has
been convicted several times of contesting crimes against humanity in claims that the gas chambers used to kill Jews during the Holocaust were only a “detail” of history.
But
her party has continued to grapple with accusations of antisemitism. On
Wednesday, it withdrew support for one of its candidates over an
antisemitic message posted in 2018.
The result of this fraught climate was that French Jews were fearful of the future, said Arfi.
“They
are very worried [about] the future, also due to the two extreme blocs
which now are growing in France – the extreme right, the extreme left –
even if some Jews sometimes think to be attracted by the extreme right
as an answer to antisemitism, most of the Jews think it is also a real
threat.”
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