That appears to be the consensus of French Jews, who are simultaneously alarmed at the widespread violence – mostly of Muslim youths – in suburbs around the country and relieved that Jews have not been directly targeted, as they were at the height of the Palestinian intifada.
“Anti-Semitism in these neighbourhoods has drastically declined over the last six months or so,” said Sammy Ghozlan, who heads the Office of Vigilance Against Anti-Semitism. He is also the president of the Council of Jewish Communities of Seine St-Denis, the Paris suburb where much of the violence, which began at the end of October, has taken place.
French riots are not a ‘Jewish problem’
PARIS — Some media are calling it a “suburban intifada,” but the rioting that is rocking France is a national problem, not a Jewish one.
That appears to be the consensus of French Jews, who are simultaneously alarmed at the widespread violence – mostly of Muslim youths – in suburbs around the country and relieved that Jews have not been directly targeted, as they were at the height of the Palestinian intifada.
“Anti-Semitism in these neighbourhoods has drastically declined over the last six months or so,” said Sammy Ghozlan, who heads the Office of Vigilance Against Anti-Semitism. He is also the president of the Council of Jewish Communities of Seine St-Denis, the Paris suburb where much of the violence, which began at the end of October, has taken place.