PARIS/ANTWERP (EJP)---Concern is growing in Jewish communities in France and Belgium following a spate of anti-Semitic incidents in the wake of the conflict in the Gaza Strip.
The National Bureau of Vigilance Against Anti-Semitism (BNVCA) reported that in Paris and several other French cities, Jews have been targeted since the beginning of Israel’s military operation.
Attackers launched two cars packed with petrol bombs at a synagogue in south-western city of Toulouse, Monday night, causing damage but no casualties. One car was set on fire and pushed by the other until it hit the door of the synagogue, at a time when about a dozen people were attending a class with a rabbi. The building caught fire but all those inside escaped unharmed.
Police found unexploded petrol bombs inside the second car, which did not catch fire. They said they were investigating the attack and had not made any arrests.
"Nobody was hurt in the blaze which has not been claimed," said Anne-Gaelle
Baudouin-Clerc, spokeswoman for the district prefecture.
“We consider that incitement to hatred of Israel from those who take part in anti-Israeli demonstrations as the cause of the anti-Jewish crimes,” Samy Ghozlan, head of the National Bureau for Vigilance against Anti-Semitism said.
Pro-Palestinian rallies have been held in several French cities since Israel began its operation.
“The conflict between Israel and Hamas is exploited by some extremists who support the Islamist-terrorist Hamas under the pretext of supporting the Palestinian people. They express hatred against Israel which leads to anti-Jewish acts like in 2000 after the beginning of the second Intifada,” he added.
The BNVCA also reported that a rabbi’s car was vandalized and anti-Jewish graffiti painted on the wall of a shopping center.
French Interior Minister Michele Alliot-Marie, who called the attack against the Toulouse synagogue "stupid and revolting," met Monday with leaders of France's Jewish and Muslim communities and security chiefs to deliver a message that the Gaza Strip conflict should not lead to violent acts in France.
France has Europe’s largest Jewish and Muslim communities.
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Leila Shahid, the Palestinian representative to the European Union, had no doubt that Monday's attack in Toulouse was linked to rising anger among France's five million Muslims at news coming from the conflict. "Look at the awful incident yesterday in Toulouse with this car rammed into a place of worship, which is unacceptable, but a result of images from Gaza," she told Radio Monte Carlo radio.
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ichard Prasquier, head of CRIF, the umbrella representative body of Jewish organizations in France, told Le Figaro newspaper that the aggressive behaviour by some protesters at pro-Palestinian rallies had worried him.
'We must really not import the conflict here. It must not, it cannot happen,'Richard Prasquier, who attended the meeting with the minister, said.
In Belgium, too, the Gaza events and protest demonstrations against Israel’s operation prompted a wave of anti-Semitic acts, rising fear in the Jewish community.
Last week, unknown attackers attempted to torch the house of a Jewish Orthodox family in Borgerhout, a suburb of the city of Antwerp where around 18,000 Jews live. An eyewitness who resides nearby alerted the police to the place and they managed to extinguish the flames before the house caught fire.
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In Britain, a spokesman for a group that monitors anti-Semitic attacks said violence against Jews and their property was running at four times the normal level since the Gaza campaign began. "Over the last week, we've now seen over 20, perhaps 25, anti-Semitic incidents that appear to be related to the violence in Gaza and southern Israel," said Mark Gardner, of the Community Security Trust (CST).
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n Saturday, during a large demonstration in the centre of the city by Muslims and left-wing activists against Israel and in support of Hamas, protesters set Israeli flags aflame, vandalized a Chabad Chanukah menorah and sprayed swastikas and hate graffiti on Jewish-owned shops.
According to Jewish monthly “Joods Actueel”, several members of the Jewish community received death threats from an anonymous man who claimed to be willing to sacrifice himself to avenge the suffering of the Palestinians in Gaza. They appeared on the website of the magazine.
The man threatened a suicide attack: "You are not safe. I know where to find you. Child by child," reads the message with a slew of anti-Semitic slurs .
Michael Freilich, the weekly’s chief editor, and Hicham El Mzairh, a local politician of Moroccan origin, made a joint appeal for calm and peace in Antwerp.
"Our first aim is to show people that the Muslim community and the Jewish community co-exist peacefully here and that it is important to maintain good relations,” they said during a press conference.
The Belgian Jewish community is planning a large demonstration in support of Israel and “for a real peace in the Middle East” Wednesday in front of the embassy of Iran in Brussels.
Iran is considered as the main sponsor of Hamas, the Islamist movement which controls the Gaza Strip.