Thursday,
February 09, 2012
16 Shevat, 5772
News
France
UK
Germany
Western Europe
Eastern Europe
EU-Israel affairs
US 2008 ELECTION
Iran - Holocaust
Conflict in Gaza
Voices
Culture
In Depth
Mideast Crisis
World Cup
On Anglo Jewry
Week at a glance
France Election
EU and Annapolis Summit
News from outside of Europe
Holocaust Remembrance Day
Mumbai Terror
DURBAN II
WILLIAMSON
Stories from our Readers
The Calendar
Links
advertisement
wagerworks software

Anti-Semitic and negationist inscriptions on a Memorial to the deportation in France
Updated: 06/Aug/2010 15:33
Page tools
Email to friend
Print this page
Bookmark this page
Add your view

PARIS (EJP)---French Interior Minister Brice Hortefeux expressed “horror and sadness” after the discovery Wednesday of anti-Jewish and negationnist inscriptions at a memorial to the deportation and resistance in Marmande, in the Lot-et-Garonne department, southwest of France.

The words “lies,” “Zionism”, “interests” and the dollar sign “$” were inscribed in red paint on the monument which bears the names of Nazi concentration camps, said Gerard Gouzes, Socialist Mayor of Marmande.

 “Marmande is shocked,” the mayor said. “It is undoubtedly the act of a Holocaust denier, someone who knows very well what he did.”

According to the Interior minister, the authors of the tags "clearly targeted the memory of the deportees and the Jewish community of France.”

As minister of worships “I am more than ever determined to fight against all the obscurantisms, all racisms and all the forms extremism,” Brice Hortefeux said.

Wednesday’s incident came after several other anti-Semitic acts in the country. Three weeks ago, dozens of Jewish graves were vandalized in eastern France. Vandals smashed or overturned 27 gravestones at the Jewish cemetery of Wolfisheim, near Strasbourg.

More recently, anti-Semitic slogans and Nazi swastikas were discovered on  the walls of the Etz Haim synagogue in Melun, central France, and on the frontages and windows of a dozen kosher stores in Paris.

France is home to western Europe's largest Jewish community.

Around 600,000 Jews live in the country.

 

 


Add Your View Email to friend Print this page Bookmark this page
Daily quote

Ninety-seven saint days a year wouldn’t affect the theater, but two Yom Kippurs would ruin it

Brendan Behan, Irish author, who was born on 9 February 1923 
 
Day in history
1994: Yugoslavia

Peace plan for Bosnia and Herzegovina announced (so called Vance-Owen peace plan)
 
Latest Articles
Lee Zeitouni’s family not allowed to attend CRIF dinner
German court caps Jewish ghetto pension claims
French government walks out of parliament after 'Nazi' taunt
EU will not recall its ambassador in Damascus, ‘important to have people to follow the situation’
EU says it will continue giving money to the Palestinian Authority despite deal with Hamas
Hungarian foreign ministry condemns Jobbik MP’s comments questioning the Holocaust and comparing Israel to a Nazi system
ADL welcomes US decision to close its embassy in Damascus