As antisemitism soars, for many Jews in France nowhere feels safe | Paul Taylor
Macron is calling for unity, but the Israel-Hamas war has sparked a rise in hate crime that threatens a fragile social peace
French Jews were only partly reassured when more than 100,000 people, including the prime minister, Elisabeth Borne, and two former presidents, turned out to demonstrate in Paris last month against antisemitism and in defence of the secular republic. Why did the president, Emmanuel Macron, not attend, many asked? Where were the leaders of France's Muslim community? And where were the cultural, intellectual and sports celebrities so often eager to take a public stance on a worthy cause?
Since Hamas fighters poured into Israel from the Gaza Strip on 7 October, slaughtering around 1,200 Israeli men, women and children, a wave of antisemitic attacks and hate speech has swept over France, home to Europe's biggest Jewish community (of around 440,000 people) and its largest Muslim population (of around 6 million people).
Paul Taylor is a senior fellow of the Friends of Europe thinktank
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