Nearly half of French Jews hide religious symbols

February 10, 2022 by Faygie Holt
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An increasing number of French Jews believe that antisemitism is widespread in their country, according to a new survey conducted by the American Jewish Committee.

A Jewish man in Marseille, France. Credit: ChameleonsEye/Shutterstock.

According to the study, conducted in late 2021, 85 percent of Jews said that antisemitism is widespread. That number is up nearly 20 points from a similar survey conducted just two years earlier that found 67 percent of French Jews said Jew-hatred was widespread.

Further, 73 percent of Jews have been victims of anti-Semitism. While the vast majority of incidents were derogatory remarks, some 20 percent of the reported incidents were labelled as “physical violence.”

According to Simone Rodan-Benzaquen, director-general of AJC Europe, there was a “75 percent increase in anti-Semitism” in France in 2021.

“More than the actual numbers of anti-Semitic hate crimes,” she told JNS, “I believe it has to do with the prevalence of anti-Semitic conspiracy theories during the anti-vax movements with demonstrators branding an infamous ‘who’ sign, suggesting Jews were behind coronavirus or the vaccine, depending on the form of conspiracy theory … .”

The increase of such conspiratorial theories on social media, she said, “means that more and more Jews and non-Jews have been directly or indirectly been exposed to anti-Semitism.”

Other findings show the impact these instances are having on religious life. For instance, 41 percent of Jews polled said they avoid displaying mezuzahs and other religious symbols—up from 37 percent in late 2019—and 45 percent of parents ask their children not to tell others they are Jewish.

Additionally, 32 percent of parents say their children have been the target of anti-Semitic insults, with 18 percent say their children have been physically attacked.

“Fearing for one’s own safety and for children’s security has tragically become the new normal for most French Jews, leading many of them to hide their Jewish identity and to tell their children to do so as well,” Rodan-Benzaquen said in a press release. “This is simply unacceptable in any democracy that is supposed to protect all its citizens.”

The study, which also polled non-Jews, found that 64 percent of the general French public believes that anti-Semitism is widespread. That number is up from 47 percent in late 2019. Additionally, nearly a third of French citizens say anti-Semitism is not talked about enough, while 15 percent say it is discussed too much.

It also found that more than a quarter of French people hold “prejudices that are classic anti-Semitic tropes,” such as the idea that Jews are richer than the average French person, while those same stereotypes are more prevalent among French individuals who identify as Muslim. Those who identify as Muslim also think that anti-Semitism is talked about too much, with 36 percent agreeing with the statement as opposed to the 15 percent elsewhere.

Comments

One Response to “Nearly half of French Jews hide religious symbols”
  1. Adrian Jackson says:

    Didn’t a former President of France ban the display of religious symbols on the person like a Christian cross or a Muslim hijab. Equally Jewish people should also obey if this law is still in place. Former President Sarkozy while a Roman Catholic convert had close ancestors who were Hungarian Jews.

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