Political tensions cloud French tribute to slain Holocaust survivor

Paris: The silent decorum of a march to honour an 85-year-old woman who survived Nazi horrors only to be stabbed to death last week in an alleged anti-Semitic attack was shattered on Wednesday, with crowds shouting “Nazi! Nazi!” and other insults at France’s far-right leader Marine Le Pen.

Mireille Knoll’s death had taken on national importance, reminding France of both historic anti-Semitism and its resurgence in recent years.

Thousands of people – Jews, Muslims and politicians on the left and right – had joined in the evening march from the Place de la Nation to Knoll’s Paris apartment, where she was killed on Friday and her home set ablaze. The tribute was one of many held throughout the day in cities across France to honour Knoll and denounce racism.

However, divisions soon surfaced at the Paris march, which both Le Pen and far-left leader Jean-Luc Melenchon had insisted on attending despite warnings from France’s leading Jewish group, the CRIF, that they would not be welcome. The group’s president, Francois Kalifat, justified their exclusion by saying the political extremes had anti-Semitics in their ranks.

“They should first clean out their own house,” he said.

The bid to exclude the two political chieftains was firmly opposed by Knoll’s son Daniel.

Le Pen and Melenchon, political rivals and not in the same spot in the march, were both pushed and insulted with cries of “get out!” and “go home!”

Shouts of “Nazi” were hurled at Le Pen, whose father and the founder of her National Front Party, Jean-Marie Le Pen, has been convicted of anti-Semitism and racism. She has since broken ties with her father.

Read the full article written by Jeffrey Schaeffer at the Brisbane Times.