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Opinion

French Jews are worried but reluctant to quit the good life

French politics took a back seat this week, with the fire that nearly devastated Notre Dame Cathedral, but Jews shouldn't forget the need to feel worried, says our French blogger

April 17, 2019 08:45
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2 min read

French people watched helplessly this week as Victor Hugo’s Notre Dame Cathedral was gutted by fire.   It felt like 9/11 again, the victim this time the much-visited symbol of Paris and Christendom of another era.  Morning brought the bleak spectacle of a roofless hulk with two flat topped towers of uncertain stability, a troubling symbol of Christianity in today’s secular society.

President Macron abandoned the speech to the nation he had just recorded.  His response to millions of written submissions and weeks of country-wide discussion will have to wait, but not for long.  European elections loom and the voting public expects answers on the tax burden, income inequality, the environment, decentralisation, a more “participative” democracy and a less high-handed governance style. Some say the rest the president’s 5-year mandate is on the line.

Antisemitism has slipped off the front pages, but Jews have not forgotten the shock of last month’s outbreak of antisemitic acts and verbal abuse.  Some commentators see a return to the 1930s, with nationalism and populism dangerously on the rise and Europe struggling to keep its balance.   A Rabbi friend sees a “new normal” where antisemitism is simply a given. 

But Paris has much to offer and Jewish cultural life is rich and varied.   Jews have won high profile positions in all walks of life.    The annual board of deputies’ dinner (le “Diner du CRIF”) attracts the President himself as keynote speaker and many other non-Jewish notables.