Israel Attacked: Over 100,000 People March against Anti-Semitism in Paris

President Emmanuel Macron backtracked on remarks made about the killing of ‘women and children’ in Gaza, as over 100,000 people marched against anti-Semitism in Paris.

The French president said “he did not intend to accuse Israel of intentionally harming civilians”, Israel’s president Isaac Herzog’s office said after the two leaders spoke by telephone.

Macron reaffirmed his support for Israel’s right to defend itself, the statement said, after his interview which “caused much pain and upset in Israel”.

The Elysee Palace had not released its own read-out of the call on Sunday night.

Macron’s attempts to smooth relations with Israel on Sunday came as 105,000 people answered a call to stand against anti-Semitism in Paris.

The march, which started at the Esplanade des Invalides in Paris at 3pm and ended near the Jardin du Luxembourg about 1.5 miles away, was policed by 3,000 officers and gendarmes.

Élisabeth Borne, the prime minister, and most of government’s ministers were in attendance along with former heads of state Nicolas Sarkozy and François Hollande.

All of them led the procession holding a banner that read “For the Republic, against anti-Semitism.”

The banner reads: 'We march against anti-Semitism' - Thomas Samson/AFP via Getty Images

The banner reads: ‘We march against anti-Semitism’ – Thomas Samson/AFP via Getty Images© 

But conspicuously absent was Macron, despite publishing letter on Saturday in the Parisien newspaper calling for national unity.

“This fight against anti-Semitism must never divide us or ever lead to pitting some of our compatriots against others.  Anti-Semitism has always been the prelude to other hatreds and racism,” he said.

  • Thousands march against antisemitism in France

    The Washington Post (Video)/The Washington Post (Video)Thousands march against antisemitism in France
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  • Macron urges Israel to stop killing women and babies in Gaza: ‘There is no reason for that’

    The Independent/The Independent
    Macron urges Israel to stop killing women and babies in Gaza: ‘There is no reason for that’
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Over the past few weeks, the number and severity of anti-Semitism crimes have increased in France, home to both the largest Jewish and Muslim populations in Europe.

Since the Hamas attack on Oct 7 and Israel’s subsequent siege of Gaza, authorities have registered more than 1,200 incidents of anti-Semitism, already three times higher than all of 2022, and made 500 arrests.

The “great civic march”, organized by speakers of the French parliament Yaël Braun-Pivet and Gérard Larcher, while intended to create national unity, exposed political division.

Marine Le Pen and her far-Right party, the National Rally, founded by her openly anti-Semitic father Jean-Marie Le Pen, were among the first to confirm their attendance, angering both the far-Left party France Unbowed and members of Jewish community.

Le Pen was ‘unwelcome’

In interview with news channel LCI last week, Yonathan Arfi, president of the Representative Council of French Jewish Institutions, sent a clear message to Ms Le Pen, saying she was unwelcome.

“We do not want people who are heirs to a party founded by former collaborators to be present,” Arfi said.

Gad Weil, co-president of Judaism in Movement, told The Telegraph that it was a strange and uncomfortable development that the group that was once an enemy of France’s Jewish community was now one of its strongest supporters.

“It’s a really incredible situation,” he said. “The founder of the Front National was anti-Semitic. And now, two generations later, they’ve become the biggest supporters of Israel and Jews in France.”

Some protesters reacted angrily to Le Pen’s presence on the march and clashed with police, shouting at the party to “get lost” and waving signs calling her fascist and that “Jews don’t want you”.

Government spokesman Olivier Véran also called the National Rally’s presence indecent and out of place. The far-Left party France Unbowed cited it as the reason why it didn’t attend.

Instead, its members joined an anti-Semitism rally organized by youth organizations in another part of Paris.

Ms Le Pen responded to the criticism: it’s “exactly where we need to be” and that politicians should “take a break for a few hours and stop the political bickering.”

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