Francois Hollande Praises Anti-Semitic Writer
On March 17 of this year, François Hollande — the socialist president of France — attended the ceremonies held in Toulouse marking the first anniversary of what is now commonly referred to as “the Mohamed Merah affair.”
On March 11, 2012, this French citizen of Algerian descent, who had joined an Islamist network and had been trained in Pakistan, killed a French soldier in Toulouse. On March 15, he shot three more soldiers in Montauban: two died on the spot; the third was severely wounded in the head and is now quadriplegic.
Four days later, Merah killed three preteen children and one adult at Ozar Hatorah, a school in Toulouse.
The terrorist had selected his nine victims with jihadist logic, as he himself boasted shortly before being shot by security forces. The four soldiers were either of North African or West Indian origin, and thus guilty of betraying their Muslim or non-Caucasian brethren by joining the enemy French army. The children and the adult at the Ozar Hatorah school were Jewish, and thus enemies of the Muslim Palestinians and the Muslim world community.
Since his election in June of last year, Hollande has frequently emphasized the Merah affair, and specifically its anti-Semitic aspect.
On July 22, 2012 — the French national memorial day of the Holocaust and of racist persecutions — Hollande drew a parallel between the murder of Jewish children by Merah and the deportation and mass murder of Jewish children. On November 1 — the Day of the Dead in French culture — Hollande attended a memorial ceremony in Toulouse with Benjamin Netanyahu. This year’s March 17 visit to Toulouse was Hollande’s third public appearance expressing his concern about the Merah affair.
However, Hollande’s reputation, one of empathy for the victims of anti-Semitism, has just suffered a blow.
What he may have achieved and still attempts to achieve in that respect may look impressive, yet all of it has been largely offset by his decision to bestow state honors to Stephane Hessel.
A former diplomat, Hessel passed away on February 27 at the age of 95. Hollande even chose to attend the ceremony — and delivered a eulogy.
Invalides honors, which Hessel was granted, are usually intended for war heroes and others with outstanding war records who stand as examples for the nation. Was that the case with Hessel?
Indeed, Hessel had fought in World War Two and joined the Free French in London. He was sent on a mission to occupied France, arrested, tortured, and sent to a concentration camp in Germany. However, thousands of French men and women who did as much, or much more, than Hessel during or after the war were buried with just a flag and music, and at local cemeteries. At best.
Hessel admitted that he had not been able to withstand torture at the hands of the Germans in 1944, and had passed on some information. One may or may not take a lenient view of that. Still, there is a crucial difference between breaking and not breaking under torture, or committing suicide rather than talking. The many who did certainly stand in line for Invalides honors ahead of Hessel.
Indeed, the honors were given to Hessel for behavior unrelated to military service. Hessel had become, over the last decade, a national icon of sorts, perhaps the last national icon affordable to a collapsing France. And he had supported Hollande.
The president, whose popularity is plummeting (only 37% of the French are happy with his administration), perhaps was looking to utilize Hessel’s prestige for his own profit. But the troubling point is that Hessel had been behaving in many respects as the exact opposite of what he had been – or was supposed to have been — as a young man.
Most perversely, Hessel’s final iconic status owed all to his latter indignity.
In an interview with the German newspaper Frankfurter Allgemeine Zeitung, published on January 21, 2011, Hessel remarked:
If I may risk a daring parallel with matters I am involved with, I’ll say this: the German occupation (of France) was, if one is to compare it, for instance, with the current occupation of Palestine by Israelis, a rather mild one, except for some unusual facts like arrests, internment, executions, or the looting of works of art.
It was nasty enough to draw a parallel between Israel and Nazi Germany. But Hessel was going even further there: he was largely exonerating the Nazis from most of the crimes they had committed in France.
Under normal circumstances, his moral standing as a former Resistance fighter and death camp inmate would have been finished with such a statement. However, circumstances are not normal anymore in France; Hessel was allowed to go on parading until his very last day.
The interview was not an isolated incident. Since 1996, Hessel — who enjoyed much popularity on French talk shows as an elegant octogenarian and nonagenarian — got increasingly involved in radical politics of all sorts, from anti-globalism to rabid anti-Israel campaigning.
This behavior culminated with Indignez-Vous! (Time for Outrage!), a very short (32 pages) and very cheap (three euros) political brochure published at the end of 2010. The brochure sold one million copies in the first ten weeks, 1.5 million in the first year, and 4 million copies in a bit more than two years (including translations).
While ostensibly devoted to the plight of the “new poor” in the post-Cold War world, Time for Outrage! dealt chiefly with the Palestinian issue — or rather, with the absolute evil known as Israel and the need to fight it.
As an implicit admission that anti-Israel hatred and anti-Semitism are now essential and powerful components of left-wing radical politics, Time for Outrage! was an inspiration for the Occupy movement, itself infested with anti-Semitic innuendo.
Why did Hollande, as a declared friend of the Jewish people and an enemy of anti-Semitism, endorse Hessel in any fashion, much less with an Invalides honor?










povecon
and France was the first country to allow Jews a citizenship, and positions in the administrations and the army
And I still don't know about France creating a genocide. If I remember correctly, you guys tried to exterminate us Christians during the French Revolution and in the aftermath in a similar fashion to what the Soviets attempted to do with religion as a whole (Heck, Karl Marx and the Soviets actually based that tenant on Communism directly on what you guys did). Even if Christianity was not an ethnicity and just pure religion, it still counts in my eyes. Even now, Christians in France are still undergoing persecution. It may not be taking them to a wall and being shot, but they have other ways.
And maybe the Jewish people were granted citizenship and places of power, I don't know. However, then again, something similar might have happened in Soviet Russia, and yet the Jewish people still ended up persecuted (Heck, Stalin even had a similar plan in place to Hitler's Final Solution called the Doctor's Plot, but he died before he got the chance to carry it out, and even some of his own advisors were aghast at the idea).
Honestly, for your own good, you guys really should abandon Socialism, which even before Marx was born, was prevalent in your country since the French Revolution.
oh during the Revolution it was a civil war whereas Christians vs Revolutionnaires were fighting each other
like during the American Civil war
and though the French revolution made far lesser victims
"Honestly, for your own good, you guys really should abandon Socialism,"
if it was really socialism, like you have in the US
Invoking the theme of "First they came for..." invokes the idea that protecting all is protecting yourself. Allowing general bigotry to be mainstreamed without challenge is a net that will eventually gather in what it will, because hate speech is a language without eyes.
hmm for a bunch of commies only, didn't remember to hear from him since he wrote his booklet on "les indignés" during the WS manifestations
Oh and Hollande is a politician, he doesn't care of these official commemorations. Though sincerily he is supporting the french Jews, he inever missed a invitation from the CRIF
LMAO, you have such short cuts !
Don't you know, that Karl Marx was a commie. that those that set the Bolchevik revolution were Jews... that most of the French Jews are socialists?
And Karl Marx may have been Jewish in terms of ethnicity, but he made it quite clear that he was a staunch atheist regarding both Judaism and Christianity. Same with the Bolsheviks who underwent the Revolution (They'd have to be areligious to even be Communist, since a mandate of Marxism is the extermination of religion, specifically "Religion is the Opiate of the Masses."). Heck, Hitler was rumored to have some Jewish ancestry, but it was made very clear that he was not actually Jewish in terms of religion (he's actually closer to an agnostic, if not a downright atheist).
I myself might not be Jewish, but I am most certainly Roman Catholic (a devout one, I mean, not one of those CINOs like Pelosi, or the Social Justice wings that's just Marxism in another name).
Religion and ethnicity?
what a farce, don't tell me that the AshkEnaze are the same as the Sefarades, that a German Jew is like a french Jew or a russian Jew... or a black Jew...ADN melted with the locals, like it or not !!!