French Jewish cemetery vandalized
PARIS (JTA) -- Vandalism at a Jewish cemetery in Strasbourg was discovered on International Holocaust Remembrance Day.
Some 30 gravestones were vandalized, including 18 painted with swastikas and 13 overturned, in Cronenbourg, a neighborhood in the northeastern French town of Strasbourg, according to the French Jewish umbrella group CRIF and the Jewish Community Protection Service.
The German phrase "Juden Raus," or “Jews, out,” also was written on one tomb.
The vandalism was discovered Wednesday, but police have not yet determined when the attack took place.
Laurent Schmoll, president of the approximately 1,000-member Jewish community in Strasbourg, told reporters that he believed the cemetery was defiled in connection with International Holocaust Remembrance Day, which is being observed Wednesday.
“These are absolutely inscriptions from the Nazi period," Schmoll said. "At the moment we celebrate the anniversary of the liberation of the concentration camps, and I think there has to be a link.”
CRIF researcher Marc Knobel said it was too early to tell why the tombs were defiled, but that one reason could have been to “mark the day.”
Strasbourg Jewish cemeteries have been vandalized with anti-Semitic graffiti in the past. Knobel said it wasn't the first time that the cemetery vandalism and other anti-Semitic incidents have occurred on Jan. 27, the day set aside by the United Nations to remember the Holocaust and its victims.
He added that it must have taken the vandals time to turn over the tombs, and noted that the cemetery is not equipped with video surveillance cameras.
Click to login and write a letter to the editor or sign up for the Daily Briefing.
This article was made possible by the support of readers like you. Donate to JTA now.
Featured Content
Need to know? Get JTA's free e-newsletters!
- JFNA lauds Obama on charitable deduction backtrack
- Jewish groups offer mixed response on same-sex marriage ruling
- Calls grow in Congress to reconsider Egypt aid
- For Orthodox musicians, alternatives to the Friday night concert abound
- Israel grants Bedouin community its first solar field license
- Primary victories by Santorum underscore Romney’s woes with conservatives
- Best bet: Super Bowl winner donating long-shot’s payoff to charity
- Four charged with hate crimes in N.Y. assault
Share
Email
Print




