1. Skip to content
  2. Skip to main menu
  3. Skip to more DW sites
Crime

Strasbourg's Old Synagogue memorial vandalized

March 2, 2019

The French city's mayor said "once again, enough is enough." The incident comes only weeks after vandals spray-painted swastikas on Jewish gravestones in a nearby town.

https://p.dw.com/p/3EMOn
The memorial stone marking the site of Strasbourg's Old Synagogue, which was destroyed by the Nazis in World War II, is pictured after it was vandalised overnight on March 2, 2019 in Strasbourg, eastern France
Image: Getty Images/AFP/F. Florin

A monument marking the site where Nazi Germany burned down Strasbourg's Old Synagogue was vandalized overnight, city officials said on Saturday.

"A new incident of anti-Semitism in our town," deputy mayor Alain Fontanel wrote on Twitter as a caption to a picture showing the black marble slab knocked off its plinth.

Hitler Youth ransacked and burnt down the Old Synagogue in September 1940, three months after German forces invaded France and occupied much of its territory.

"Sadly, history repeats itself," Fontanel said.

Strasbourg is the capital city of the Grand Est region, formerly Alsace, in northeastern France. It is also the seat of the European Parliament and close to the German border.

Read more: Being Jewish in France: 'Just go back to Tel Aviv!'

'Enough is enough'

Mayor Roland Ries told French television that the incident was anti-Semitic.

The slab "must weigh 300 or 400 kilograms," Ries said. "It wasn't pushed off by a single individual."

The stone lies near another memorial, the Avenue of the Righteous, which honors the work of non-Jews who helped save Jews during the Nazi occupation.

Read more: German politicians alarmed by rising anti-Semitism in France

"The site is itself a response to whoever did this repulsive act because it symbolizes both the actions and horrors of the Nazi regime and the French people's power of resistance," Mayor Roland Ries wrote on Facebook ahead of his visit to the site.

Rising anti-Semitism in France

France is home to the largest Jewish population in Europe and has seen a surge in anti-Semitic acts in recent years.

In February, vandals spray-painted swastikas on 96 graves in a Jewish cemetery in the town of Quatzenheim, some 20 kilometers (12.5 miles) northwest of Strasbourg.

Read more: Did anti-Semites infiltrate France's yellow vests?

In response, French President Emmanuel Macron has vowed to draft a new law against online hate crime and take actions to close down groups that spread hate and violence.

Israel's ambassador to Germany, Jeremy Issacharoff, told DW on Friday that he supported efforts by European countries to introduce regulations against online anti-Semitic material.

"Today, anti-Semitism is an assault on Jews, it is an assault on Israelis," he said. "But in the end, it is also an assault on the democratic tolerance and nature of European society as a whole."

amp/jm (AFP, dpa)

Each evening at 1830 UTC, DW's editors send out a selection of the day's hard news and quality feature journalism. You can sign up to receive it directly here.