By The
Associated Press
LONDON --
Firebombs hurled at Jewish schools and synagogues in France. Orthodox
Jews assaulted on the streets of north London. Protesters at a Rome
demonstration dressed as suicide bombers.
European
Jews are increasingly uneasy about a wave of anti-Semitic violence that
has coincided with rising tensions in the Middle East.
``There
is a feeling ranging from discomfort to worry,'' said Michael Whine,
spokesman for the Board of Deputies of British Jews.
The
problem is most serious in France, where authorities reported nearly 360
crimes against Jews and Jewish institutions in the first two weeks of
April alone. Those attacks came when the news was dominated by images of
Israeli tanks pushing into West Bank cities in the Jewish state's
biggest military offensive in two decades.
The
French violence -- which authorities say is at its highest level since
World War II -- included a March 31 arson attack that destroyed the Or
Aviv synagogue in the port city of Marseille. Attackers have also thrown
gasoline bombs and tried to set fires at about a dozen other synagogues
and cemeteries. A kosher butcher's shop was shot at and teen-agers on an
amateur Jewish soccer team were assaulted with sticks and metal bars,
sending one to the hospital.
French
President Jacques Chirac urged people to show respect and tolerance to
help end the attacks, which President Bush also condemned on Tuesday,
singling out France.
France's
Interior Ministry said most of the suspects detained are young Arabs of
North African origin.
French
Jews have been further rattled by the strong showing of far-right leader
Jean-Marie Le Pen in the presidential qualifying round. Le Pen has been
convicted of anti-Semitism and once called Nazi gas chambers a ``detail
in the history of World War II.''
The wave
of attacks around Europe began when the current Palestinian uprising
broke out in September 2000 and surged again last month with Israel's
West Bank offensive.
In
Belgium, there have been a half dozen attacks on Jewish institutions,
including the burning of a bookstore and a shooting at a synagogue.
``There
is today an anxiety of the part of Jews when they go to the religious
centers, they go to their social centers,'' World Jewish Congress
Secretary-General Avi Beker said at emergency meeting the group held in
Brussels. ``This is quite shameful for Europe.''
In
Britain, the trouble has been milder, which Whine attributed to the
government's tough stance against hate-fueled vandals and close
cooperation between police and the Jewish community.
But last
weekend, attackers broke into the Finsbury Park District Synagogue in
north London, smashing windows, painting a swastika on a lectern and
throwing holy books, skullcaps and prayer shawls on the floor. A British
flag was left on the altar, prompting speculation that right-wing
nationalists were responsible.
Whine
said 15 British Jews had been victims of anti-Semitic attacks in the
first three weeks of April, most of them in London. Some had to be
briefly hospitalized, but none was seriously injured, he said.
Recently,
the British magazine New Statesman apologized for an issue headlined ``A
Kosher Conspiracy'' that included an image of the Jewish Star of David
piercing the Union Jack. Inside, one article suggested that supporters
of Israel have undue influence over the media's coverage of the Middle
East. Another article was about pro-Israeli lobbies.
Aba
Dunner, secretary-general of the Conference of European Rabbis, said
widespread criticism of Israeli military action had created a climate
that made thugs feel violence was acceptable.
``There
seems to be a green light being given to the people who don't like
Jews,'' he said. ``Clearly in France and Belgium it's the Muslims who
are relating the Middle East situation to Jews in the West. ... And it's
given a green light in my opinion to the right-wing parties.''
German
Jews appealed to authorities this week to stop a ``spiral of violence''
against Jewish targets. In recent weeks, an assailant threw a Molotov
cocktail at a synagogue, a homemade bomb exploded at a Jewish cemetery
and two Jewish women were assaulted at a Berlin subway station.
Police in
Berlin apologized last week for an official's suggestion that Jews there
should stop wearing religious symbols to avoid attacks.
Political
leaders in Italy have condemned the anti-Semitic tone of some
demonstrations billed as promoting peace or Palestinian rights,
including one at which a few participants dressed as suicide bombers.
Synagogues
in Russia and Ukraine have been attacked, and vandals desecrated
gravestones at a Jewish cemetery in northern Greece.
Dunner
said it was hard to know whether a decrease in Middle East tensions
would bring an end to attacks in Europe.
``Once
you've let the genie out of the bottle, it's not that easy to get it
back inside,'' he said. ``There's a lot of hatred out there.''