March 2017 AD
liberté, égalité, fraternité
Not allowed in France
I will save you a lot of time trying to decipher what the Jerusalem Post writes about the trial of Georges
Bensoussan and why it matters.
A) French Jews made all discussions by Christians questioning any aspect of the Holocaust a mortal crime - a hate crime.
B) French Jews made all discussion by Christians questioning any aspect of Muslim immigration a mortal crime - a hate crime.
C) French Jew Georges Bensoussan, a prominent Jewish historian for
being an "expert" on the Holocaust, said that antisemitism in Arabs is
genetic by saying, "in Arab families in
France and beyond, everybody knows but will not say that antisemitism is
transmitted with mother’s milk.”
Statement A and B censoring Christians are totally non-controversial
among Jews. They are all in agreement, in such manner as that no
Jew cares to raise an objection in defense of a Christian.
Statement C though has terribly split the Jewish community.
The French version of America's Judeo-ACLU is LICRA. (League against
Racism and Antisemitism). LICRA is trying its best not to
be hypocritical. It feels it must sacrifice a fellow Jew
who does not adhere to established Judeo-doctrine of not questioning
anything that smacks of Islamophobia.
The reason?
Fear that French Christians will feel a freedom of speech is now
available also to them in their own land of "liberté, égalité,
fraternité".
On the other hand, there are plenty of Jews who believe a Jew to be
exempt to all rules they place upon Christians, and so vehemently
oppose the prosecution of this poor Jewish intellectual as being a
second "Dreyfus trial", the hallmark French case that prosecuting Jews
for anything is illegal.
There. Now you know.
Source:
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The hate speech trial of a prominent French historian charged with calling Arabs innately antisemitic is dividing French Jews and sowing dissent within the local equivalent of the Anti-Defamation League.
It is all happening over just two words: “mother’s milk.”
Georges
Bensoussan, one of the world’s leading experts on Jews in Arab lands,
used the two fateful words during a radio interview in 2015. Citing the
work of an Algerian sociologist, he asserted that “in Arab families in
France and beyond, everybody knows but will not say that antisemitism is
transmitted with mother’s milk.”
Bensoussan later insisted he
meant this as a metaphor for culturally transmitted bias. Nevertheless,
his words prompted both the Collective Against Islamophobia in France
and the International League against Racism and Anti-Semitism, or LICRA,
independently to initiate a criminal trial against him for allegedly
inciting racial hatred.
The verdict in Bensoussan’s trial, which
began last month, is expected to determine boundaries of free speech in
academia in a country where moderates fear both radical Islam and the
surge of xenophobia it is triggering.
But the trial is already
pitting anti-racism activists against one another, including within
LICRA. One of France’s most revered thinkers, the philosopher Alain
Finkielkraut, resigned from its honorary board in protest over what
French media are calling “l’Affaire Bensoussan.”
Long frustrated
over what they regard as politically correct censorship, right-leaning
French Jews reacted with outrage over Bensoussan’s prosecution, using
language even more heated than the hyperbolic rhetoric common in their
favorite media.
Former Le Monde reporter Yves Mamou called the prosecution “a Jihad against the truth” and “France’s new Dreyfus Trial” in reference to the wrongful conviction for treason in 1894 of a Jewish army captain.
Sammy
Ghozlan, founder of the center-right National Bureau of Vigilance
Against Anti-Semitism, condemned the prosecution as “shocking.”
“I
think it’s deplorable how LICRA has lowered itself into this quagmire
of a trial against telling the truth,” he added in an interview Thursday
with JTA.
Ghozlan, a former police commissioner, said people
with origins in Muslim countries in recent years have been responsible
for most of the hundreds of violent antisemitic incidents recorded in
France. At least eight people were murdered since 2012 in jihadist
attacks on Jewish targets.
Discontent over Bensoussan’s
prosecution spread to more centrist circles, exposing the left-leaning
LICRA to criticism by Finkielkraut. Last year he received the country’s
ultimate academic distinction when he entered the Academie Francaise
pantheon of great thinkers.
On Jan. 29 Finkielkraut, a member of
the dovish JCall group of French Jews who oppose Israel’s settlement
policy, announced he would be resigning from LICRA over its decision to
sue Bensoussan.
The move “dishonored” LICRA, he said during an
interview with RCJ radio, accusing LICRA of “opting for inquisition”
against Bensoussan.
“I call on all activists, followers and
sympathizers to draw their own conclusions [about LICRA] from this
ignominy,” he said. Finkielkraut called the prosecution of Bensoussan
“an exceptionally grave event politically, judicially and historically.”
During
the interview, Finkielkraut noted that Bensoussan in 2015 was
paraphrasing the statements of the Algeria-born sociologist Smaïn
Laacher, a non-Jew who said that antisemitism in Muslim areas is “in the
air that one breathes.”
Laacher and Bensoussan were using
metaphors, Finkielkraut argued, and neither “speak of any biological
dimension to the culturally transmitted phenomenon they describe.” That
refutes the “incitement to racial hatred” charge, he said.
But in
an election year with the far-right National Front group leading in the
polls, this technicality was soon eclipsed in the media by the trial’s
broader implications on free speech and race relations.
The trial
“is a way of avoiding investigative thought and any public expression
on Islam except for praise,” Finkielkraut said in the RCJ interview.
In a scathing op-ed in the Marianne weekly, columnist Martine Gozlan called the trial “shameful” and an attempt to “silence free thought.”
It’s
a recurring accusation by advocates of several French thinkers, Jews
and others, who have paid a personal and public price recently for
speaking out against Islam or in defense of Israel.
The list
includes Michel Houellebecq, who has received death threats for writing a
novel critical of political Islam; Bernard-Henri Levy, who is reviled
by many members of his left-wing circles for defending Israel, and
Finkilkraut himself, who was violently ejected from a public gathering
recently because he is a “Zionist.”
Gozlan also noted that
LICRA’s fellow plaintiff, the Collective Against Islamophobia, has been
accused — including by LICRA itself — of propagating antisemitic
disinformation against Prime Minister Manuel Valls, whose wife is
Jewish.
On Feb. 2 Philippe Karsenty, the French Jewish activist
and deputy mayor of the Paris suburb of Neuilly-sur-Seine, echoed
Gozlan’s sentiment in an op-ed he wrote with lawyer Pierre Lurçat.
“How
could a group established to defend Jews come to assist a judicial
jihad waged against a Jewish intellectual specialized in the history of
the Holocaust?” they asked.
It was a withering attack on LICRA, a
group founded by a Jewish journalist in 1926 in an effort to defend a
Jew charged with the Paris killing of a Ukrainian nationalist. The
Ukrainian was responsible for pogroms in Ukraine in which the Jewish
killer’s relatives perished.
Amid growing criticism, the head of
LICRA, Alain Jacubowicz, who is Jewish, broke his silence about the
affair. In an op-ed published earlier this month, he accused Bensoussan
of “benefiting extremists” with his statement on Islam.
Jacubowicz had a point.
Bruno
Gollnisch, a Holocaust denier and European Parliament lawmaker for
National Front, embraced Bensoussan’s cause. In a Jan. 25 op-ed
published on his website, Gollnisch equated Bensoussan’s troubles to
those of Jean-Marie Le Pen, who was sidelined as the National Front’s
leader after multiple convictions for hate speech against Jews and
Muslims.
“There are truths we’re forbidden to speak,” Gollnisch wrote about both men.
Bensoussan in turn broke his own silence on the affair and replied to Jacubowicz in an open letter published Monday.
Turning
Jacubowicz’s claim against him, Bensoussan wrote that the popularity of
a populist, anti-immigrant party like the National Front is being
fueled by “a denial of reality, a suicidal strategy of blindness and
silence.”.
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Article located at:
http://www.thechristiansolution.com/doc2017/806_FrenchJews.html
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