Paris Holocaust memorial vandalized with 'blood-red hands'
The Wall of the Righteous and other sites in the neighborhood were defaced by hooded individuals, according to the Holocaust memorial foundation.
A Paris Holocaust memorial for the French people who risked their lives to save Jews was vandalized with painted red hands on Monday night, the Shoah Memorial said on Tuesday.
The Wall of the Righteous and other sites in the neighborhood were defaced by hooded individuals, according to the Holocaust Memorial Foundation. The Shoah Memorial said that a complaint had been filed with the police and that an investigation is underway.
Activist group Nous Vivrons shared on Instagram a picture of a building in the Marais district covered in the same red hands.
“We are outraged by this cowardly and hateful act, regardless of the perpetrators and the meaning of these red hands,” said the Shoah Memorial.
Why the red hands?
Representative Council of French Jewish Institutions (CRIF) president Yonathan Arfi shared a photograph of the vandalism on social media, claiming that the graffiti was meant to evoke the lynching of two Israeli reservists in Ramallah during the Second intifada in October 2000. Instead, this symbol has recently become associated with Pro-Palestinian/Hamas activists who have used the symbol of red hands in activist efforts calling for an immediate ceasefire between Israel and Hamas, asserting that Israelis are spilling Palestinian blood.
CRIF vice-president Nathalie Beizermann said that the red hands “are the signature of those who advocate [to spread] the terrorism that struck Israel and attacks all over the world. It is an insult to memory by uneducated people who trample on our democracies.”
The Shoah Memorial said that the vandalism of the wall honoring 3,900 French Righteous Among the Nations occurred on the anniversary of the May 1942 transfer of 3,700 Jews from Paris to camps in the Loiret before transportation to the Auschwitz-Birkenau death camp.Shoah Memorial director Jacques Fredj said the act showed the necessity of educational and historical organization more than ever.“We are acting against intolerance and ignorance in a moment of confusion and exploitation of the history of the Shoah and genocides,” said Fredj. “We will continue to deploy and amplify our work of education and pedagogy against barbarism, against antisemitism, and all forms of intolerance.”French President Emmanuel Macron said that the vandalism undermined the memory of French heroes and the victims of the Holocaust.
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