in Pithiviers, the fight against anti-Semitism at the heart of Macron’s speech

in Pithiviers the fight against anti Semitism at the heart of

French President Emmanuel Macron marked this Sunday, July 17 the 80ᵉ anniversary of the Rafle du Vel d’Hiv, during which thousands of Jews were deported in 1942, by inaugurating in Pithiviers a new place of memory in the old station of where eight convoys left for Auschwitz-Birkenau. The Head of State focused his speech against anti-Semitism, judging that France had none ” not finished ” with this ” contemporary combat » and denouncing a « new form of historical revisionism “.

The Head of State went to the old station of Pithiviers, in the center of France, to inaugurate a new place of memory in this station from which left eight convoys for the concentration camp of Auschwitz-Birkenau. Emmanuel Macron was notably accompanied by the historian Nazi hunter Serge Klarsfeld and a survivor of the Nazi extermination camps, Ginette Kolinka.

Macron calls for ‘giving nothing’ to ‘creeping’ anti-Semitism

In his speech, Emmanuel Macron called ” the republican forces ” at ” increase vigilance “in the face of anti-Semitism” even hotter ” and ” crawling than 20 years ago.

Henceforth, anti-Semitism can take on other faces, drape themselves in other words, other caricatures “, estimated Mr. Macron. ” But the odious anti-Semitism is there, it lurks, still alive, persists, persists, returns “, he continued, evoking in turn the “ terrorist barbarity », « murders and crimes », resurgences on « social networks ” where the ” desecration of graves “.

He interferes in debates on television sets. It plays on the complacency of certain political forces. It also thrives around a new form of historical revisionism, even Holocaust denial. “, he insisted, alluding, without naming him, to the far-right candidate for the presidential election Eric Zemmour who had notably maintained that Marshal Pétain had ” Safe of French Jews during World War II.

Controversy around Philippe Pétain

The role played by Marshal Philippe Pétain, head of the Vichy government (1940-1944) who collaborated with the Nazi regime during the Second World War, was also the subject of his speech. ” Neither Pétain, nor Laval, nor Bousquet, nor Darquier de Pellepoix, none of them wanted to save Jews. It’s a falsification of history to say so “, also hammered the head of state, considering that” those who indulge in these lies plan to destroy the Republic and the unity of the Nation “. ” Looking our truth in the face is not weakening France or repenting. It is to recognize everything so as not to reproduce it “, urged Mr. Macron.

In the context of these commemorations, a controversy has ignited social networks. In 2018, Emmanuel Macron called Philippe Pétain ” great soldier » during the First World War, although he later ” makes dire choices “. The leader of the deputies La France Insoumise Mathilde Panot alluded to it on Twitter on Saturday July 16 at the end of the day.

The left-wing politician was accused of instrumentalizing the Holocaust and of not saying in her tweet that the roundup concerned Jews. The Minister responsible for Transport, Clément Beaune, called on Ms. Panot to withdraw her tweet and present “ his apologies to France, quickly “. ” Beyond shame. We dare not believe it “, he reacted on the same social network. Relaying this call to withdraw the controversial tweet, Renaissance MP Prisca Thévenot said this Sunday on CNews that LFI had ” succeeded in winning the palm of the abject, of the unworthy “.

In a part of his speech which could respond to the remarks of the deputy, Emmanuel Macron explained that “ the mechanics of 1940 came a long way » and had fed, among other things, « approximations “. ” We will never eradicate the roots of anti-Semitism if we do not at the same time stir up the ferments of education and dialogue “, further pleaded Mr. Macron, who had visited earlier the old station, transformed into a museum by the Shoah Memorial.

Pithiviers station, rotating plate » of the Holocaust

The small Pithiviers station has not welcomed travelers since the end of the 1960s and has just been transformed into a museum by the Shoah Memorial. It was through this station that some of the 13,000 Jews passed through, including 4,115 children, arrested in Paris and its suburbs on July 16, 1942 and the following days, by 9,000 French officials, at the request of the Germans. 8,160 of them, including the elderly and the sick, were taken to the Vélodrome d’Hiver stadium, known as Vel d’Hiv, in the 15th arrondissement of Paris, before being evacuated to camps, notably in Pithiviers.

From Pithiviers station alone, eight convoys then left for the extermination camps, transporting more than 8,000 deportees, making it the second French deportation site after that of Drancy, near Paris. Only a few dozen adults will survive. ” This station is the place where the French event becomes European genocide. (…) It is a place of memory unique in France says Jacques Fredj, director of the Shoah Memorial. During his speech, Emmanuel Macron described her as the ” Holocaust hub “.

(With AFP)

Read also: Rachel Jedinak, tireless witness to the Holocaust



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