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Wiesenthal Centre at Historic Day for France: IHRA Definition of Antisemitism Adopted by French Parliament Lower House with resulting vote of 154 votes to 72

Paris, 3 December

“Following a 3 hour Q&A devoted mainly to terrorist dangers in France, the National Assembly (Parliament’s Lower Chamber) spent a further 2 hours debatingthe draft Resolution to adopt the IHRA (International Holocaust Remembrance Alliance) Definition of Antisemitism,” explained Wiesenthal Centre Director for International Relations, Dr. ShimonSamuels, who was present throughout.

“MP Sylvain Maillard, from the majority governing party, led the presentations for adoption, followed by other centrist leaders. Among them was Mr. Meyer Habib,elected to represent the overseas French expatriates of the Mediterranean region, including Israel,” added Samuels.

Samuels at the National Assembly with MP Maillard (left) and with MP Habib (right)


Several “yes” speakers listed the names of French Jewish victims of antisemitic terror and the string of attacks, from the 1980 rue Copernic synagogue bombing tothe Toulouse Jewish school killings in 2012, from Ilan Halimi tortured to death in 2006 to the murder of Holocaust survivor Mireille Knoll in 2018.

The extreme left opposition took positions that “anti-Zionism should be considered valid as ‘freedom of expression against Israeli colonization’,” as claimed byMP Sabine Rubin. Socialist MP Michèle Victory claimed that the Resolution was “a slap at all dispossessed people.”

MP François Pupponi, who quit the Socialist Party in 2018 to become a moderate-left independent, stated: “Hate for Israel is hate for the Jews. There is no doubtthat anti-Zionism has become a mask to conceal antisemitism.”

The ballot ended with 154 votes in favor of the Resolution, 72 against.

The only Jewish organizations present were the French Jewry umbrella body CRIF and the Wiesenthal Centre.

French Interior Minister Christophe Castaner reiterated "the importance of the IHRA Definition as a tool in the training of teachers, police, and judges, againstantisemitism and hate and to rebuild social cohesion."


Samuels at the Parliamentary hearing with CRIF President Francis Kalifat (left) and with Interior Minister Castaner (right) at the February 2019 CRIF dinner, where President Macron announced hiscommitment to adopt the IHRA Definition.


“Adopting the Definition was a historic day for France... The question is how it will impact on the legal, educational and security measures in battling antisemitism,” concludedSamuels.


For more information, please contact Shimon Samuels at csweurope@gmail.com or at +33 609 770 158, and join the Center on Facebook, www.facebook.com/simonwiesenthalcenter, or follow @simonwiesenthal for news updates sent directly to your Twitter feed.

The Simon Wiesenthal Center is one of the largest international Jewish human rights organizations with over 400,000 member families in the UnitedStates. It is an NGO at international agencies including the United Nations, UNESCO, the OSCE, the OAS, the Council of Europe and the Latin American Parliament (Parlatino).

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