France’s updated plan to counter antisemitism will bring students to sites of attacks

Visits could include Holocaust sites, and roving exhibitions about antisemitism and racism will also be set up in schools, French PM says

David I. Klein/JTA|
The French government updated its plan for fighting antisemitism and racism, which will require teachers to receive training on the topic and all French schoolchildren to visit the site of an antisemitic or racist incident.
  • Follow Ynetnews on Facebook and Twitter

  • Those visits could include Holocaust sites, and roving exhibitions about antisemitism and racism will also be set up in schools, France’s Prime Minister Elisabeth Borne announced Monday.
    2 View gallery
    French Prime Minister Elisabeth Borne speaks to present her government's national plan against racism, antisemitism and ethnic discrimination at the Arab World Institute in Paris, Jan. 30, 2023
    French Prime Minister Elisabeth Borne speaks to present her government's national plan against racism, antisemitism and ethnic discrimination at the Arab World Institute in Paris, Jan. 30, 2023
    French Prime Minister Elisabeth Borne speaks to present her government's national plan against racism, antisemitism and ethnic discrimination at the Arab World Institute in Paris, Jan. 30, 2023
    (Photo: Emmanuel Dunand/AFP via Getty Images)
    The plan was first adopted in 2015 but is required to be updated every three years. In addition to the educational additions, French law will also be adapted to make charges of serious antisemitic or racist offenses enough to stop the accused from fleeing the country.
    The plan was put together by the Interministerial Delegation for the Fight Against Racism and Antisemitism, or DILCRAH, as it is known by its French initials, with advisory input from the American Jewish Committee.
    “DILCRAH has long recognized that antisemitism endangers all of French society, not only Jews. It is essential for the government to have a robust strategy dedicated to confronting antisemitism in all its forms,” said Anne Sophie-Sebban, director of AJC Paris. “Significantly, for the first time, the plan includes an AJC recommendation to create indicators to measure how each component of the government’s strategy plan is working.”
    2 View gallery
    Anne-Sophie Sebban-Bécache, director of AJC Paris
    Anne-Sophie Sebban-Bécache, director of AJC Paris
    Anne-Sophie Sebban-Bécache, director of AJC Paris
    (Lazar Berman/Times of Israel)
    Overall, the plan contains 80 different action points across five different categories, which include measuring the reality of racism, antisemitism and discrimination; improving education and training; sanctioning perpetrators and supporting victims.
    Government data found that some 1.2 million people in France suffer from some sort of racism or discrimination. Among them are France’s nearly 500,000 Jews, who have reported increasingly high rates of antisemitism in recent years.
    In 2021, the trial of a man accused of murdering an elderly Jewish woman in Paris sparked nationwide debate over the government’s handling of antisemitic crimes. Last year, the death of a young Jewish man became a last-minute issue in France’s national election campaign.

    Content distributed by the Jewish Telegraphic Agency.
    Comments
    The commenter agrees to the privacy policy of Ynet News and agrees not to submit comments that violate the terms of use, including incitement, libel and expressions that exceed the accepted norms of freedom of speech.
    ""