Police call assaults on Jewish man and teenage girl in Paris hate crimes

Screen capture from video of the Alexander III bridge, Paris. (YouTube screencap)

A young man and a teenage girl were both assaulted in two separate incidents on the streets of Paris, in what police said may have been hate crimes.

Separately, unidentified individuals wrote “Long live Palestine, Jews out” on a Paris synagogue.

The male alleged assault victim, 19, was attacked Wednesday at about 5 p.m. by three men in Paris’ 19th District after noticing one of them was trying to steal his wallet and computer from his bag, the Le Point newspaper reported Friday.

Upon seeing that he wore a kippah, the alleged pickpocket and two accomplices shoved the Jewish man to the floor and kicked him repeatedly in the back at a bus stop and ran away, according to the report, which is based on the alleged victim’s complaint to the police.

The incident involving the teenage girl occurred the previous day in Sarcelles, a suburb of Paris with a sizeable Jewish community, Le Point reported. She was hit forcefully in the back by a man who spoke Arabic to her. She did not understand what the man said, she told police. The man, whom, the alleged victim did not recognize, pointed his finger at her and made gestures evocative of firing a handgun, she said.

The alleged victim, a student at a Jewish high school for girls, was wearing that institution’s uniform when the attack occurred, the report said. Her friend was walking alongside her and witnessed the exchange, it also said. Both were wearing clothes that identified them as Jews, the report noted.

In the vandalism incident at a French synagogue, worshipers discovered on Saturday graffiti about Jews and Palestine written on the wall of a synagogue in Les Lilas, an eastern suburb of Paris bordering on the 19th District, the Le Monde Juif news website reported.

In another incident, the word “Jews” was spray-painted on a shop display in a suburb of Dusseldorf in Germany.

The graffiti in Germany, which is reminiscent of the marking of Jewish-owned shops by the Nazis, was found in Ratingen last month, north of Dusseldorf, the Ratinger Zeitung reported. The report did not say whether the shop targeted was indeed owned by Jews.