My reply was an explanation to what you wrote in this part and why it is considered antisemitic:
In a number of articles, graffiti of stars of David across buildings in France was categorized as anti-Semitic, which seems really weird to me because they weren’t defaced or altered in any way, just stars of David. On its face I would think that was…pro-semitic.
Also in the article that I have linked, the mention of this incident is immediately followed by this:
Police now believe this was a Russian-inspired destabilisation operation rather than a home-grown intimidation campaign.
Marking buildings with Stars of David is how the Nazis marked Jewish homes and properties.
There’s this article (The Guardian), which includes accounts from the police chief of Paris, and the mayor of Besancon.
And regarding Palestinian solidarity being conflated with anti-semitism, according to this The Guardian article, it stems from people conflating Jews with Israelis:
Whereas it used to be mostly an extreme-right phenomenon, police say some of the most virulent antisemitism now comes from young people of Muslim origin, who identify with the Palestinians as victims and conflate French Jews with their Israeli oppressors.
There are more sources that report on the rise in anti-semitism:
ranging from the desecration of cemeteries to antisemitic graffiti and banners, social media attacks, vandalism against Jewish property, threats against Jews and a handful of assaults
There are more sources that report on the rise in anti-semitism:
ranging from the desecration of cemeteries to antisemitic graffiti and banners, social media attacks, vandalism against Jewish property, threats against Jews and a handful of assaults
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The current Masalit massacres are being done by Muslims