Paris - Religious Jews in Marseille are facing a wrenching choice: Whether to wear the skullcap that proclaims their religion or tuck it away in hopes of staying safe.
It’s a dilemma about identity and freedom of faith that has confronted religious communities elsewhere in Europe and the U.S. It’s becoming especially acute in France, from where a record number of Jews emigrated to Israel as it grapples with anti-Semitic violence increasingly inspired by the Islamic State group.
An attack this week was the last straw for the Marseille Jewish community’s religious leadership: A machete-wielding 15-year-old slashed a Jewish teacher in the street. Under police questioning, the boy invoked IS.
Zvi Ammar, head of the Israelite Consistory of Marseille, asked Jews to go without the kippa “until better days.” Kippa is the Hebrew word for skullcap, while it is known as a yarmulke in Yiddish.... Read More: VIN