News Hollande says Jews see France as home Facebook Twitter Email SMS WhatsApp Share By JTA | February 20, 2015 French President Francois Hollande at a visit to a vandalized Jewish cemetery said French Jews still see France as their homeland. “How do we understand the unnamable, the unjustifiable, the unbearable?” Hollande said Feb. 17 at the cemetery in Sarre-Union, in northeastern France’s Alsace region, where more than half of the 400 gravestones were pushed over and vandalized. A monument to Holocaust victims also was vandalized at the cemetery, which has been desecrated previously. Five suspects, aged 15 to 17, were detained on Feb. 16 after the youngest alleged vandal turned himself in. On Feb. 16, Hollande rejected statements made the previous day by Israeli Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu encouraging European Jews to move to Israel, calling them “crude electioneering.” Netanyahu’s statements followed the shooting attack Feb. 15 at a Copenhagen synagogue that killed a volunteer security guard and injured two policemen. They echoed comments he made last month after two attacks in Paris left 17 dead, including four Jewish men during the siege of a kosher supermarket. “The comments are not helpful and I think people will ignore them,” Hollande said, adding later, “We’re not prepared to tolerate a situation in this country or in any country in Europe where any Jews feel they have to leave.” Several French and Danish officials have spoken out against Netanyahu’s call for European Jews to make aliyah. “Terror is not a reason to move to Israel,” Denmark Chief Rabbi Jair Melchior said Feb. 15. — jta JTA Content distributed by the Jewish Telegraphic Agency news service. Also On J. Our Crowd Honors, happenings, opportunities, comings & goings — March 2023 Torah In Moses’ self-doubt, a great lesson in humility Politics With retirement on the horizon, a look at Dianne Feinstein’s Jewish legacy Obituaries Death announcements for the week of March 31, 2023 Subscribe to our Newsletter Enter Email Sign Up