More than 180,000 march against soaring antisemitism in France
- There has been a major increase in anti-Jewish acts in France, which boasts Europe’s largest Jewish community, since the start of the Israel-Gaza war
- ‘A France where our Jewish citizens are afraid is not France,’ President Emmanuel Macron wrote in a letter published on Saturday

More than 180,000 people turned out on Sunday to march against antisemitism in France, after a surge in anti-Jewish incidents across the country in the wake of the Israel-Gaza conflict.
France has recorded nearly 1,250 antisemitic acts in recent weeks and President Emmanuel Macron – who did not attend on Sunday – condemned the “unbearable resurgence of unbridled antisemitism”.
“A France where our Jewish citizens are afraid is not France,” Macron wrote in a letter published on Saturday.

Police said 105,000 people had joined the Paris march, while interior ministry figures put the nationwide figure at 182,000.
Thousands of people gathered at more than 70 events across France, including in major cities Lyon, Nice and Strasbourg.
The same slogan was adopted nationally: “For the Republic, against antisemitism”.
Agence France-Presse journalists saw tens of thousands packed into the setting-off point at the capital’s Invalides park.