- The French Jewish community is in an uproar over allegations
that Reform Rabbi Gabriel Farhi, who was stabbed on January 3, may in fact
have faked the stabbing.
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- The allegations surfaced in a report this week by the
weekly magazine Marianne, which was then picked up by Le Figaro. The journal
reported that police officers investigating the stabbing said it is not
clear whether Farhi was actually stabbed by an unknown assailant, and they
are not ruling out the possibility that Farhi in fact stabbed himself.
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- The report stunned French Jewry, which for the past two
years has been vociferously protesting law enforcement agencies' failure
to take effective action against the hundreds of anti-Semitic attacks the
community has suffered.
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- "You can imagine what a destructive effect this
affair could have on the Jewish community," said one community leader,
who asked to remain anonymous. "For two years we have been screaming
about the attacks against us and the rise of anti-Semitism in France. If,
God forbid, it turns out that the stabbing was staged, not just Rabbi Farhi
is in trouble, all the Jews are in trouble. Who will take us seriously?
And that is without even mentioning the enormous shame caused by the thought
that four former prime ministers took the trouble to support the rabbi
and the Jewish community. What will we do now? Apologize to them?"
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- The Reform community is backing Farhi fully. When its
executive board met Monday night to elect a new president, all 18 members
made a point of shaking Farhi's hand and offering their support. "I
assure you that if I or my colleagues in the community had any doubts at
all, we would not be expressing our support," said Francis Lentschner,
the newly elected president. "There is no doubt that the affair has
greatly hurt the community, but I'm certain we'll get over it."
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- The rumors began to surface immediately after the attack,
when police came to investigate. "I've seen assaults and stabbings
as part of my job, but I must say that this was a rather strange stabbing,"
Marianne quoted the officer who led the investigating team as saying. A
few days later, the doctor who examined Farhi submitted a report to the
police in which he wrote that "the wound does not match the rabbi's
version of the assault."
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- On Wednesday, Farhi and his lawyer, Michel Zaoui, held
a press conference to refute the allegations and accused the police of
deliberately trying to frame the rabbi. Zaoui, for instance, charged that
it was not the doctor's job to draw conclusions about the attack.
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- Lentschner also cast doubt on the police's motives. "The
very day after the attack, rumors circulated in Paris that the rabbi was
responsible for his own injury," he said. "The rabbi himself
told me that during his interrogation, the police treated him as a suspect
rather than as a victim."
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