Henry Srebrnik, [Charlottetown, PEI] Guardian
Has the National Front, the far-right
French party, truly shed its anti-Semitic carapace, or is this a good cop-bad
cop routine?
On Aug. 20, the party’s founder and
longtime leader, Jean-Marie Le Pen, was expelled from its ranks at the
insistence of his daughter Marine, the current head of the NF.
They had already been feuding for months,
and Jean-Marie had already been suspended in May for saying that he saw the
Holocaust as a “detail of history.”
Le Pen in turn remarked that he was “deeply
shocked, hurt, and the victim of a political witch-hunt,” and would not support
Marine in the 2017 presidential election, which she thinks she has a chance of
winning. “To be persecuted by your daughter, is very difficult,” he added.
Since she replaced her father in 2011, Marine
has been trying to broaden the party’s base to include people uneasy at the way
France has been handling its economy and immigration policies.
In particular, she wants to attract French
Jews, increasingly upset by attacks from radical Islamists. The Charlie Hebdo
magazine massacre last January is still fresh in their minds.
Marine has tried to steer the NF away from
the overt racism and anti-Semitism of its past. The party did well in elections
to the European parliament last year, and in French municipal elections more
recently.
On the other hand, Jean-Marie, who created
the party on 1972, has kept making statements casting doubt on the veracity of
the Holocaust; he has also continued to insist that those who led the
collaborationist Vichy regime in the Second World War were patriots.
He has contended that the wartime
collaborator Marshal Philippe Pétain was not a “traitor.”
In 2007 he told the newspaper Le Monde that
“you can't dispute the inequality of the races.” More recently, he said that
France should get along with Russia to save the “white world.”
These and other remarks have prompted
Marine to accuse him of trying to “rescue himself from obscurity.”
Florian Philippot, one of the five vice
presidents of the NF and one of the main advisors of Marine Le Pen, said that Jean-Marie
Le Pen went “from provocation to provocation” in a “work of destruction.” So
the rift does seem genuine.
France has the largest Muslim population in
Europe. They have come mainly from its former colonies in north and west
Africa. The country’s tradition of secularism in recent years has been
challenged, as efforts to integrate Muslims into the country’s culture have led
to controversy over headscarves, halal food, and the construction of mosques.
Author Michel Houellebecq’s new novel, Submission, published earlier this year, imagines
France in 2022 as a country ruled by a Muslim president, in which there are
numerous conversions to Islam, widespread polygamy, and creeping sharia.
Accused of undue provocation, Houellebecq
said, after the Charlie Hebdo attack, “Marine Le Pen doesn’t need me.”
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