Jim
Bramlett
(14 March 2007)
"French Jews flock to Florida"
Dear friends:
The below is another symptom of the Islamization of Europe, and a stark reminder
of the Jews in Germany in the 1920s. Evil by a different name is again on the
move.
____________________________________
French Jews flock to Florida
South Florida is experiencing an influx of Jews who fear persecution in France.
By Alfonso Chardy
The Miami Herald
Rod Kukurudz decided to uproot his family from a comfortable life in France
to Surfside when his then 16-year-old daughter, Audrey, came home one night
in 2005 -- upset and fearful.
''Dad,'' she told him, ''now even if it's hot I have to wear a scarf to hide
my Star of David,'' while riding the Paris Metro.
French Jews living in South Florida told The Miami Herald that hostility from
Islamic militants in France after the Sept. 11, 2001, terrorist attacks in the
United States spurred them to leave. Departures surged after last year's abduction
and death of Ilan Halimi in France.
The 23-year-old Halimi, a French Jew of Moroccan parents, was kidnapped Jan.
21, 2006, by a gang of youths calling themselves the ``Barbarians.''
''The atmosphere created by that episode, plus other incidents and the general
hostility of Muslims in France toward Jews, is what's behind my decision to
leave,'' said Kukurudz, who now lives with his wife and their three daughters,
including Audrey, in Surfside.
Vanessa Elmaleh is among a growing number of South Florida immigration attorneys
helping French Jews secure U.S. visas -- but not necessarily asylum.
''Asking for asylum can be risky,'' said Elmaleh, a French Jew herself. ``If
they deny your petition, they can deport you.''
Immigration court figures show a slight uptick in the number of asylum applications
from French nationals starting in 2003 -- but those figures do not specify whether
applicants were French Jews. South Florida immigration attorneys say the majority
of French Jews are arriving on immigrant, investor and business visas.
Kukurudz, for example, obtained an investor visa with Elmaleh's help and now
runs Citizen Events, organizing events for companies and organizations.
Pascal Cohen left his family behind in France and arrived in Aventura a few
weeks ago on a business visa to open a South Florida subsidiary of a high-end
chocolate brand called Cote de France. His wife and two young daughters plan
to leave France and join him later this year.
There are no official U.S. government figures on the number of French Jews here,
but officials in U.S. Jewish organizations said it could be anywhere from 2,000
to 4,000 in South Florida -- mostly Miami-Dade.
''I would say they're in the thousands now,'' said Mendy Levy, a rabbi at The
Shul synagogue in Surfside.
''There is no question of an increase in the number of French Jews in South
Florida, and there's an expectation that that rate of increase will accelerate,''
said Jacob Solomon, executive vice president of the Greater Miami Jewish Federation.
'French Jews see the handwriting on the wall and say, `We're not going to wait
until it's too late.' ''
None of the French Jews interviewed was attacked in France, but all expressed
fears the Halimi incident was a preview of more militant violence to come.
The latest State Department human rights report, issued last week, cited more
anti-Semitic incidents in France during the first nine months of 2006 than during
the same period in 2005 -- but fewer than in the first nine months of 2004.
French officials have condemned attacks on members of the Jewish community.
''France is not an anti-Semitic country,'' Philippe Vinogradoff, France's consul
general in Miami, told The Miami Herald on Thursday. ``France is doing a lot
of efforts in its jurisdiction, in its education system, to eradicate definitively
any trace of anti-Semitism.''
France's Jewish population has been variously estimated at between 500,000 and
700,000 and its Muslim population at five million to six million. But French
Jews here say the community has been depleted by frequent departures, the majority
to Israel. Jewish Agency figures show that almost 14,000 French Jews have resettled
in Israel since 2001.
Vinogradoff said 12,000 French nationals are registered with his consulate,
which covers Florida, the Bahamas, Puerto Rico, the U.S. Virgin Islands and
some Caribbean countries. Vinogradoff said it's impossible to tell how many
are French Jews because the consulate is prohibited by French law from asking
about religion or national origin.
He noted that while the French expatriate community here has been growing steadily,
there has been no sharp hike in numbers in the past five years.
But Elmaleh, who specializes in French Jewish immigration, said figures are
much higher than those officially acknowledged -- with perhaps more than 50,000
French Jews moving or actively planning to move to Israel and more than 10,000
in South Florida.
Portions of some neighborhoods in north Miami-Dade have turned into pockets
of French Jewish culture -- particularly in Surfside, Bal Harbour and Aventura
where synagogues have seen significant additions of French Jews to congregations
and new businesses cater to an expanding French-speaking clientele.
''I have seen an increase in my practice relating to wealthy French nationals
who are also Jewish, exploring options to use the United States as a safe haven,
anticipating problems relating to their Jewish heritage,'' Linda Osberg-Braun
said. Other immigration attorneys like Roger Bernstein and David Berger also
said they see more French Jewish clients.
In their hearts, many of the French Jews arriving in South Florida feel they
are refugees, and there's a movement to press the U.S. government for such status.
A group has posted a petition on the Internet --
www.petitiononline.com/ID22206/petition.html -- urging the U.S. Congress
to approve a refugee program for French Jews.
Both Cohen and Kukurudz miss life in France, but they have no regrets about
leaving. They did it for their children.
''So they can have a future,'' Cohen said.