In the drab Toulouse suburbs where gunman Mohamed Merah killed seven people before being cut down by police commandos, the talk is more of bubbling tensions between ethnic and religious communities and how solutions are nowhere in sight.
The gap is not just between the capital to the north and Toulouse in the southwest. In the gritty outskirts of Paris, within sight of the Eiffel Tower, an “us and them” mentality still haunts the streets rocked by immigrant riots in 2005.
“Politicians in France love to talk about harmony, how there are no communities and everybody lives together,” said Georges Dray, 72, a retired Jewish bar owner who came to Toulouse in the wave of French settlers who left former colony Algeria on its independence in 1962.
“That is pure cinema. They should say how things really are,” he said.
The Toulouse killings claimed the lives of three soldiers, three Jewish children and a rabbi, before gunman Merah died in a shootout with police.
An hour later, conservative President Nicolas Sarkozy, who is campaigning for re-election in the April-May poll, proposed tougher security measures.
“This is going to raise questions about our system of integration, our approach to fundamentalism and our tolerance of certain practices here. You’re going to hear a lot about that in the weeks to come,” a senior Sarkozy campaign adviser said, speaking on condition of anonymity.
Lahsen Edbas, 29, a Muslim grocery store worker in the eastern Paris suburb of Le Raincy, echoed a widespread skepticism about the Paris elite: “Why is all this happening now, just before an election?” Sarkozy’s re-election campaign has already hammered away at those issues, calling for tighter controls on immigration and tougher access to social benefits for foreigners settling here.
Muslim and Jews here, many of them born in France and well integrated, saw these as code words and terms aimed against them. There are about 5 million Muslims and 600,000 Jews in the 63 million population of metropolitan France.
When Prime Minister Francois Fillon suggested in early March that Muslims and Jews should give up the “ancestral traditions” of halal and kosher meat, leaders of those minorities said they were being stigmatized so Sarkozy could win far-right votes.
Debates like that over halal and kosher slaughter practices or the killings in Toulouse — where there were both Muslim and Jewish victims — have brought national leaders of the two communities closer together.
But the gap between majority and minority, and between Jew and Muslim, seems to be growing at the grassroots level.
Mohamed, a Toulouse construction worker in his 30s, noted Merah reportedly turned to radicalism after being rejected twice by the army. “You think that’s only because of the dumb things he did as a kid?” he asked. “Your name and the color of your skin also count.” Mohamed said divisions in French society were widening. “There are also big tensions between the communities,” he said, referring to Muslims and Jews. “This sort of event, given how it’s distorted in the media, will make that worse.”
