Local Chabad leader says community undeterred by police raid on attackers believed responsible for killing 129 people last week
PARIS — The presence of terrorists in the Paris suburb of Saint-Denis will not affect the daily life of the Jewish community there, the head of the local Chabad center said.
Rabbi Mendel Belinow said the community will only “increase the volume of its activities” following a raid Wednesday that ended with the death of two suspected terrorists in the poor and heavily Muslim suburb north of the capital. Police stormed a building in Saint-Denis believing it was the hiding place of those responsible for the attacks that killed at least 129 people on Friday. Three officers were wounded and a police dog was killed.
No members of the Saint-Denis Jewish community of 15,000 to 20,000 are known to have been injured in the raid.
One of the suspected terrorists killed was a woman who set off her explosive vest as counterterrorism forces were preparing to enter her hideout. Police made seven arrests.
“We are not suspending our activities, and are preparing to celebrate Hanukkah as usual,” Belinow said, adding he was “not surprised at all” by news that terrorists chose to hide in the municipality.
“It’s a difficult neighborhood, that is no stranger to extremism,” he said.
Following the attacks on Friday, many French Jewish institutions, and in Paris especially, briefly suspended their operations, though many synagogues remained open.
Anti-Semitic attacks have remained are a “frequent occurrence” in Saint-Denis, but have not increased in recent months, said Belinow, who has served as an emissary to the Chabad-Lubavitch movement in Saint-Denis for the past 25 years.
As reported by The Times of Israel