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paris - Page 3

  • J-2 pour Déposez vos projets au Budget participatif 2016 !

    Avec les crédits réservés aux "quartiers populaires", l'enveloppe du Budget participatif de Paris19e a été portée à

    5 745 413 euros, (presque 6 millions d'euros) vous avez jusqu’au 19 février pour déposer vos projets sur la plateforme www.budgetparticipatif.paris.fr


    Une question ? Envoyez un mail à : bpa19@paris.fr

    A Paris19, on a presque 6 millions d'euros, alors à vos idées, projets et clics !!! http://budgetparticipatif.paris ‪#‎NotreBudget‬

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    Lire la suite

  • A Paris butcher offers a lesson in interfaith ties

    PARIS — On Fridays, the Boucherie de l’Argonne closes early. Its Muslim workers head to afternoon prayers. The Jews prepare for Shabbat — a practical accommodation for staff sharing similar roots and cultural references.

    “We work well together,” says Philippe Zribi, a Tunisian-born Jew whose family runs the butcher’s store that employs eight people: three Jews, three Muslims and two Catholics.

    In a city still recovering from last year’s deadly extremist terror attacks, where national news is dotted with reports of anti-Semitism, the store tucked next to an abandoned railroad track offers a more positive face of interfaith relations.

    With an estimated 30,000 to 40,000 Jews living in the 19th arrondissement, the district is home to one of the largest Jewish neighborhoods in Europe, according to local Deputy Mayor Mahor Chiche. It also includes a sizable Muslim population that mostly hails from North and sub-Saharan Africa.

    “There’s a real mix, both socially and religiously,” says Chiche. “The older generation who lived together in Algeria, Tunisia or Morocco, they know each other. They speak Arabic, Hebrew and French. But the younger generation has a harder time getting to know each other. More work needs to be done there.”

    Across France, anti-Muslim acts tripled last year from 2014, to nearly 400, while anti-Jewish acts were double that number, according to Interior Ministry statistics.

    When a Kurdish teen attacked a Marseille Jewish teacher with a machete last month, some Jews opted to remove their yarmulkes and keep a low profile.

    “I remain pretty pessimistic,” says Sammy Ghozlan, who heads the National Bureau of Vigilance Against Anti-Semitism, a French watchdog group near Paris. Like many others, he blames the attacks on young Muslims and, to a lesser degree, the far right.

    Those incidents add to a broader, troubling picture of race and religion in France. A new IPSOS survey finds more than two-thirds of French Jews believe anti-Semitism has greatly increased over the past five years. More than one-quarter of all French surveyed said they had personally encountered insults and other problems with Muslims over the past year, according to the report commissioned by the French Judaism Foundation.

    The 19th has its own share of problems. The radicalized Muslim brothers Said and Cherif Kouachi, who gunned down a dozen people at the Charlie Hebdo magazine before dying in a hail of police gunfire, grew up in the district. They joined an extremist network known as the Buttes Chaumont gang, named after a neighborhood park about a mile from the Argonne butcher store.

    The gang was dismantled a decade ago, and Deputy Mayor Chiche says anti-Semitic acts have abated to about a dozen yearly.

    But some experts believe November’s Paris attacks have led to a greater understanding among mainstream Jews and Muslims.

    Rabbi Michel Serfaty, who heads a Jewish-Muslim friendship association, says Muslim groups are now reaching out to him. “This is new,” he says. “They’re saying they can’t continue living this way, with misunderstandings.”

    The Argonne butchery, where a photo of the late Lubavitcher Rabbi Menachem Schneerson is pasted near the cash register, offers another example of relations that work.

    A steady stream of customers arrives before closing time. Leontine Duobongo, from the Republic of the Congo, studies the cuts. Raised a Christian, she converted to Judaism a few years ago.

    “My boss is Jewish so I became Jewish,” she says.

    The store’s kosher certification also draws Muslims who keep similar halal dietary codes.

    A native of Sfax, in southern Tunisia, butcher Zribi moved to Paris as a toddler in the 1960s, his family joining the waves of North African Jews leaving their homelands after independence. In the 1980s, his father opened the store, which Zribi helps run with a brother.

    The Zribis have installed a prayer room for their Muslim employees. They sometimes lunch together. Conversations are sprinkled with the Arabic from their homelands.

    For butcher Mostafa Makhoukh, a Muslim from Oujda, Morocco, the Argonne store where he has worked for 18 years is now “family.”

    “Working with Jews isn’t a problem,” agrees another Muslim butcher, Abdel Haq, who also comes from Morocco. “When it comes to religion, each person has his own convictions,” he says.

    November’s indiscriminate assault on Paris nightspots has drawn Argonne’s staff closer together.

    Zribi lost two Italian friends. Haq, the Muslim butcher, says he lost nobody, but remains shaken by the killings.

    “The only lesson I can offer is not to be afraid of the other person,” he says. “If I find myself next to a Jew at a cafe, we’ll talk. We have to go toward the other.”

    Washington Post, By Elizabeth Bryant 4 février 2016

    Copyright: For copyright information, please check with the distributor of this item, Religion News Service LLC.

     

    “There’s a real mix, both socially and religiously,” says Chiche. “The older generation who lived together in Algeria, Tunisia or Morocco, they know each other. They speak Arabic, Hebrew and French. But the younger generation has a harder time getting to know each other. More work needs to be done there.”

    Across France, anti-Muslim acts tripled last year from 2014, to nearly 400, while anti-Jewish acts were double that number, according to Interior Ministry statistics.

    When a Kurdish teen attacked a Marseille Jewish teacher with a machete last month, some Jews opted to remove their yarmulkes and keep a low profile.

    “I remain pretty pessimistic,” says Sammy Ghozlan, who heads the National Bureau of Vigilance Against Anti-Semitism, a French watchdog group near Paris. Like many others, he blames the attacks on young Muslims and, to a lesser degree, the far right.

    Those incidents add to a broader, troubling picture of race and religion in France. A new IPSOS survey finds more than two-thirds of French Jews believe anti-Semitism has greatly increased over the past five years. More than one-quarter of all French surveyed said they had personally encountered insults and other problems with Muslims over the past year, according to the report commissioned by the French Judaism Foundation.

    The 19th has its own share of problems. The radicalized Muslim brothers Said and Cherif Kouachi, who gunned down a dozen people at the Charlie Hebdo magazine before dying in a hail of police gunfire, grew up in the district. They joined an extremist network known as the Buttes Chaumont gang, named after a neighborhood park about a mile from the Argonne butcher store.

    The gang was dismantled a decade ago, and Deputy Mayor Chiche says anti-Semitic acts have abated to about a dozen yearly.

    But some experts believe November’s Paris attacks have led to a greater understanding among mainstream Jews and Muslims.

    Rabbi Michel Serfaty, who heads a Jewish-Muslim friendship association, says Muslim groups are now reaching out to him. “This is new,” he says. “They’re saying they can’t continue living this way, with misunderstandings.”

    The Argonne butchery, where a photo of the late Lubavitcher Rabbi Menachem Schneerson is pasted near the cash register, offers another example of relations that work.

    A steady stream of customers arrives before closing time. Leontine Duobongo, from the Republic of the Congo, studies the cuts. Raised a Christian, she converted to Judaism a few years ago.

    “My boss is Jewish so I became Jewish,” she says.

    The store’s kosher certification also draws Muslims who keep similar halal dietary codes.

    A native of Sfax, in southern Tunisia, butcher Zribi moved to Paris as a toddler in the 1960s, his family joining the waves of North African Jews leaving their homelands after independence. In the 1980s, his father opened the store, which Zribi helps run with a brother.

    The Zribis have installed a prayer room for their Muslim employees. They sometimes lunch together. Conversations are sprinkled with the Arabic from their homelands.

    For butcher Mostafa Makhoukh, a Muslim from Oujda, Morocco, the Argonne store where he has worked for 18 years is now “family.”

    “Working with Jews isn’t a problem,” agrees another Muslim butcher, Abdel Haq, who also comes from Morocco. “When it comes to religion, each person has his own convictions,” he says.

    November’s indiscriminate assault on Paris nightspots has drawn Argonne’s staff closer together.

    Zribi lost two Italian friends. Haq, the Muslim butcher, says he lost nobody, but remains shaken by the killings.

    “The only lesson I can offer is not to be afraid of the other person,” he says. “If I find myself next to a Jew at a cafe, we’ll talk. We have to go toward the other.”

    Washington Post, By Elizabeth Bryant 4 février 2016

    Copyright: For copyright information, please check with the distributor of this item, Religion News Service LLC.

     

  • Le budget participatif parisien à Paris19e

    #‎NotreBudget‬

    A Paris19ème, nous avons prévu 15 lieux de rencontres, de discussions et de votes sur le Budget Participatif Parisien ; alors si vous n'avez pas encore voté rendez vous sur le Site Internet https://budgetparticipatif.paris.fr ou dans l'un de ces points fixes :


    Mairie de Paris19e 1 place Armand Carrel

    Maison des associations 20, rue Edouard Pailleron

    Centre sportif Mathis 15, rue Mathis

    Stade Jules-Ladoumègue rue des Petits-Ponts

    Centre d'animation Place des fêtes 2-4 rue des Lilas

    Antenne Jeunes Flandre 49 ter avenue de Flandre

    Antenne Jeunes Solidarité 2 rue de la Solidarité

    Bibliothèque Claude Lévi Strauss 41 avenue de Flandre

    Bibliothèque Hergé 2/4 rue du département

    Bibliothèque Place des Fêtes 18 rue Janssen

    Bibliothèque Benjamin Rabier 141 avenue de Flandre

    Le 104 104 rue d'Aubervilliers

    Espace Riquet 53 rue Riquet 75019 PARIS

    BelleVille 15 bis-17 rue Jules Romains

    Danube Social et Culturel 49 bis, rue de Général Brunet

    budgetparticipatif, notrebudget, paris, hidalgo, dagnaud, paris 19ème, démocratie, participation citoyenne

  • Un militant d'extrême gauche agressé par des skinheads : il faut dissoudre ces groupes

    Ce mercredi 5 juin 2013, Clément, un étudiant, militant antifasciste de gauche, est mort à Paris sous les coups de militants d’extrême droite qui appartiendraient au groupe des Jeunesses nationalistes révolutionnaires (JNR).

    Je suis stupéfié qu’au XXIe siècle l’on puisse mourir à Paris – la ville de la liberté – pour ses idées.

    Je suis révolté que malgré tous les signes précurseurs du déferlement de haine cela n’a pas pu être évité, les coupables de ce crime odieux devront être appréhendés et punis.

    Une agression pas anodine

    Je suis surtout triste pour ce jeune étudiant, qui avait l’avenir devant lui, et pour ses proches.

    Un étudiant qui meurt à Paris ce n’est jamais anodin ; immédiatement, on pense à Malik Oussekine, Ibrahim Ali (tué par des colleurs d’affiches du FN à Marseille) et Brahim Bouarram (jeté dans la Seine lors du défilé FN du 1er mai 1995).

    Delanoe, Bouaram, Méric, Hidalgo, Paris

    Depuis des mois, Marine Lepen a voulu changer l’image de son parti, la dédiabolisation a gagné y compris certaines élites. On invite les responsables FN sur les plateaux de télévision, on refuse de se désister au nom du front républicain et on assure l’élection d’un candidat FN, on banalise ses raccourcis idéologiques.

    Pourtant, notamment portés par "la vague Marine" et ses disciples, homophobie, antisémitisme, et xénophobie n’ont cessé de prospérer ces dernier mois ; il est temps de crier ensemble STOP à la haine.

    Il n’est pas possible de laisser se banaliser l’idée que poser avec des néo-nazis n’a pas de conséquences politiques (Marion Maréchal-Le Pen s'est affichée aux côtés du chef de file du GUD et d'un militant du mouvement skin), il n’est pas possible de laisser prospérer des croix gammées sur les murs de nos universités (temple du savoir), il est enfin intolérable de voir des individus faire devant les caméras des saluts nazis, détruire des permanences électorales, et faire des "chasses à l’homme" à l’encontre de militants (comme a été pourchassée Caroline Fourest).

    Le dérapage de trop

    L’extrême droite doit être combattue avec force : idéologiquement, politiquement, ainsi que sur le terrain. Nous ne devons rien laisser passer, aucun dérapage.

    Pendant les manifestations pour le mariage pour tous, nous avons redouté ce moment où de la violence verbale, de l’incantation au choc de civilisations, naîtrait la violence de trop. Ce mercredi soir, l’acte de trop a été commis.

    De la même manière que que le groupe "Unité radicale" fut dissous après la tentative d’assassinat du président Chirac, les ligues d’extrême droite doivent être dissoute et ce sans plus tarder.

    Aujourd’hui, le préfet de police de Paris doit prendre ses responsabilités en rétablissant l’ordre républicain dans la capitale.