Tunisia Jewish man injured in knife attack; motive unclear

Tunisian security forces stand guard during a visit by the US deputy chief of mission for Tunisia and French ambassador at the Ghriba synagogue in the resort island of Djerba on May 26, 2024. (FETHI BELAID / AFP)
Tunisian security forces stand guard during a visit by the US deputy chief of mission for Tunisia and French ambassador at the Ghriba synagogue in the resort island of Djerba on May 26, 2024. (FETHI BELAID / AFP)

A Tunisian Jewish jeweler has been injured in a knife attack in Djerba, days before the island holds its yearly Jewish pilgrimage, community representative Rene Trabelsi said.

The motive for the attack, which took place on Thursday in the island’s Jewish quarter, remained unclear, Trabelsi says.

“At this time, we still don’t know if it was an antisemitic attack,” he said on Thursday night.

The jeweler was “doing well” following the assault, but “he had two damaged fingers” and “wounds to his shoulder and arm,” he adds.

The attacker, who was arrested, was armed with a large knife, “the kind used in butcher shops,” Trabelsi said.

Djerba, whose palm trees and beach resorts attract flocks of tourists each year, sits off southern Tunisia and is home to one of the largest Jewish communities in that region outside of Israel.

Each year, it hosts a Jewish pilgrimage at the Ghriba synagogue, Africa’s oldest, usually drawing thousands of pilgrims from Europe, Israel and beyond.

But after a 2023 deadly attack on the synagogue that killed two worshippers and three police officers, fewer pilgrims have turned out to make the pilgrimage amid tightened security measures.

On Thursday night, Foreign Minister Gideon Sa’ar condemned the attack on the jeweler and called “on the Tunisian authorities to take all necessary measures to protect the Jewish community.”

But Trabelsi, who is Tunisia’s former minister of tourism, said the statement “bothered [him] a lot.”

“I don’t understand the attitude of the Israeli foreign minister,” he told AFP. “We don’t depend on Israel. We are Tunisians in our own right. We depend on our country, which is Tunisia.”

Tunisian authorities did not respond to AFP’s requests for comment.

This year’s pilgrimage to the Ghriba synagogue is due to take place on May 15 and 16.

It is at the heart of the Jewish tradition in Tunisia, where only about 1,500 members of the community still live — mainly on the island — compared to around 100,000 in the 1950s, before many left for Israel and France.

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