Users posted photos of public figures including Michael Jackson, Robert De Niro and Russian President Vladimir Putin with a skullcap on their heads while calling on members of the general public to join the campaign and wear a kippa on Friday at 10 A.M.
King of pop and King of kippa! #TousAvecUneKippa pic.twitter.com/sg2iqzX47T
— Sophie (@mllesosso) January 13, 2016
"You're talking to me?" #TousAvecUneKippa pic.twitter.com/tbVVBpiNr9
— Sophie (@mllesosso) January 12, 2016
The campaign was launched in the wake of recent hate crimes committed against Jews in France. Those assaults included the stabbing of a Jewish man in Marseille on Tuesday, allegedly by a 15-year-old Muslim radical. Another incident took place in November when a Jewish teacher was stabbed by a man who yelled insults at him along with two other men, one of whom was wearing a T-shirt with the logo of the Daesh extremist group. There have been other incidents involving knifes and other cutting weapons.
The calls, however, were met with harsh criticism from other representatives of the community, including Michele Teboul, president of the local branch of CRIF — a political umbrella group that lobbies for French Jewish communities.
Teboul told the Jewish Telegraphic Agency that she "could not support a measure which dials back hundreds of years during which Jews were able to practice their faiths and live freely as citizens of the French Republic."
According to population estimates, about one third of the 850,000 residents of Marseille are Muslims and around 80,000 are Jews.