ROUEN, France — French police shot and killed a man armed with a knife and a metal bar who is suspected of having started a fire that charred and blackened the insides of a synagogue in the Normandy city of Rouen early Friday, an attack the interior minister said was ''clearly'' antisemitic and which infuriated Jewish leaders facing a surge in hate crimes since the outbreak of the Israel-Hamas war.
The suspected arsonist was an Algerian national who wasn't flagged as a potential extremist, Interior Minister Gerald Darmanin said after inspecting the fire-damaged synagogue. He said the man had sought permission to stay in France for medical treatment and, after it was refused, had been placed on a police wanted list for possible return back to his country.
Darmanin praised the 25-year-old police officer for using his service weapon against the ''particularly dangerous, particularly violent" assailant who rushed at him with a knife, declaring: ''He was right to do so.''
The minister said the officer would be decorated for his ''extremely courageous, extremely professional'' behavior.
''This antisemitic act in Rouen affects all of us, deeply,'' he said. France is ''extremely determined to continue protecting all the Jews of France, wherever they are, who must practice their religion without fear."
In the wake of the Israel-Hamas war, antisemitic acts have surged in France, which has the largest Jewish and Muslim populations in Western Europe. France has also seen pro-Palestinian protests in major cities and students occupying university campuses in support of Palestinians in Gaza.
The main French Jewish umbrella group described the synagogue blaze as ''a scandalous message'' and ''a way of saying that Jews don't belong in French society.'' This week, a Paris memorial honoring people who distinguished themselves by helping to rescue Jews in France during the country's Nazi occupation in World War II was also attacked, defaced with painted blood-red hands.
''It's unbearable. It's more and more serious every day. After the antisemitic graffiti we saw in the past few days, antisemitic slogans, antisemitic insults, we now have attempts at setting synagogues on fire,'' said Yonathan Arfi, president of the Representative Council of Jewish Institutions in France.