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The desecration of the Jewish cemetery at Carpentras, an event that scarred the national psyche and did untold damage to France's image abroad, may be close to resolution after an investigation lasting more than six years.
The news that four men had been arrested, that two had confessed and that all four were believed to have links with a far-right movement, was greeted across France yesterday with a collective sigh of relief.
Jean-Claude Andrieux, the mayor of Carpentras - a rundown town set in glorious Provencal countryside - hoped it would now be able to "recover its honour". He has seen the town, whose Jewish community dates from when the Popes of Avignon accorded Jews special protection, become a pariah.
Investment has passed it by, as though outsiders feared its malign associations. All development, repairs and business give the impression of having been frozen for six years. On 10 May , France awoke to reports that one of the country's oldest Jewish cemeteries had been despoiled.
More than 30 tombstones had been smashed. The body of year-old Felix Germon, buried two weeks before, had been exhumed, impaled on an umbrella, and left with a star of David on his stomach.