promoting the
anti-Zionist list, featuring the quenelle gesture The name comes from a dish of elongated
fish balls, said to resemble a
suppository. Dieudonné first used the quenelle gesture in his 2005 show named "1905", while talking about a dolphin. Dieudonné used the gesture in various contexts, including for his 2009 European election campaign poster for the "anti-Zionist party":
Performance The quenelle gesture is usually performed by pointing one arm vertically downwards palm down, while touching the shoulder with the opposite hand. Although the quenelle is usually done with the hand at shoulder level, it can also be done with different variations (e.g., elbow or wrist level). Dieudonné described it as "a kind of
up yours gesture to the establishment with an
in the arse/ass dimension. But it's a quenelle, so it's a bit softer, less violent." Dieudonné and his lawyers filed a lawsuit against the League on December 13, 2013. Critics see quenelle salutes performed (and photographed) in front of prominent
Holocaust landmarks and Jewish institutions as proof of the prejudiced intent of the gesture. Individuals have been photographed performing the gesture at the
Auschwitz extermination camp, and
Alain Soral performed a quenelle in front of the
Holocaust Memorial in Berlin. One man subsequently sought by French police performed the quenelle at three locales connected to the murder of Jews: two at sites related to the March 2012
Toulouse shootings and the other near the Paris monument commemorating the Holocaust. According to
Jean-Yves Camus, a specialist in
far-right politics, the quenelle is a "badge of identity, especially among the young, although it is difficult to say whether they really understand its meaning". Camus stated that Dieudonné has become the focus of a "broad movement that is anti-system and prone to
conspiracy theories, but which has antisemitism as its backbone". Dieudonné describes himself as an
anti-Zionist, but not an antisemite. He stated that the quenelle is a humorous "anti-system" gesture which has no association with antisemitism, and Suit against unknown, those who compare the quenelle to a Nazi salute. On January 23, 2014 Dieudonné subsequently described the gesture as also being a sign of "emancipation" for people descended from slaves. Officially, French authorities said the gesture is too vague for them to take any action against Dieudonné. However, an official January 2014 circular issued by the
Interior Ministry specifically linked the quenelle gesture to antisemitism and extremism. In August 2017, the
Swiss Federal Supreme Court confirmed the conviction of three Geneva men for showing the quenelle in front of a synagogue, while partially masked and in military uniform. The men incurred a suspended monetary penalty for violating a Swiss law prohibiting acts of public racism. ==Notable uses==