A mosque in Jargeau, near Orléans, France, has received a new threat letter warning that it will be burned down again — eight months after the same mosque was deliberately set on fire in February 2025, just days before Ramadan, according to a report by the French outlet Mediapart.
“No Mosque in Jargeau — It Will Burn Again”
The threatening letter was delivered on October 28, 2025 to the French-Turkish Cultural Association of Jargeau, which owns the city’s mosque.
The message read:
“No mosque in Jargeau. Don’t bother rebuilding it — it will burn quickly.”
This chilling note recalled the night of February 26, 2025, when the mosque’s prayer hall was set ablaze in a deliberate arson attack — destroying the building entirely and traumatizing the local Muslim community.
The association had previously received a handwritten letter in 2023 reading:
“Get out, you Turks.”
For many congregants, this new threat brings back painful memories of that earlier hate message which preceded the actual arson by just months.
Community Fear and Frustration
“We are disgusted,” said Ali Ozturk, a member of the association.
“The first time we received a letter like this, our mosque was burned down. We can’t take it lightly. It shows that there’s still someone — or a group — nearby that poses a real threat to the community.”
Since the fire, Muslims in Jargeau have been praying in a temporary prayer hall within the association’s building. They have also applied for permission to rebuild the destroyed mosque — but progress has been slow, leaving the community both spiritually and physically displaced.
Despite the Orléans public prosecutor’s office opening an investigation earlier this year, no suspects have been identified.
“It’s shocking,” said Ozturk. “We can’t understand how, after all these months, there are still no results. The fact that we’re still receiving such letters means that the necessary measures have not been taken.”
Authorities Under Pressure
Speaking to Mediapart, the Orléans public prosecutor acknowledged the frustration of the victims, saying she “understands the impatience of the civil parties,” but insisted that
“the procedures are moving at a normal pace,”
and that the case “is being handled with the utmost seriousness and has been referred to the investigative unit.”
However, for many Muslims in Jargeau and across France, the slow pace of justice only reinforces a sense of neglect and institutional indifference toward anti-Muslim hate crimes.
Islamophobia on the Rise
Mediapart noted that the Jargeau mosque is not an isolated case. In 2024 alone, five mosques in the Orléans region received similar threat letters, reflecting a broader and growing wave of Islamophobia across France.
The pattern — hate mail, vandalism, and arson against Muslim institutions — underscores a dangerous normalisation of anti-Muslim sentiment, fueled by racist rhetoric and political silence in the face of escalating hate crimes.
Editorial Context: A Mirror of Europe’s Islamophobia Crisis
This case once again highlights the rising hostility toward Muslims in Europe, particularly in France, where the rhetoric of “secularism” has often been used to justify restrictions on Islamic identity — from mosque closures and hijab bans to the criminalisation of solidarity with Gaza.
The continued impunity surrounding such hate crimes not only threatens French Muslims’ safety but also exposes the moral contradiction of a state that claims to defend freedom of belief while failing to protect Muslim citizens and their places of worship.







