ANTI-Semitic graffiti sprayed on a bagel shop in Paris has recalled the darkest days of the Holocaust.

The word “Juden” – German for Jew – was sprayed in yellow paint on the window of a bagel shop in the city’s 4th arrondissement on Saturday night.

4 The anti-Semitic graffiti was sprayed onto the bagel shop's window Credit: Central European News

This is the historic area of the capital city where thousands of men, women and children were rounded up by collaborating French police and German soldiers during the Second World War.

Many had to wear yellow stars identifying their religion, and their businesses were ‘tagged’ with the word Jew, before they were taken to their deaths in concentration camps.

“An anti-Semitic tag in the middle of Paris,” said France’s Interior Minister, Christophe Castaner, as he reacted to the latest outrage.

He added: “One too many. Juden in yellow letters, as if the most tragic lessons of history no longer enlighten [our] consciences.

“Our answer: to do everything to make sure the perpetrator of this outrage is prosecuted. Our pledge – don’t let anything pass.”

Gilles Abecassis, the owner of the Bagelstein shop on the Ile St Louis said: “We discovered this tag on Saturday morning and it was probably done overnight from Friday to Saturday.”

This was the day that the Yellow Vests – the social movement threatening President Emmanuel Macron’s government – went on the rampage around Paris for the 13thSaturday in a row.

They have been associated with a number of anti-Jewish incidents, and are known to number neo-Nazis in their ranks, but there was no immediate evidence linking them with the bagel shop incident.

Juden in yellow letters, as if the most tragic lessons of history no longer enlighten [our] consciences. Our answer: to do everything to make sure the perpetrator of this outrage is prosecuted. Our pledge – don’t let anything pass. France’s Interior Minister, Christophe Castaner

The Paris prosecutor's office has now opened an investigation for “aggravated voluntary damage” and “provocation to racial hatred”.

LICRA, France’s league against racism and anti-Semitism, posted a photo from Nazi Germany in 1938, contrasting it with an image of the Bagelstein graffiti.

Far-Right parties in France including the National Rally – which used to be called the National Front – have a history of anti-Semitism, and their members are regularly convicted for crimes including Holocaust denial.

Ariel Weil, mayor of the 4th arrondissement, said the perpetrators of the latest attack were among those who “were nostalgic for the Third Reich”.

Some 67,000 French, Polish and German Jews were deported from Paris between June 1942 and July 1944.

They were brutalised not just by the Nazis, but by French police and paramilitaries, and then herded on wagons belonging to SNCF, France’s national railway.

It is only in recent years that the French have begun to acknowledge the part they played in the Holocaust.

It was as recently as 1995 that the then conservative president Jacques Chirac finally publically admitted that French police and other authority figures had helped arrest 13,152 Jews on two days – July 16 and 17 1942 – in Paris.

MOST READ IN WORLD NEWS COV-ER & OUT Lockdown-free Sweden 'on brink of BEATING Covid after achieving herd immunity' GRINCHES Mum reveals HUGE Xmas gift haul for daughter - but some parents brand kid 'spoilt' NONE THE WEISER Inside of this house is larger than life… CAN you see yourself living here? OUT OF THIS WORLD Man transforms into 'alien' after having nose REMOVED & splitting tongue TAKING ITS TOLL Sweden says high virus death toll 'down to elderly surviving flu season' DOWN THE PAN Model jailed for spate of masked robberies as her life ‘went down the toilet’

They included more than 4,000 children, and all were held at the so-called Vel d’Hiv cycle stadium before being talem to camps such as Auschwitz.

Mr Chirac said in 1995: ‘Yes, French people, the French state, assisted the occupier in its criminal madness.’

The release of crucial records – including those of the collaborating Paris police – have made the work of historical researchers far easier.

4 A Jewish shop is vandalised in Germany in 1939 Credit: Time Life Pictures

4 The vandalism drew a strong reaction on social media Credit: Central European News

4 Jewish graves were vandalised in Herrlisheim in 2004 Credit: Rex Features

Holocaust survivor Leslie Kleinman BEM who lost his entire family in Auschwitz, tells his astonishing story of survival to The Sun