A Brooklyn synagogue with Holocaust survivors among its congregation was the victim of antisemitic graffiti vandals who spray-painted “Hitler” on its façade, authorities said Wednesday.
Councilwoman Inna Vernikov posted a video of the hateful message that desecrated the Beth Shalom Synagogue on Avenue X in Sheepshead Bay.
Vernikov said she had received a text message from Rabbi Asher Altshul, who saw the vandalism when he arrived at the synagogue around 6:30 a.m. “This is not something we’re [just] seeing in the media. This is something happening in our backyard,” Vernikov, who lives three blocks from the house of worship, said in a video posted on Twitter.
“There are Holocaust survivors who attend this shul,” she added. “And after the atrocities they’ve seen during World War II, they now have to come to a synagogue in the United States of America in 2022 and see a Hitler sign on the wall.”
Vernikov told The Post in a subsequent interview that officers from the 61st Precinct were investigating the alleged hate crime, while volunteers from the Shomrim patrol erased the hateful graffiti
“It’s very scary. It’s sickening,” said Vernikov, a Ukraine-born Jew whose own relatives were among the 6 million killed in the Nazi genocide during World War II.
The watchdog group StopAntisemitism tweeted about the vandalism, stating they “look forward to the NYPD finding those responsible for this horrific act and punishing them to the fullest extent of the law.”
Synagogue vandalism - the Congregation Beth Shalom of Kings Bay Brooklyn has been desecrated with grotesque Hitler graffiti.
— StopAntisemitism (@StopAntisemites) August 17, 2022
We look forward to the NYPD finding those responsible for this horrific act and punishing them to the fullest extent of the law. pic.twitter.com/0VsIhRlHyI
Recent reports show that antisemitism is on the rise in New York and across the country, with reported incidents ranging from physical assaults to Jew-hating graffiti and vandalism.
Vernikov said she’s pressuring educational institutions — including the City University of New York — to confront antisemitism among its own faculty and students.