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NYU Graduate Student Investigated After ‘F**k Israel’ Vandalism

A New York University graduate student, Naye Idriss, is under investigation after she wrote “Free Palestine” and “Fuck Israel” on a mailbag at the university's library, according to NGO StopAntisemitism, a watchdog group that monitors antisemitism. Idriss worked in the library as an Arabic translator, leading NYU to open an investigation. Idriss said her actions cost her the job.

Idriss, who was born and raised in Beirut, Lebanon, is a graduate of Columbia University and is studying at the Hagop Kevorkian Center for Near Eastern Studies at NYU, according to a tweet by StopAntisemitism. 

In 2022, StopAntisemitism issued a report grading 25 US schools based on antisemitic climate. NYU received a failing grade.  At NYU, the review said, “students report a hostile and anti-Semitic environment when their identity or Zionist beliefs are expressed.

The report went on to say that student groups at NYU, as well as Columbia University, approved resolutions supporting the Boycott, Divestment and Sanctions movement against the Jewish State of Israel.

Ohio Homeschooling Couple Indoctrinates Thousands of Children Through Nazi Education

Ohio’s department of education is investigating neo-Nazi ‘Dissident Homeschooling’, a homeschooling network that claims public schools are run by ‘Zionist scum,’ teaches kids to say ‘Sieg Heil’ in class and instructs fellow parents not to give their kids ‘Jewish media content.’ The couple who are running the organization are Katja and Logan Lawrence, or ‘Mr. and Mrs. Saxon.’

There are more than 2,500 members of the “Dissident Homeschool Network,” a channel on the social network messaging app Telegram. The “dissidents” are a group of Nazi parents who share homeschooling lesson plans extolling the virtues of Hitler and white nationalism — while relying on a popular social media account run by a Jewish woman to provide ammunition for their hatred. The founders of the group were recently unmasked by a hate group monitor as a couple in rural Upper Sandusky, Ohio.

“There is absolutely no place for hate-filled, divisive and hurtful instruction in Ohio’s schools, including our state’s home-schooling community,” Stephanie Siddens, the interim superintendent of public instruction at Ohio’s education department, told Vice News. “I emphatically and categorically denounce the racist, antisemitic, and fascist ideology and materials being circulated.”

Ohio Governor Mike DeWine, along with Rep. Bob Latta, whose district encompasses Upper Sandusky, and Rep. Jim Jordan, all gave statements to Vice News condemning the group.

“We are so deeply invested into making sure that [our] child becomes a wonderful Nazi,” the founder of Dissident Homeschool Network, who goes by the pseudonym “Mrs. Saxon,” recently said on a neo-nazi podcast to promote the group. She has been identified by the Anonymous Comrades Collective, an anti-Nazi group, as well as Vice News and HuffPost, as Katja Lawrence, a Dutch immigrant who currently lives in Upper Sandusky, Ohio.

Lawrence is a recently naturalized US citizen who frequently rails against other groups of immigrants on social media; her husband, Logan is an insurance agent. The Lawrences are so enamored of Nazidom that Katja uploaded audio of her own kids performing Nazi salutes to her Telegram channel and baked a cake to celebrate Hitler’s birthday.

Launched in the fall of 2021, the Lawrences’ homeschooling project is explicitly labeled as a means for neo-Nazi parents to indoctrinate their kids by keeping them away from public school. Lesson plans include teaching cursive by having students write out famous quotes from Hitler and American neo-nazi George Lincoln Rockwell; building “math” classes around racist manipulations of urban crime statistics; and praising Confederate general Robert E. Lee as “a grand role model for young, white men.” In idle chats, members of the group disparaged the Indiana Jones movies as “Jewish revenge porn.”

On the channel, Katja Lawrence frequently boasts about the size and strength of their Nazi parents’ movement: “There is a huge network of people like us.”

Las Vegas Man Arrested after Threatening to 'Shoot Up' Synagogue

UPDATE February 16, 2023: A Nevada Judge has decided Michael Sanchez will undergo a mental evaluation to determine if he will face criminal charges; more here.

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UPDATE February 3, 2023: Nevada Judge increased Michael Sanchez’s bail amount from $20,000 to $100,000; more here.

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Michael Sanchez, a Las Vegas man who allegedly threatened to ‘shoot up’ a local synagogue while he believed ‘the Jews and police were after him,’ was arrested by police Monday.

Sanchez is being held in jail on a $20,000 bond on a charge of making threats or conveying false information concerning acts of terrorism.

The Las Vegas Metropolitan Police Department report states the following - “On Jan. 29, a Rabbi at the Chabad of Southern Nevada Synagogue contacted the FBI about a threat he received on the phone “from a subject indicating they were going to come to shoot the synagogue.”

The Rabbi gave agents the phone number of the caller, and it was traced to Sanchez’s residence, the report said.

The FBI contacted the Southern Nevada Counterterrorism Center, and LVMPD officers responded to the synagogue and Sanchez’s home.

At the synagogue, the Rabbi told police he had received a call from Sanchez, who identified himself and said, “Michael made verbal threats towards him and the synagogue.”

“Michael accused him and the people that attend his church of being child molesters and killers... something in between the lines that they do not deserve to live,” an arrest report said. NGO StopAntisemitism tweeted such rhetoric was being widely spread by various groups like ‘Goyim Defense League’ or GDL.

Sanchez then brought up the shooting, which happened at a synagogue in Poway, CA, where one woman died and three others, including an 8-year-old, were injured.

Recordings of the call were given to authorities.

Investigators went to Sanchez’s home, and upon seeing officers, Sanchez told police, “he knew they were there because the ‘Jews’ sent them.”

While speaking to the cops, Sanchez admitted he made the call and threatened to “shoot up” the synagogue. He further stated that “the Jews and police were out to get him.”

He told police he was a veteran of the army and had been deployed to Iraq twice.

“Officers recognized in speaking with Sanchez that he was displaying signs of paranoia.”

When the police tried to get family contact information from Sanchez, he became agitated and said his family would tell lies about him.

It was later learned Sanchez had called the synagogue several times over the previous five days, making comments that “Jews are pedophiles and they were enslaving everyone,” among other disparaging comments.

Sanchez’s next court appearance is scheduled for Feb. 1.

Antisemitic 'GDL' Flyers Litter Rochester Neighborhood

Plastic baggies containing candy canes and antisemitic flyers were left at the end of several driveways in a New York neighborhood Sunday, officials with the Town of Irondequoit confirmed. These flyers are being distributed nationally by white supremacist, Jon Minadeo II and his group, the Goyim Defense League (GDL).

The NGO StopAntisemitism has featured Minadeo as a previous Antisemite of the Week’ due to his ongoing harassment campaign against the Jewish people.

The radical flyers inside the clear sandwich bags blame prominent Jewish individuals for a variety of perceived social issues. These include ‘eliminating religion, replacing it with science and materialism,’ ‘controlling the education system to spread deception,’ encouraging gun control, and more.

The Irondequoit Police Department (IPD) has been in contact with the Jewish Federation of Greater Rochester (JFGR), and is is currently investigating the incident, JFGR Director of Community Security Mark Henderson said. Officers went through the area early Sunday morning, cleaning up the flyers.

The flyers depict photographs of prominent Jewish people, with a Star of David photoshopped on the image, and a description of the individual’s alleged moral wrongdoing. In one flyer on gun control, the photoshopped Star of David appeared on each individual’s forehead, acting as a target.

At the bottom of each handout, readers are encouraged to learn more at the organization’s website, a YouTube-esque platform with countless hours of virulently antisemitic videos, songs, blogger content, and livestreams.

“This is an unfortunate incident that the Town as well as our Police Department takes very seriously,” Irondequoit Town Supervisor Rory Fitzpatrick said in a statement. “This is very disturbing. Irondequoit is proud of the diverse makeup of our Town. We welcome people from all walks of life and value their voices.”

Kentucky Op-Ed Causes Outrage after Claiming Authors Claim‘Jews Do Not Have a Monopoly on Persecution’

Rosalind Welch, Honi Goldman, Mary Lou Marzian, Maria Fernadez, and Tina Ward-Pugh penned an op-ed on National Holocaust Remembrance Day telling Jewish people that they “do not have a monopoly on persecution and atrocities.”

Even though the January 27 memorial focuses on the monumental tragedy of six million Jews killed by Nazi Germany during the Second World War, the Courier-Journal – part of the USA Today Network owned by parent company Gannet – lectured that the day be used to memorialize “every genocide” for the sake of inclusivity.

The op-ed, titled “Holocaust Remembrance Day is a time to remember more than one atrocity,” warned that fixating specifically on the Holocaust during such a memorial results in people “negating and trivializing the horrors of the past and the injustices of today.” 

It also made a point to remind readers, “Hitler was just one of many dictators.”

The claims made in the piece were blasted on Twitter for being insensitive and for obscuring the memorial of those killed with progressives’ “general identity grievance.”

The op-ed, composed by the outlet’s five opinion contributors on Holocaust Remembrance Day, began with the declaration, “As one Louisville rabbi recently said, January 27 is a teachable moment to remember all the hate speech and all the violence that is perpetuated against religions, races and genders, all those acts committed in the past and those that continue to this day.”

The piece then made a much more controversial remark, stating, “Jews do not have a monopoly on persecution and atrocities.”

The rest of the piece amounted to a mini-lecture for people who focused solely on the Jewish people during the memorial. It suggested they’re keeping other races, religions, and creeds down by doing so. 

The op-ed added, “For one group, for one person, to claim that the hate and violence towards them are more important than another’s, only encourages more acts of violence against others, including Black people, Asians, Hispanics, Muslims, LGBTQ+, trans-gender, and Native Americans. This list is not all-inclusive.”

The opinion contributors continued, saying, “If we as a community only focus on one religion, only one event, we are then negating and trivializing the horrors of the past and the injustices of today.”

They added, “International Holocaust Day is not just a mantra about one Jewish holocaust, but about every genocide, every mass tyranny that is carried out upon any group based on skin color, religion, gender identity, and ethnic background.”

The piece additionally commented, “Hitler was just one of many dictators. The list of tyrants, past and present, continues with the addition of names from around the globe today.” 

After continuing to assert the obvious, that there has been more than one evil person in history, the piece concluded with a call for readers to “be brave and protest violence against others and to recognize that hate speech grows into hate violence.”

Though Twitter users were not impressed nor inspired by this commentary. 

Jewish conservative and prominent Twitter user Noam Blum demolished the piece on the social media platform. He tweeted out an image of the article with the caption, “Brain-addled progressives cannot ever condemn antisemitism without burying it in a mountain of general identity grievance.”

Actress and writer Tracy-Ann Oberman urged the piece’s authors to go back to their history books on the subject. She tweeted, “You haven’t done your journalistic diligence, have you? You have no idea about the Jewish Final Solution of The Third Reich, the obliteration of one race. Do some homework and start by following @AuschwitzMuseum @HolocaustUK and @simonwiesenthal.”

User David Gaw reminded the authors, “No, Holocaust Remembrance Day is a day to remember the Holocaust. They even called it ‘Holocaust Remembrance Day’ to make this easy to understand.”

In response to the headline, NBC News social media editor Evan Rosenfeld claimed, “No, no, it’s not.”

Residents of Jacksonville Victimized in Wave of Antisemitic Flyer Drops Compliments of White Supremacist Group ‘GDL'

Plastic bags filled with antisemitic flyers and hate messages were left at homes in the Jacksonville, Florida area. The residents woke up Sunday morning shocked at the messages.

One neighbor says she became worried and called the police when she found the bag left in her driveway. She is Jewish, works at an Orthodox school, and has seen hate toward the Jewish community become more frequent.

This is not the first instance antisemitic messages were spread across the first coast. Last August, similar messages in bags were left in the Lake Pointe neighborhood. In November, an antisemitic banner was hung over 1-95. And after at least two recent football games at the TIAA Bank field, hate messages were projected onto buildings around the city.

NGO StopAntisemitism has identified white supremacist Jon Minadeo II, founder of the Goyim Defense League (GDL), as the individual behind the strategic littering of neighborhoods around the nation. StopAntisemitism has crowned Minadeo as ‘Antisemite of the Week for his antisemitic statements and actions.

In response to the increase, just last week, the Jacksonville city council passed a law prohibiting signs or messages from being projected on buildings without the owner's consent.

Rabbi Shmuli Novack, Chabad of Southside, says he has noticed an increase in antisemitism, but it doesn’t shake his faith.

"Instead of turning off, or terrorizing, or breaking down the Jewish community, what I think you’ll find is that folks are saying in the Jewish community, well this is my opportunity, I should be participating more," Rabbi Shmuli Novack of the Chabad of Southside, said. "Let’s act and behavior more Jewishly as the ultimate way to defeat these acts of hatred.”

Masked Man Attempts to Set NJ Synagogue on Fire with Molotov Cocktail

Update February 1st: The Department of Justice has announced Nicholas Malindretos, 26, has been arrested in connection with the incident; more here.

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A synagogue was left undamaged after a Molotov cocktail was thrown toward the temple in New Jersey on Sunday morning, police said.

A man wearing a ski mask threw the explosive at the front door of the Temple Ner Tamid around 3:19 a.m. before fleeing the scene, the Bloomfield Police Department said in a news release .

Detectives with the police department along with agents from the FBI and the Bureau of Alcohol, Tobacco, Firearms and Explosives were notified of the incident.

Investigators believe that the suspect is a white male and have released a surveillance photo of him.

Attorney General Matthew J. Platkin said in a statement that the incident is being investigated as a bias incident and that his office is working with law enforcement to find the arson suspect.

Platkin added that his office is aware of a second incident that happened on Saturday in Monmouth County, where members of a church were attacked.

That incident is also being investigated as a bias incident, Platkin said.

"We are cognizant of the fact that these attacks have occurred while violence continues to erupt in Israel, and while our own nation reckons with violence at home," Platkin said.

Bloomfield Mayor Michael Venezia said in a statement that the attack on the synagogue "did not work" and said that hate and antisemitism "will not be tolerated."

White Supremacist Group 'GDL' Cited in Palm Beach Over Antisemitic Flyers

UPDATE March 2, 2023: Palm Beach County files charges against GDL member Nicholas ‘Jehu’ Bysheim. Bysheim was charged with resisting arrest after being cited for littering; more here.

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Palm Beach Police issued “littering” citations to four men Saturday for distributing hundreds of antisemitic flyers to private residences on the island, a department spokesman said Sunday. Police identified the men as David Kim, Jonathan Baldwin, Jon Minadeo II, and Nicholas Bysheim.

The citations to the out-of-state individuals came at 5 p.m., shortly after police sent out an alert to residents to report any antisemitic material they may have received. 

Minadeo is a well-known antisemitic agitator who boasted on social media last year that he had been handcuffed and arrested for “hate speech” outside the Auschwitz concentration camp in Poland. He leads an extremist group called the Goyim Defense League (GDL) and its platform Goyim TV, which has distributed antisemitic flyers in cities across the country, according to national hate-group monitors. 

NGO StopAntisemitism has been following Minadeo and his white supremacist followers of the ‘GDL.’ In 2022, StopAntisemitism named Minadeo ‘Antisemite of the Week’ for his ongoing antisemitic rhetoric and actions.

In December, Minadeo announced he had moved the Bay Area-founded group to Florida.

Bysheim was arrested by Atlantis Police on Jan. 21 for obstructing a law enforcement officer without violence after receiving a littering citation for “throwing antisemitic hate speech flyers” on residents’ lawns, police said. StopAntisemitism assisted in the identification of Bysheim.

The Palm Beach island littering citations came after police say the men distributed flyers to residences. 

Contained in weighted, zipped plastic bags, the flyers decry nationally elected and appointed Jewish officials in relation to gun control, “the COVID agenda,” allegations that U.S. media are controlled by Jewish interests and the Biden Administration in general.

Hate crime charges, in this case, are unlikely, according to a Palm Beach Police spokesman.

Last week, Palm Beach County leaders held a closed-door meeting to push forward and expand plans to combat recent antisemitism displays in the area.

Under a bill introduced on Jan. 19 by State Rep. Mike Caruso, R-Delray Beach, anyone who projects antisemitic images onto buildings could be charged with a felony.

The Palm Beach flyer incident follows similar antisemitic occurrences in West Palm Beach and Boca Raton, in addition to Atlantis. 

Australian Company Produces Sickening Hitler-Inspired Valentine Merchandise

An online Australian company came under fire for selling Adolf Hitler "inspired" merchandise for Valentine's Day, which has now been taken down.

The site, Spicy Baboon, was selling mugs, t-shirts, stickers, cards and beer cozies with a cartoon depiction of Hitler holding a rose in his mouth and surrounded by hearts. Underneath the graphic was the caption "Be Mein."

In the product description, the site had written: "Nothing says 'I love you' more than Time Magazine's Man of the Year (1938) clasping a rose."

The site's owner Scot Mackenroth apologized and said that they didn't mean any harm by it or to offend anyone but claimed it was for humor purposes.

U.S. based NGO StopAntisemitism tweeted they “fail to find the humor behind the man who annihilated 6 million Jews!”

The Anti-Defamation Commission (ADC), Australia's leading civil rights organization, has expressed its disgust towards the Hitler merchandise. The ADC Chairman, Dr. Dvir Abramovich rejected the apology and urged them to meet Holocaust survivors so that they can understand the pain and suffering Hitler had inflicted on them.

"This is a new and perverse low in Australian retail," Dr. Abramovich said in a statement regarding the sale. "The words sickening, vomit-inducing, and stomach-churning do not even come close to describing this abomination, and it's hard to imagine anything more obscene that abuses the Holocaust and takes its vulgar exploitation to new depths. To use a monster such as Hitler, responsible for the extermination of six million Jews, including the murder of 1.5 million children, the gas chambers of Auschwitz, the execution of families in open fields, and the crushing of babies' skulls, to express love and associate him with Valentine's Day is a profound insult to the memory of the victims.

Second Bay Area Jewish High School Evacuated After Bomb Threat Called In

About 250 students and staff were evacuated, according to officials. The school postponed all homework and in-class assignments scheduled for the next day. In a press release, the Palo Alto Police Department said it was investigating the incident, and officers described the suspect as an “unknown adult male.”

Palo Alto police were not aware at the time of the threat to JCHS, Lt. Brian Philip said. Officers have been in touch with FBI agents, who will continue the investigation and determine if the incidents are linked, Philip said.

“It is not uncommon that there’s several threats made to similar institutions,” he said.

“We would like to thank the Palo Alto police for their immediate and thorough response and to our parent body for their calm during what was understandably an upsetting experience,” Pellant said in the statement to the school community. “Our faculty and students responded in an exemplary fashion. They have every reason to be proud of themselves.”

At 3:14 p.m., San Francisco police officers said they responded to JCHS, a day school with a student body of just under 200, after receiving a call about an unknown suspect “threatening violence against the school,” SFPD spokesperson Adam Lobsinger told J. in an email.

SFPD searched the school and the surrounding area before referring the incident to its investigations unit.

Brinner, the security representative, told J. that law enforcement experts are noting an upward trend of threats either phoned in, emailed or posted online to institutions of various stripes over the past few years.

“There’s been a broader wave of calls against schools, and last year JCCs,” Brinner said, a wave that included an emailed threat to the JCC San Francisco in May, prompting an evacuation. In 2020, the S.F. center was one of more than 50 JCCs to receive bomb threats officials characterized as “vague.”

In addition to contacting law enforcement in the event of a threat, Brinner also recommended that Jewish institutions notify Jewish community security experts, either with the national Secure Community Network or the Federation’s security team at security@sfjcf.org. The Federation can help facilitate security trainings and provide other resources to local institutions.

Maryland Attacker Uses Antisemitic Slurs While Viciously Beating Jewish Man in Supermarket

UPDATE February 28, 2023: Eugene Thompson, 19, was indicted by a Montgomery County grand jury on Feb. 23, on a felony count of robbery and a felony hate crime charge; more here.

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Eugene Thompson, also known as Michael Stewart, used antisemitic language during a robbery and attack that left the victim unconscious Wednesday at a Giant grocery store in Gaithersburg, Montgomery County, Maryland, Police said in a news release. Thompson was arrested and charged with assault and robbery. The State Attorney’s Office says they are exploring hate crime charges.

The incident comes amid a wave of antisemitic activity in Montgomery County, including four incidents of graffiti over the past two weeks at Montgomery County Public Schools, the deposit of antisemitic flyers at homes Saturday night in Kensington, harassing emails sent in December to Walt Whitman High School staff, defacement of the Whitman sign on the eve of Hanukkah, and a number of other episodes last fall.

According to charging documents, a man was shopping when he saw Thompson and a group of other men inside the store throwing fruit and other grocery items at customers in the store, as well as stealing donuts from the display case.

When the man asked them to stop, the group surrounded him, and an argument ensued, according to charging documents. At some point, the victim unzipped his sweatshirt to reveal a Star of David necklace and pulled out a pen to prevent the men from assaulting him, according to charging documents.

The documents allege Thompson noticed the necklace and put his hands up in a fighting stance. Thompson used antisemitic language against the victim and physically assaulted him, police stated.

According to charging documents, the victim stated that when he was being beaten up, he heard members of the group yell, “Yeah, do it for Kanye!,” although he wasn’t sure if Thompson also said those comments. The man believed the group’s statements were referring to celebrity rapper Ye (formerly Kanye West), who has made antisemitic remarks in recent months and been hosted by former President Donald Trump.

The victim lost consciousness, and the group left the store, according to the release. The victim’s keys were also taken after the assault.

Officers from the 6th District and Montgomery County Fire Rescue Services treated the victim on the scene. He was taken to a hospital with serious but non-life-threatening injuries.

Thompson was charged with first-degree assault and strong-arm robbery-related charges and is being held without bond. 

According to Lauren DeMarco, director of public affairs at the State’s Attorney’s Office, the case is currently pending trial and is under review. “We take hate crimes very seriously, and hate has no place in Montgomery County. If there is evidence that a hate crime occurred, we will prosecute it as such,” DeMarco stated in an email to Bethesda Beat.

In November, the County Council unanimously passed a resolution to address and combat antisemitism. It affirmed the International Holocaust Remembrance Alliance’s definition of antisemitism.

Pasadena Neighborhoods Littered with Antisemitic Flyers During Holocaust Remembrance Day

Antisemitic propaganda in the form of flyers made to resemble newspaper clippings was discovered by a local resident walking in the area of 700 S. Madison during the early hours Friday. 

Numerous driveways and yards were littered with antisemitic material inside plastic sandwich bags weighed down with rocks. These plastic bags were reportedly found on every property from the 500 block to the 1000 block of South Madison Ave. 

January 27 was International Holocaust Remembrance Day.

“This is one of the most disturbing things that happened in all the years. I’ve lived here in Pasadena,” one area resident told Pasadena Now. 

Over 50 such bags were recovered by Pasadena Police personnel, authorities said. The flyers were orchestrated by the white supremacist group ‘Goyim Defense League’ or GDL, led by Jon Minadeo II.

Neighboring streets were not affected and Pasadena Police do not have any suspect information as of this writing. 

City Public Information Officer Lisa Derderian said similar incidents have occurred previously.

“This is recurring and it’s unfortunate,” Derderian said. “Propaganda like this is not tolerated and this group deserves no attention as they hide behind literature and false accusations.”

Palo Alto Jewish High School Evacuated After Bomb Threat

A high school in Palo Alto was evacuated after it received a bomb threat via phone Thursday. According to the Palo Alto Police Department (PAPD), staff at Kehillah Jewish High School called the police around 2:54 p.m. to report a bomb threat. 

After officers were informed, the school evacuated around 250 students. 

Palo Alto police sealed off the school and prevented access to the campus while canines and officers searched the campus. 

Investigation reveals there was no bomb on campus. 

The suspect is a man who was not identified by police, according to the press release. He called the school’s administrative office and made the threat.

PAPD said there have been no similar phone-in bomb threats recently in the city. Anyone with information about the incident is asked to call 650-329-2413 or email anonymously at paloalto@tipnow.org or send a text or voicemail to 650-383-8984.

Staten Island JCC Daycare Cancels Classes After Receiving Concerning Message

The Jewish Community Center’s Berman Early Childhood Center in New Springville canceled classes Thursday after it received a “concerning message” from a caller, officials said.

The facility contacted the NYPD and the United Jewish Appeal⁣ Jewish Community Relations Council security team after receiving the communication, said Allison Cohen, the chief of communications and external affairs at the Joan and Alan Bernikow Jewish Community Center (JCC).

The nature of the call is not clear. The NYPD did not immediately have more information concerning the incident.

“Thanks to the quick response of NYPD and the FBI, the caller has been identified and deemed not to be a credible threat,” said Cohen. “Law enforcement will follow up with legal action.”

Police deemed it safe to resume operations, but officials decided to cancel classes for the day “out of an abundance of caution with the safety of our children and staff in mind,” added Cohen.

A normal school schedule is expected to resume Friday.

The facility, which opened in 2018, serves infants and young children, from 3 months to 5 years old. It offers several early childhood programs, with day care starting at 3 months old, Pre-K for All and the First Foot Forward program, a preschool for young children with disabilities.

The JCC evacuated its Sea View and Greenridge locations in spring 2022 after receiving an email containing a bomb threat, the Advance/SILive.com reported. During the summer of 2021, the Staten Island JCC in Sea View was evacuated after a staff member received a threatening email.

The incidents come amid a wider trend of threats directed at JCCs and synagogues in the United States.

Authorities late last year increased presence in Jewish communities in New York City after a hate crime threat that resulted in the arrests of two people.

Antisemitic Messaging 'YE is Right' Graffitied Across University of Alabama

Multiple antisemitic messages were discovered across the University of Alabama campus Thursday morning, according to a statement from the university. The statements, which were written in chalk at different locations on campus, were found just a day before International Holocaust Remembrance Day.

“The University was notified this morning about anonymous chalkings with concerning language targeting our Jewish community," the university said in a statement Thursday afternoon. "We condemn these chalkings, which violate our Capstone Creed, our campus culture and our core values. Our expectation is that everyone be treated with civility and respect."

"#YEisRight Friday 1/27" was the statement many students saw on sidewalks. Some also included a signature of "America First." The campus newspaper, The Crimson White, reported nearly two dozen chalkings were found around campus.

Ye, formerly known as Kanye West, is a famous rapper who has shared multiple antisemitic stances in recent months including a denial of the Holocaust.

Pictures were shared on Twitter by NGO StopAntisemitism. The group called on the university to investigate.

"We are disgusted that a group of white supremacists are trying to infiltrate an American University on Holocaust Remembrance Day," StopAntisemitism Executive Director Liora Rez said. "We are confident that the University of Alabama will do everything in its legal power to keep their Jewish population safe."

Chabad at the University of Alabama, self-described as a vibrant Jewish student organization at The University of Alabama, also released a statement Thursday.

"We are horrified by the antisemitism across campus today!" the group posted to social media. "This hate does not represent our campus. Our community stands resolute and determined, and we ask you to stand with us."

UC Berkeley Vandalized with Antisemitic Graffiti

Antisemitic graffiti was found on UC Berkeley’s campus Tuesday, with the words “No Jew Go Away” written in red marker on a door in the MLK student union building. A photograph of the graffiti was posted to Instagram by Associated Students senator Shay Cohen.

“We know that this is deeply upsetting to many in our community, and our first concern is to make sure that everyone feels supported,” Cohen wrote on Instagram. “Please do not hesitate to reach out directly to our office or other leaders in the campus Jewish community.”

UC Berkeley spokesperson Dan Mogulof said the university and the campus police were aware of the incident and that other relevant personnel and departments had been informed, including Ethan Katz, associate professor in the Center for Jewish Studies.

“There is no way of knowing if the person or persons responsible were affiliated with the campus,” Mogulof said.

According to campus police, an unspecified anti-Asian message was found nearby in the same handwriting. There are no suspects.

Cohen, a sophomore, was the author of a UC senate resolution denouncing antisemitism that in November failed to earn unanimous support when six student senators boycotted the vote. In October, Cohen spoke at a Jewish student forum organized by the S.F.-based Jewish Community Relations Council. The event was held in response to the controversy over the decision in August by nine Berkeley Law student affinity groups to ban Zionist speakers.

“There is no such thing as a ‘Jewish-free zone at Berkeley,’” Cohen said at the forum, referring to an inflammatory L.A. Jewish Journal op-ed that helped bring national attention to the issue. “But that is just a technicality. By saying Zionists are not welcome here, you are saying Jewish students are not welcome here.”

At Stanford last weekend, a photo circulated of a student reading “Mein Kampf,” Hitler’s infamous manifesto. The public posting on the Snapchat social media platform led to the filing of a “protected identity harm” report, a system that the university uses to address incidents in which students feel attacked due to their identity.

“What happened recently is about relationships, not books. We are working with students to reflect on their behaviors with accountability, integrity, and compassion,” said Rabbi Laurie Hahn Tapper, Stanford associate dean for religious and spiritual life.

Early in the fall 2022 semester, a hate crime inquiry was launched at the university after a mezuzah was “torn off” a student residence shortly after Rosh Hashanah. In October, Stanford formally apologized for enforcing quotas on the admission of Jewish students in the 1950s.

Wave of Swastikas Plague Maryland County Schools

Antisemitic graffiti was found on a desk today in Maryland at Colonel Zadok Magruder High School. This is the fourth time in the past week that antisemitic graffiti was found at a Montgomery County Public School, as over the weekend, MCPS sent out a message alerting the community that drawings of swastikas were recently found on desks at at three separate MCPS schools.

Magruder Principal Dr. Leroy C. Evans sent the following message to Magruder students and families:

“Good afternoon Magruder High School Families,
I am writing to share preliminary information regarding a very serious racially insensitive incident that is under investigation.  Today, antisemitic graffiti was located on a student's desk. We are in the early stages of our investigation at this time. We will be speaking with students who may have information regarding this incident.

Given the seriousness of this incident and heightened concerns around racial insensitivity and antisemitism, we seek parent support and involvement in speaking with your children in our efforts to eliminate this hateful and harmful behavior.

We are committed to providing a safe, welcoming, and respectful environment for all our students and staff. Bullying, harassment, and intimidation, whether in person or online, will not be tolerated at Magruder High School and is subject to serious disciplinary actions in alignment with the MCPS Student Code of Conduct.

Please do not hesitate to share anything you believe may be a concern to our school community. As a reminder, if you see something, say something. If you have any questions or concerns, please contact the school at 240-740-5550.

MCPS and the Board of Education released the following statement on Saturday:

“Montgomery County Public Schools, Superintendent Dr. Monifa McKnight, and the Board of Education condemn all acts of antisemitism in any form. This week, swastikas were drawn on student desks at three separate schools. In each case, students and the staff addressed the vile impact of the hateful images, worked to remove the drawings immediately, and in each case, appropriate discipline in alignment with the MCPS Student Code of Conduct was assigned. More important than disciplinary action, however, is what we do in response. As we fight these repeated acts of hate, we must challenge one another to learn and understand what antisemitism, hatred, and racism are and the harm they cause.

These specific three instances are not the first this year in which the Jewish community in our county and our schools have experienced acts of antisemitic hate or bias. We must do more, and we will. In collaboration with advocates such as the Jewish Community Relations Council, we will continue our efforts to educate our students about antisemitism. Our schools have held and will continue to hold restorative conversations with students and staff, and schools have held community meetings to discuss incidents, but honest and forthright conversations must continue. As a community, we must speak loudly and together against antisemitism and all acts of hate and racism. We must be inclusive and welcoming of everyone in our diverse and vibrant community. Our differences make us stronger and better and make our community an exciting place to live; there is no room for hate.

To learn and to do so at high levels, all students must feel physically and, yes, emotionally safe. When they experience anxiety because of acts of hatred, they can’t be at their best in their classroom. We must embrace the work necessary to ensure our scholars are in safe and welcoming school environments.

Our schools, school leaders, and board of education members stand together in solidarity to condemn antisemitism, hate, and racism—always.”

Delta Stewardess Touts 'You People' Before Booting Hasidic Man from Flight

A Hasidic man was forced to disembark from a Delta flight on Monday after being accused of bringing too much overhead luggage.

According to a VINnews report, a Delta supervisor later admitted that the passenger was a victim of discrimination.

The passenger – visibly an Orthodox Jew, as seen by his clothing – told VINnews  that after he was seated, a stewardess and a member of the flight crew approached him, saying, “You people always have tons of luggage. Why can’t you put the hat box under your feet?”

According to the passenger, he politely replied that he could and would do so if necessary, however, at that point there was no need, as the overhead bins were still empty. The stewardess then returned to the rear of the plane.

Less than two minutes later, he said, she returned, removed his carry-on suitcase from the top bin and started walking it out of the plane. Told that the suitcase was his personal property and that he had not given permission for her to take it, she replied, “If you don’t let me, I will show you.”

She returned the luggage, and he put it back on the overhead bin and sat down, he said.

About 15 minutes later, he continued, after everyone was settled in and there was still plenty of room in the overhead bins, security guards escorted him off the plane and began investigating the incident as well as questioning other passengers.

According to the report, security then informed the alleged victim that although he had done nothing wrong, the stewardess threatened to leave the flight if they allowed him back on, and they had no replacement. They reportedly removed him against his will and offered him a $500 gift card and a hotel.

VINnews reached out to Delta airlines and received the following response from a spokesperson: “Delta is aware of and in the preliminary stages of investigating a situation regarding a customer being asked to exit flight 1541 and be rebooked on an alternate flight. We are committed to using the results this investigation to come to a full understanding of the events that took place and respond as appropriate.”