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ISIS Threatens Global Attack Against Chabad Jewish Centers Worldwide

The security headquarters (CWA) of the Chabad-Lubavitch Hasidic movement this weekend joined the security unit of the Educational Affairs Division in issuing a rare global warning to Chabad centers around the world. The warning came in response to threats by the Islamic State (ISIS) terrorist organization, which announced plans to attack synagogues.

“In recent days, several threats from the ISIS organization to carry out attacks against various targets in the world, with an emphasis on synagogues, have been published in several media outlets around the world,” the message reads.

“Due to an incident of burning a Quran that took place in Sweden, and in light of the security situation and friction with the Muslim population in Israel, we recommend that you increase your vigilance in your surroundings at Chabad Houses and Jewish Centers,” the warning continues.

“If you have security in place, ask the guards to increase their vigilance. As in the case of any unusual event, we have informed the local police as soon as possible and requested they increase their presence.”

CWA Rabbis Shlomo Peles and Moshe Fleishman told the Hebrew-language edition of COL(Chabad Online) that in recent days, ISIS released a leaflet with statements that seems to be calls to their followers around the world, urging them to actually carry out attacks.

“It is not known which specific place, God forbid, they are planning to attack, so we have asked all emissaries to increase their vigilance,” they said.

Atlanta Area Jewish Communities Hit with Antisemitic 'GDL' Flyers

Residents in Dunwoody and Sandy Springs neighborhoods outside of Atlanta found disturbing antisemitic flyers in their driveways Sunday morning.

Dunwoody Mayor Lynn Deutsch posted a photo of the flyer on Facebook.

“The purpose of activities like this is to cause fear and to divide us,” Deutsch said. “I stand with our Jewish community and all who face intolerance. I believe that love always conquers hate. Please be good to each other.”

“The Dunwoody Police Department is aware that a number of residents of all faiths received antisemitic flyers in their driveways overnight,” Dunwoody Chief of Police, Billy Grogan, said. “We are actively investigating this incident and working closely with the Sandy Springs Police Department, as their community was victimized as well. If you have any information related to this case, please contact 911. There is no place for hate in Dunwoody.”

Sandy Springs Mayor Rusty Paul said on Facebook, “Overnight, some despicable individual(s) flyered our community with antisemitic, hate-filled material.”

Gov. Brian Kemp weighed in on the flyers, echoing sentiments expressed by Deutsch and Paul.

Paul said the city is checking security cameras in an effort to identify the “culprits” and “if legal charges are possible, they will be brought.”

NGO StopAntisemitism has identified the group as the Goyim Defense League (GDL), led by leader, Jon Minadeo II. Minadeo was named StopAntisemitism’s ‘Antisemite of the Week.’

A spokesperson for Sandy Springs police said they are currently investigating the flyers and that there have been no arrests yet as the investigation is currently underway.

NY Chabad ‘Mitzvah Tank’ Vandalized With ‘Palestine’ Graffiti Again

A mobile Jewish education and social services center in New York City was vandalized Thursday evening with the word “Palestine,” three months after an almost-nearly identical incident at the exact location.

The “Mitzvah Tank,” which is operated by the Chabad Jewish movement, was parked on Broadway Avenue in New York’s SoHo district when it was vandalized. The New York City Police Department is investigating and reviewing video surveillance.

On Nov. 1, the same Mitzvah Tank at the exact location was also vandalized with the word “Palestine” NGO StopAntisemitism expressed their outrage over the situation and sent their support to the Mitzvah Tank.

A Mitzvah Tank is a vehicle used by Chabad to educate the public about Judaism and provide social services such as feeding the poor.

“Our Mitzvah Tank was once again hatefully vandalized,” said Chabad Rabbi Yehuda Pevzner on Twitter. “@NYPD detectives are investigating and we hope that this case is taken very seriously. For more information, please reach out to info@mitzvahtank.nyc #LoLefached”

“Whenever darkness strikes we realize we need to work even harder to light up the world,” Pevzner told The Algemeiner. 

Swastika and White-Supremacist Graffiti Discovered in Wisconsin Community

Law enforcement officials in Adams County, Wisconsin, are asking the community for their help to find vandals who littered the streets with antisemitic graffiti.

Street signs and roadways were spray painted near the Grand Marsh area, including antisemitic symbols. 

The Sheriff's Department found it in the Town of Lincoln, and now they're looking for who did it. 

"Even though this could be just a simple act of vandalism or something like that, obviously, we still take it seriously -- hopefully, if somebody saw something, they can share that information with us, and we can identify the suspects and investigate it properly," said Sheriff Brent York. 

An area rabbi said he believes this was an act of hate. 

"It's a mixture of emotions when I see something that is such an obvious expression of hatred in a public place like this; it's truly upsetting and dumbfounding," said Rabbi Benjamin Altshuler. 

Rabbi Altshuler said despite that; he hopes incidents like this can be used to raise awareness. 

"Use this as an opportunity to stand and pronounce that we're aiming to create a welcoming community, that we are open to difference, that we affirm and recognize that diversity makes our community stronger," he said. 

And even stop fear in the face of hate. 

"I think if we do that outwardly and in a proud way, it shows that we're not afraid," said Altshuler. 

Claremont College Attacked by Known White Supremacist Group 'GDL'

On Saturday, Jan. 7, the Claremont Colleges Campus Safety Department was alerted that flyers containing antisemitic messages had been distributed both on campus and in surrounding residential areas. 

Administrators from Scripps College, Pitzer College, Claremont McKenna College and Pomona College notified their respective students and faculty of the incident shortly after Campus Safety became aware of the situation.

The posters promote the Goyim Defense League (GDL), an antisemitic extremist group led by Jon Minadeo II. The GDL operates a streaming site with thousands of followers that regularly espouses antisemitic content. The Jewish advocacy group exposing antisemitism - StopAntisemitism - previously featured Minadeo as their ‘Antisemite of the Week’.

Antisemite Jon Minadeo II during a ‘GDL’ stunt

The group has members nationwide and largely attracts those involved in various white supremacist and antisemitic movements. In November, the GDL organized a rally in LA to support Ye’s, formerly known as Kanye West, antisemitic outbursts on social media.

The inflammatory flyers posted in Claremont are just one incident of the GDL’s nationwide antagonism. The Anti-Defamation League reports that antisemitic incidents are on the rise nationwide. In the United States, Antisemitic events increased over a third in 2021 from 2020. 

In an email to the Pomona community, President Gabi Starr condemned the rise of antisemitic propaganda and affirmed the institution’s stance against hate speech.

“As an institution of higher learning, we are committed to the ongoing work of both opposing antisemitism and affirming a vital Jewish community life,” Starr said.

Pitzer Interim President Jill Klein echoed Starr and encouraged community members to “honor Pitzer’s core values of social responsibility and intercultural understanding” in an email on Jan. 9.

Starr later confirmed via email that The Hive and Pomona’s ITS building were the only buildings on campus to be defaced with the GDL promotional flyers. However, in the two days that followed the incident, two lime green posters that referred to Christian nationalist Julie Green as a “prophet” were taped to a light post outside of Estella Laboratory, near The Hive. 

Outside of the 5Cs, at least 11 houses near campus also received the GDL flyers. The flyers often included bible verses and targeted various public figures related to online dating and pornography companies.

According to the Claremont Courier, similar flyers have been distributed throughout the Inland Empire recently, including in nearby Upland.

Jewish Chaplain and 7C Campus Rabbi Hannah Elkin, expressed grave disappointment and frustration with the GDL’s vandalism.  

“[I was] unfortunately not surprised,” Elkin said to TSL via email when she recalled being made aware of the flyers. “Organizations like the [GDL] have been very active around the country, including posting similar flyers around neighborhoods throughout Los Angeles and Southern California.”

“[All of this] impacts every member of the Jewish community in Claremont,” Elkin said. “Even rhetoric and flyers are frightening because we have a lived and historical understanding of how speech can turn into violence,” Elkin said.

Oregon Area Town Targeted by White Supremacist Group 'GDL'

The community of Thurston is again seeing antisemitic bags on their streets and sidewalks, making it a second occurrence in less than a month.  

The bags are filled with corn as a means to weigh them down and contain fliers with antisemitic messages blaming the COVID pandemic on the Jewish people. Local Thurston resident Andy said that there are different types of contents in each bag, but are all equally shocking and inappropriate.

The NGO group StopAntisemitism tweeted about the incident, noting the white supremacist group ‘Goyim Defense League’ was once again responsible for the targeted hate campaign.

One of the major areas that was effected by this recent act included south 36th and 37th streets in Thurston.

“We're out yesterday and same thing, we see several of those bags out before the school kids come home,” Andy said.  “People in the neighborhood have been picking them up and throwing them away, trying to keep them away and keep the kids protected.”

Margot Helphand is a member of the Jewish Federation of Lane County and is saddened to see such hateful forms of speech being featured on the fliers in the bags.

"The American Jewish community has not seen this level of antisemitism since the 1930's, and sadly the Eugene and Springfield community is not immune,” Helphand said. “This hate, antisemitism, which has been called the oldest hate, is matched with escalating hate against other minorities as well.”

Springfield Police have stated that have a detective already assigned to the case and they are actively investigating. The department also advice members of the community with visual evidence such as a security video or a ring doorbell should email the department as soon as possible.

Armed Stalker Arrested Outside New York Synagogue

Beaumont Police have arrested Ahmed Abdalla Allam, a New York man following numerous reports of a suspicious vehicle near St. Anthony Cathedral Basilica School and Temple Emanuel, and investigators seized what they call an AR-15-style assault rifle and ammunition.

The Beaumont Police Department says it responded to numerous reports of a suspicious vehicle, a Toyota Rav 4 with New York license plates, occupied by a lone male, in the area of St. Anthony Cathedral Basilica School and Temple Emanuel. Witnesses say the driver would park across the street and stay for hours, sometimes days at a time. The driver was not cooperative with requests to move to a different location and at times was confrontational.

School officials reached out to Beaumont Police Chief Jimmy Singletary and expressed safety concerns for the students and the staff. Beaumont Police, under the direction of Chief Singletary, conducted directed patrol in the area.

Beaumont Police Press Release:

On Sunday, January 29 at 9:00 p.m., Ahmed Abdalla Allam, a 26-year-old man from New York, was operating the black Toyota Rav 4. Police stopped him for a traffic violation in the 700 block of Archie Street. Officers arrested Allam and the officer conducted an inventory of the vehicle subsequent to the arrest. The officer located suspected synthetic marijuana, an AR-15 style assault rifle and ammunition in the vehicle.

Allam was transported to Jefferson County Correctional Facility where he was booked in for Possession of a Controlled Substance and Driving with a Fictitious Plate. Additional federal charges are pending.

Beaumont police investigators are working with Jefferson County District Attorney Keith Giblin, the US Attorney’s Office, ATF and the FBI. Police had assistance from the Port Arthur Fire Department.

Police remind citizens to continue to report suspicious activity. If you see something, say something.

Teen Charged with Harassment after Threatening Maryland Jewish Center

A 17-year-old Montgomery County resident is facing charges of making harassing and antisemitic telephone calls to the Jewish Rockville Outreach Center in Maryland, police said Thursday.

The antisemitic calls were reported to police, as Montgomery County experiences a surge in antisemitic incidents. Antisemitic messages and graffiti have been found at numerous schools across the county in recent months. Antisemitic flyers also were found in late January on the porches of several Kensington residents. NGO Stop Antisemitism has linked the antisemitic flyers to Jon Minadeo II, leader of the white supremacist group Goyim Defense League (GDL).

In December, the Montgomery County Police went to the Jewish Rockville Outreach Center, in the 11300 block of Old Georgetown Road, where they met with a staff member who reported receiving multiple calls from a person who used antisemitic language.

After responding to the incident on Dec. 20, detectives from the police department’s 2nd District Patrol Investigations Unit were able to determine the identity of the caller, a juvenile who lives in the community, police said Thursday.

Police forwarded the juvenile's case to the Montgomery County Department of Juvenile Services for consideration, with the recommended charge of telephone misuse against the teen.

Also in December, a sign at Walt Whitman High School was vandalized with antisemitic graffiti. In November, antisemitic graffiti was found along the Bethesda Trolley Trail.

A $5,000 reward is being offered for information about those two incidents by the Jewish Community Relations Council of Greater Washington and the Jewish Federation of Greater Washington.

Santa Barbara Community on High Alert as Third Antisemitic Incident is Uncovered in Three Days

On Wednesday, Santa Barbara Unified School District (SBUSD) staff announced that graffiti of a swastika symbol was recently found on a pole in the Dos Pueblos High School athletic stadium. 

“While we have not determined the perpetrator, Santa Barbara Unified condemns this hateful act in the strongest possible terms,” the school district said. “A custodial team removed it immediately, and an investigation is now underway.” 

This is the third antisemitic incident to be reported in Santa Barbara County this week, following the spread of antisemitic messaging at UCSB and its neighboring community of Isla Vista. The string of incidents have occurred only days after International Holocaust Remembrance Day. 

SBUSD emphasized that it “opposes these acts and will continue to educate our students and our community in combating any and all acts of bias and hate.” In addition, the district said it has “several initiatives already underway to address racial incidents in our community,” noting anti-bias/anti-racist training for staff and the prepared launch of an education campaign against hate. 

“We stand with the Jewish community and condemn all forms of hate,” said Superintendent Dr. Hilda Maldonado. “What’s happened at Dos Pueblos and across Isla Vista/UCSB is troubling. We continue our commitment to identifying, responding, and providing remedies to racial incidents when they occur in our schools. We believe in and stand for the respectful treatment and dignity of all people as one of our strongest values.” 

The school district included that students and staff members should report any incidents to their school site leaders, adding that it “will address any situation swiftly and thoroughly.”

Man Opens Fire Inside Russian Jewish Center

UPDATE March 28, 2023: The district attorney initially charged Mishin with two felony religious terrorism counts with hate crime enhancements, but they were dropped after a preliminary hearing cast doubt on claims that Mishin’s actions were motivated by antisemitism. Two days later, on March 9, the prosecution filed additional charges based upon newly discovered victims. Mishin now faces six felony counts of interfering with religious worship—religious terrorism charges—with hate crime enhancements, plus seven misdemeanor counts for drawing a replica firearm and disturbing a religious meeting; more here.

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UPDATE March 17, 2023: San Francisco Superior Court Judge Michelle Tong granted a two-year gun violence restraining order against Dmitri Mishin. The restraining order will remove firearms from Mishin and prevent him from owning or possessing firearms or ammunition for two years; more here.

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UPDATE March 8, 2023: Presiding Superior Court Judge Loretta M. Giorgi affirmed the bulk of the charges brought against 51-year-old Mishin, but in a move that complicated the narrative brought by prosecutors and significantly changed the complexion of the case, Giorgi tossed out hate crime charges, determining they were not sufficiently supported; more here.

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UPDATE February 9, 2023: San Francisco District Attorney Brooke Jenkins said 51-year-old Dmitri Valerie Mishin has been charged with two felony counts of obstructing the exercise of religion, one count of misdemeanor disturbing a religious meeting, and five counts of misdemeanor brandishing a firearm. Prosecutors are pursuing his counts of obstructing the exercise of religion as a hate crime; more here.

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UPDATE February 5, 2023: San Francisco police investigators arrested 51-year-old Dmitri Mishin late Friday afternoon in connection with an incident earlier in the week in which Mishin entered a Jewish synagogue and fired off several rounds from a firearm; more here.

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San Francisco police and the FBI are searching for a man who opened fire inside the Schneerson Jewish Center (Chabad) in San Francisco on Wednesday night.

The man entered the Schneerson Center around 7:20 p.m. in the middle of a session on the life of the Lubavitcher Rebbe Menachem Mendel Schneerson, according to Rabbi Bentzion Pil, who leads the community.

The man said in accented Russian that he was from Mossad, the Israeli intelligence service and that he was going to start shooting.

“I thought he was joking,” Pil told J. on Thursday. “He looked like a Russian Jew.”

Located in a Richmond District neighborhood near what’s often called “Little Russia,” the Schneerson Center is a node of Jewish life for immigrants from the former Soviet Union in the Bay Area, where FSU households number between 15,000 and 20,000, according to Rabbi Shimon Margolin, who leads a local nonprofit serving Russian-speaking Jews.

After the man entered, Pil said he first asked whether he wanted to join their session. It soon became clear that was not his intention.

A jarring video of the incident captured on a security camera shows a man wearing a baseball cap, jacket and sneakers enter the room and gesture animatedly with his arms while speaking to those seated around a table. After about 15 seconds, he reaches into his jacket pocket and reveals a handgun. He appears to struggle to cock the weapon, while an elderly man makes a phone call and starts walking toward him. As the elderly man approaches, the suspect starts firing his weapon, and the elderly man crouches down. He fires in a direction away from those seated around the table, then proceeds to fire around the room while some people clutch their ears and duck. In total, the suspect fired between six and eight shots. Then he leaves.

“Everyone was stunned and shocked,” Pil said.

The video shows little movement from a dozen or so people around the table — many of whom are in their 60s or older, shul members said.

Pil said the group was perplexed. “It was so unexpected from him,” he said.

One person in the group said he might have seen the suspect before. Still, after the shooting started, Pil said he went into the kitchen to grab a knife, but by the time he got back, the man was gone.

After the man left, those gathered deliberated about whether to call the police, Pil said.

“I still believe it was just a crazy guy,” he said. “He didn’t scream any antisemitic words or expressions.”

Ultimately they decided it wasn’t worth contacting the police because they were unhurt, and they doubted the man would be kept in detention for long if he was caught.

Only the next day was law enforcement contacted after some of the younger community members heard about what had happened.

According to statistics compiled by the California attorney general’s office, hate crimes targeting Jews have been on an upward trend over the past 10 years. Jews are the most frequent target of religiously motivated hate crimes, numbers that accord with national figures.

In an interview with J., the rebbetzin Mattie Pil, Rabbi Bentzion Pil’s wife, lent another interpretation as to why the most senior Jews from the former Soviet Union did not contact the police.

“They still feel like they’re in the Soviet Union,” she said. “There, when something happens, it’s always the fault of the Jews. If you called the police, it would be your fault. So they didn’t want to make any waves.”

UC Santa Barbara Hit with Back to Back Antisemitic Incidents in Two Days

On Monday, UC Santa Barbara students and staff were shocked to discover antisemitic messages scrawled on a chalkboard of an Israeli Politics class on campus. One statement specifically read, “From the river to the sea,” referring to a common phrase symbolizing the total elimination of the State of Israel and Palestinian control from the Jordan River to the Mediterranean Sea.

Images of the chalkboard that were posted to Instagram have since been deleted, and showed the phrase “F*** ISRAEL” in large letters, surrounded by other offhand references to Israel and Jewish people.

On Tuesday morning, residents and employees of businesses in the neighboring Isla Vista community were startled to find hundreds of flyers distributed in the area spreading antisemitic ideas, denying the Holocaust, and seemingly connecting Jewish people with racism, homophobia, and pedophilia.

NGO StopAntisemitism reported on incident at UCSB and has also identified Jon Minadeo II, leader of the Goyim Defense League (GDL) as the white supremacist group behind the antisemitic flyer drops around the nation. Minadeo was named StopAntisemitism’s Antisemite of the Week.’

A joint statement about the incidents was released on social media Tuesday, signed by Jewish student organizations Santa Barbara Hillel, Chabad at UCSB, Students Supporting Israel, Mishelanu, and the school’s Alpha Epsilon Pi–Sigma Beta Chapter, which noted that the events took place within four days of International Holocaust Remembrance Day, saying they act as a reminder “that antisemitism is not a thing of the past but something that has become disturbingly common.”

In response to the incidents, UCSB released a statement saying the university “stands firmly against all forms of hate, violence, and discrimination, whether it is on campus or in our community,” and that the flyers “targeting the Jewish community” are being investigated by the Santa Barbara Sheriff’s Office.

Antisemitic Messaging Surfaces at the University of Florida

University of Florida President Kent Fuchs is responding to antisemitic chalk messages left on campus the day after a Jewish student organization hosted a Holocaust survivor.

The Chabad UF Jewish Student & Community Center sent a notice about antisemitic graffiti on and off campus. New messages were found on campus on Wednesday morning. Community center officials say a “propaganda group” is traveling all over Florida to spread their messages.

Some of the antisemitic graffiti includes chalk messages stating, “Christ is King #Ye24″ and “Ye is Right 2/2/23″ The messages reference the artist formerly known as Kanye West who has experienced backlash for a series of antisemitic remarks.

NGO StopAntisemitism identified and has been following the group, led by neo-nazi, Dalton Clodfelter, as they plan to visit Universities and Colleges around the nation to spread Kanye’s antisemitic ideology. StopAntisemitism recently named Clodfelter their ‘Antisemite of the Week.’

Fuchs responded to the messages left on campus by releasing a statemen

The messages were found the morning after Holocaust survivor Saul Dreier, 97, and his band was hosted by UF Chabad leaders. Dreier was born in Poland in 1925. When World War II started in 1939, Dreier’s childhood was cut short, and he went through three concentration camps.

Swastika Graffiti Discovered at Colorado High School

On Monday, January 30, an image of a swastika was found to be drawn on a poster in a bathroom at Crested Butte Community School in Colorado. When it was drawn or who is responsible is unknown. 

“This situation came to our attention on January 30 at approximately 8:50 a.m. The poster with the graffiti was immediately taken down,” said Crested Butte Secondary Principal Ernie Kothe. “CBSS assistant principal Mr. (Sean) McCune then immediately began to investigate the situation with camera replay and student interviews. The investigation is still ongoing.”

He continued, “In the meantime, sessions have been created for students by the counseling staff focusing on educating students on dignity, respect and tolerance. Our PBIS (Positive Behavior Intervention System) Seek the Peak focus will also be reviewed with students.

A parent of a student who discovered the graffiti shared with the News that they felt the school handled the situation very well. “The school was extremely responsive, and they have a plan. I think they’re handling it great,” the parent said. 

Jewish Child Strangled Riding Bus Home in London

A 12-year-old visibly Jewish boy in London was attacked Monday by a deranged antisemite while riding a bus home from school in the city’s Stamford Hill neighborhood.

The Stamford Hill Shomrim organization reported in a tweet that a 50-year-old man grabbed the boy by the throat and threw him off the bus.

NGO StopAntisemitism shared their horror over the antisemitic incident involving the attack against the Jewish child.

Antisemitic incidents in Britain reached a record high in 2021, the most recent year for which are there are statistics.

According to the annual report by the Community Security Trust (CST) there were 2,255 anti-Semitic incidents reported in 2021, a rise of 34 percent over the previous year.

The London-based Shomrim organization helps hate crime victims file reports with the police, and accompany such victims to court as well.

Jewish Cemetery in Serbia Desecrated by Radical Football Club Fans

The Sephardic cemetery in Belgrade, the capital of Serbia, has been vandalized in an antisemitic attack, the local Jewish community said.

Antisemitic graffiti was painted on the cemetery entrance by a group of ultra-right supporters of a Belgrade football club. The vandalism in the cemetery was reported to the authorities.

The Sephardic and Ashkenazi cemeteries in Belgrade are the only two Jewish graveyards still in use in Serbia.

In November 2021, the same cemetery was attacked when unidentified people smashed the windows and left an ax on the floor.

Following the latest antisemitic attack, Rabbi Menachem Margolin, Chairman of the European Jewish Association (EJA), wrote a letter to both the President of Serbia and the Minister for Home Affairs, calling for a robust response and asking to bring a delegation of Jewish leaders to meet and tackle the rise in antisemitism in Serbia.

In his letter to President Aleksandar Vucic, Rabbi Margolin wrote, “Mr. President, the small Jewish Community in Serbia seldom makes the headlines. This is in no small part to the effort of the government, and to wider society in general, for creating a friendly and tolerant environment where Jews can live and grow.’’

“However, when I receive a message from a prominent community member that not only was the attack repeated but that “things are not good,” I believe this merits a more robust response,’’ he added.

“We would like to entreat you to condemn, in the strongest terms possible, this latest attack and to launch a full investigation with a view to full prosecution.,’’ Margolin wrote, adding that he would like to meet the Serbian president together with a delegation of Jewish leaders to discuss constructive and effective ways to combat antisemitism.

‘’In this, we have much experience and a template we have called the “10 Commandments” that would make a meaningful difference. We would be happy to share them with you,” he concluded.

New York Regents State Exams Blasted for Shameful Antisemitic Questions

A Regents exam administered to thousands of New York students last week was blasted by critics as “unconscionable and shameful” for including “loaded” questions about Israel.

A group of Jewish leaders and civic organizations ripped a section of the test that showed maps of the changes to Israel’s borders over the decades and asked two questions that gave a “dishonest” impression about the Jewish state’s expansion.

“The maps lack all context,” former state Assemblyman Dov Hikind said. “Specifically, that border changes resulted from successive wars started by Arab states to annihilate Israel. Second, the questions, at best, lend themselves to debate, not to singular answers from among false choices.”

Hikind also said that the Global History and Geography Regents II, given last Thursday, included the trope that the Holocaust was the prevailing reason for the state of Israel and that “Zionists and Jewish immigrants” benefited most from the “changing borders.”

“When you show these maps and ask why the state of Israel was created, it just attributes it to the Holocaust,” said Hikind, who added that the Zionist movement toward the Jewish state actually began in the 19th century under Theodor Herzl.

He also complained that the test referred to the Golan Heights region, which was recognized by the US in 2019, as being “annexed” by Israel.

The questions shocked proctors charged with administering the test, he said.

“One proctor was so angry, she was beside herself,” Hikind told The Post. 

Hikind, along with Brooklyn Councilwoman Inna Vernikov and the group Americans Against Antisemitism, are calling on New York State Commissioner of Education Betty Rosa “to swiftly remove the disingenuous questions and conduct a thorough audit to ensure such egregious distortions of history that invariably lead to animosity for the sole Jewish state aren’t being inadvertently fed to our children.”

“Test transparency can raise legitimate issues of questions’ appropriateness and wording,” said David Bloomfield, an education professor at  Brooklyn College and the CUNY Graduate Center. “It’s not a matter of ‘wokeness’ to civilly debate these matters.”

Hikind said that by reducing the creation of the Jewish state to the Holocaust ignores all historical, ancestral, and biblical connections of the Jewish people to the land of Israel. “That connection goes back thousands of years.”

This isn’t the first time the Regents have had an Israel problem. 

In 2017, an “anti-Israel” cartoon blasted as “anti-Israel propaganda” was discovered on the Global Studies Regents.

The New York State Education Department said the two questions on Israel were “designed to test students’ knowledge of geography as it relates to historical events.”

“New York State social studies teachers prepared, selected, and reviewed the excerpt and questions on the Global History Regents Exam prior to their inclusion,” they added. “All exam questions are reviewed multiple times by NYS-certified teachers and State Education Department subject matter and testing specialists to ensure they are not biased, accurately measure the learning standards, and contain no errors.”

Antisemitic Content Found in Student’s Journal After Stealing New Jersey School Bus

Bader Alzahrani, a Saudi Arabian student who is in America on a visa, was arrested for stealing a school bus in Livingston, New Jersey, on Jan. 17. Alzahrani was charged with receipt of a stolen vehicle and transportation of a stolen vehicle. He will face a federal judge on Monday.

Court documents state that a bag with journals of antisemitic messages was found in a house across from the parking lot where the bus was stolen. The documents also state that a Saudi Arabian passport with Alzahrani's name was also found.

Authorities say that the journals had entries in English and Arabic. They contained such phrases as "God, I am ready for your orders. I want to live the rest of my life to serve you and the religion." "Blood, blood, destruction, destruction. Allah." and "Jews control everything."

Alzahrani is in the United States on a student visa. Officials say that he went missing in October from the university he was attending. Officials would not name that university.

The incident was very shocking to members of the community.

“I have a daughter, and that just freaks you out that something could happen,” says Miles Finney. “He could've tried to pick up kids; that's crazy that they let that happen.”

Alzahrani could face up to 20 years in prison and a $250,000 fine if he is convicted.

White Supremacist Group 'GDL' Antisemitic Flyers Target Charlottesville Community

Antisemitic flyers were distributed throughout Charlottesville’s Barracks Rugby and Venable neighborhoods over the weekend in what appears to be part of a national public relations stunt by the Goyim Defense League (GDL) hate group.

Congregation Beth Israel, Charlottesville’s only synagogue whose temple is the oldest still standing in the commonwealth, warned its congregants Monday morning to “be aware of their own personal safety when in public and at their home.”

Former Charlottesville Mayor Mike Signer, who is Jewish, told The Daily Progress his street was in one of the neighborhoods the campaign targeted. He said he found the leaflets scattered on several nearby driveways on Saturday morning as he walked out to fetch the morning newspaper.

The leaflets distributed in Charlottesville were sealed in plastic bags filled with corn kernels in an apparent attempt to keep them from blowing away. “Every single aspect of the media is Jewish,” they read. “6 Jewish corporations own 96% of the media.”

The leaflets also have an advertisement for Goyim TV, a video platform owned by the Goyim Defense League and operated by self-proclaimed white supremacist Jon Minadeo II.

Minadeo’s best-known work is a banner his group claims it hung last year across a Los Angeles freeway that read, “Kanye is right about the Jews.” The rapper formerly known as Kanye West had earlier previously engaged in several rants on podcasts and social media attacking Jews.

NGO StopAntisemitism named Jon Minadeo II their ‘Antisemite of the Week.’

Congregation Beth Israel has encouraged its members to attend the synagogue’s periodic security trainings, which include “Situation Awareness,” “Run, Hide, Fight,” “Stop the Bleed,” and “White Supremacist Threat.”

Virginia Republicans Del. Terry Kilgore and state Sen. Bryce Reeves have introduced bills in the House of Delegates and state Senate, respectively, that would enforce higher criminal penalties for antisemitic hate crimes and require those crimes be entered into a database maintained by the Virginia State Police.