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Swastikas Discovered at Southern California Beach

A set of beach access stairs near Camino de la Costa in La Jolla’s Lower Hermosa neighborhood was vandalized with Nazi symbols and the numbers “1602” spray-painted on it over the weekend.

The incident was reported to the city of San Diego via the Get It Done app and the Bird Rock Maintenance Assessment District. It wasn’t known when the graffiti was painted.

The Nazi symbols were painted over, though it wasn’t immediately clear when or whether it was by the city or a resident. The references to 1602 remained.

The staircase has been deteriorating for years, with the concrete crumbling and the rebar rusted. However, the stairs recently got the attention of the state Legislature. Last year, when California Gov. Gavin Newsom signed the state’s $308 billion budget into law, $2 million was set aside to repair the staircase.

Long Island Synagogue Forced to Evacuate Over Bomb Threat

The sign at Temple Beth David in Commack marks the Jewish New Year, but it began with a scare for the congregation, after receiving an email with a bomb threat.

This threat follows a series of synagogues forced to evacuated last weekend due to bomb threats. StopAntisemitism shared several areas affected by these threats on Twitter.

"It was a graphic sentence that there would be people in pools of blood," Rabbi Beth Klafter said.

The attack didn't happen, and it turns out, the threat was one of give at Long Island synagogues over the holiday weekend.

Additionally, MacArthur Airport received a threat. Police say all the threats were unfounded.

And while this is all unsettling, Rabbi Klafter believes her congregants will continue to show up.

"I think it's a feeling we want to be together, and we will not let actions like this get in our way," she said.

But antisemitic actions are becoming more prevalent.

"That's one antisemitic attack -- physical, verbal every 33 hours here in New York," Hochul said.

To fight the antisemitic attacks, Governor Hochul announced a number of steps on Tuesday, including: the creation of an anti-hate education center, improved collection of data involving hate incidents and hate crime seminars for law enforcement.

"Certainly, it's a step in the right direction," Rabbi Jessica Rosenthal said.

Rabbi Rosenthal's congregation B'nai Israel Temple in Oakdale was also targeted with an email threat. B'nai Israel will have increased security for Yom Kippur services, Sunday and Monday. She expects a strong attendance.

"When we receive hateful word and hateful messages it's very difficult, but I also think that one of the most important things that I can say about it is that we can't let this hatred or this antisemite define who we are," she said.

Rosh Hashanah Celebration at Ohio Synagogue Interrupted by Bomb Threat

With more than 300 people praying in Temple Israel’s Great Hall on the first day of Rosh Hashanah, Dayton police cruisers converged to block the congregation’s main entrance at about 11:30 a.m. because of a swatting threat. Jewish new year services continued uninterrupted with no incidents through their scheduled 1 p.m. conclusion.

“Someone called the national suicide hotline at 988 and reported that they were going to commit suicide, and they were going to take as many Jews at Temple Israel in Dayton with them,” Suzanne Shaw, Temple Israel’s executive director, told The Observer about the Sept. 16 threat.

Swatting calls aim to cause disruption and trigger a large-scale police response.

Shaw said law enforcement traced the swatting call to Washington, D.C. and notified the D.C. police. Dayton’s police, Shaw said, “ended up coming here in force.”

“We had four or five cruisers blocking the entrance for a while and they ended up leaving two or three cruisers here for the rest of the day.”

Security organizations across the United States warned Jewish congregations going into the Rosh Hashanah holiday to be on alert for bomb and swatting threats, and that although no previous case was credible, all threats should be taken seriously.

JTA reported bomb threats at “a number of synagogues across the United States” over the two days of Rosh Hashanah. All the cases were deemed not credible, and no incidents of violence were reported during the holiday weekend.

Even so, at a handful of congregations, Rosh Hashanah services were evacuated or delayed because of the threats. During Rosh Hashanah, the swatting calls broke into public view in at least half a dozen cases. In many cases, the threats have targeted synagogues that livestream their services so the perpetrators can watch the response in real time.

“We generally have a police cruiser at the entranceway,” Shaw said of Dayton’s Temple Israel. “The police go through here, they go through the perimeter and everything else before services, and everything’s locked down at that point. And then we have hired security around the building. And once services start, we just have one door to come in. Everything’s armed. We’re pretty locked down for the High Holidays.”

After Temple Israel’s Sept. 16 services, participants joined in a tashlich ceremony at the bank of the Miami River behind the temple, with security and the increased police presence.

“Police responded the way they should, everything was locked down tight, security was out back, and you didn’t know anything about it, and you could continue to worship and not worry about that,” Shaw said.

New York Man Arrested for Disrupting Rosh Hashana Services

A man accused of disrupting a service at a Brighton synagogue over the weekend has been arrested, according to Brighton police.

Christopher Avila, 31, of Farmington, Ontario County, was charged with disruption or disturbance of a religious service, a misdemeanor, in connection with the incident that took place during a Rosh Hashana service at Temple B'rith Kodesh in Brighton on Friday night. 

Avila is accused of causing a disruption by "rambling loudly" at the start of the service inside the synagogue, according to Brighton police. He was detained by police at the scene.

Brighton Police Chief Dave Catholdi said that Avila "is known to law enforcement," but police cannot comment further on any criminal history.

The incident at Temple B'rith Kodesh was one of three unsettling incidents that occurred at houses of worship in the Rochester region over the weekend, as members of the Jewish community celebrated the Rosh Hashana holiday.

Rosh Hashana, which translates from Hebrew to mean the “head” of the year, is commemorated with special

On Sunday morning, two Jewish congregations received identically worded bomb threats via email. One email threatened Temple Beth-El in Geneva, Ontario County, and the second threatened Congregation Etz Chaim in Perinton, which worships in the same building that houses Mountain Rise United Church of Christ.

Both buildings were evacuated and searched by police.

The New York State Police Hate Crimes Task Force and Federal Bureau of Investigation were both alerted to the threats and will further investigate both bomb threats, said Mark Henderson, regional security director for the Jewish Federation of Greater Rochester.

New York Synagogue Forced to Close from Ominous Threats During Rosh Hashanah

Temple Israel in Albany was one of multiple synagogues targeted with a bomb threat on Friday, forcing the congregation to evacuate as Rosh Hashanah began. The threat against the temple comes among a trend of rising antisemitic incidents in New York and nationwide.

Synagogues in a dozen states also were targeted, including bomb threats made in Los Angeles, San Francisco, Cleveland and New York City. StopAntisemitism - a Jewish watchdog organization reporting on antisemitic events - shared a list of synagogues targeted over the weekend.

Rabbi Wendy Anderson said that police officers responded to the synagogue when the evening service was nearly done and asked everyone to move outside. The synagogue was equipped with a security guard who recorded the names of all who entered and was able to confirm all had been evacuated.

The building was searched by police and K-9 units and deemed safe for Saturday’s service for the Jewish New Year celebration.

Anderson, who started at Temple Israel in July, said she had heard of “swatting” incidents like that one, which involved calling bomb threats to synagogues in various cities.

“Why does some jerk with a phone and the ability to Google ‘when is Rosh Hashanah?’ get to interfere with our service?” Anderson said.

The rabbi said the incident was not unlike many other increasing instances of antisemitic threats across the country. The police had previously practiced emergency drills at the synagogue, and Anderson was part of a security briefing before the high holidays out of caution.

Anderson said that the antisemitic incident showed that security in place at Temple Israel worked well. Of more concern to the rabbi is how antisemitism is creating fear about hosting Jewish community events and wearing traditional religious items, like kippahs, in public.

Saturday’s Rosh Hashanah services were attended by hundreds of worshippers, including Albany Mayor Kathy Sheehan, who came to show her support following the incident.

“I went to Rosh Hashanah services to ensure that the members of Temple Israel know that they are not alone in this fight against hatred and bigotry, and I am grateful for the warm and welcoming reception I received,” Sheehan said.

Sheehan said the incident was a reminder that antisemitism is rising everywhere, including in Albany. She said that the Albany Police Department responded quickly and will continue to monitor synagogues during the holiday season.

“It just really affirmed how great of a community we have at Temple Israel, the Jewish community and also in Albany,” Anderson said.

Following the holiday weekend, Gov. Kathy Hochul addressed antisemitism across New York in a news conference at the Center for Jewish History on Tuesday, saying that everyone deserves to “worship without anxiety.”

Hochul said that New York is reaffirming its support for the Jewish community during their high holiday celebration and leading the nation in fighting antisemitism.

“We will be the place where we teach what tolerance and understanding are all about,” Hochul said. “You cannot ignore the seeds of hate and antisemitism that have been planted.”

Hochul also announced more funding to fight antisemitism and hate crimes. Those efforts include the establishment of a state education center, an increase in data collection on hate and bias by the state Division of Human Rights, and reinforcement of mental health programs for Jewish communities facing antisemitism.

“This is not just a Jewish experience,” Hochul said. “This hurts all of us.”

The governor also said that $500,000 would go to community organizations to fight antisemitism and hate, while an additional $38 million would be allocated for securing physical sites, including synagogues, from hate crimes, an initiative that had previously received $150 million in funding.

Ambassador Deborah Lipstadt, the U.S. State Department’s special envoy to monitor and combat antisemitism, spoke at the news conference and commended Hochul’s dedication to the issue, saying that fighting hate helps all groups that face discrimination.

“Hate cannot be fought in silos. What begins with Jews rarely ever ends with Jews,” Lipstadt said. “It has to be a whole-of-society approach. Speak up.”

Anderson also expressed concern about the growing hate she has seen across many minority groups.

“I also worry that usually antisemitism isn’t by itself,” Anderson said. “The people who hate Jews probably hate a bunch of other minority groups, too. We may be the canary in the coal mine for the rise of certain kinds of extremism.”

Hochul also called on other states and countries to dedicate resources to combating antisemitism.

“Follow our lead,” Hochul said.

New Hampshire Property Defaced with Antisemitic Graffiti

More antisemitic graffiti was found on the former Laconia State School property over the weekend, prompting an investigation involving the Laconia Police Department, the Civil Rights Unit of the state Attorney General’s Office and the Federal Bureau of Investigation.

The vandalism included swastikas, references to and recruiting information for several white supremacist groups and, notably, threatening language targeting and naming a prominent member of the city’s Jewish community, according to Laconia Police Chief Matt Canfield.

LPD was called around 8 a.m. Sunday morning by a community member walking the property who saw the graffiti. The tagging was found on a former water control building and a water tower off Eastman Road and Green Street.

“Any act of antisemitic graffiti, or actions, we take very seriously — whether it's a swastika carved on a park bench or this graffiti, it's all wrong,” Canfield said. “We will not tolerate it and will bring all law enforcement resources to bear to investigate these types of crimes and do all we can to find the perpetrators and prosecute them to the fullest extent.”

Canfield said he hopes the investigation reveals any potential links between this and past instances of hate symbols tagged at the State School and other places in the city. In addition to its investigation, the department has staged two camera surveillance trailers on the property.

City leaders, including the mayor, city manager and members of the Human Relations Committee and of city council, held a meeting with law enforcement and faith-based community leaders Tuesday afternoon.

Ira Keltz, president of Temple B'nai Israel, released a statement Tuesday, signed by himself and Rabbi Jan Katz. It reads, in part, "Rosh Hashanah is a time of reflection, renewal, and hope. This reprehensible act goes against the principles of tolerance, respect, and understanding that our community holds dear.

"We are deeply saddened that such hatred and bigotry exist in our community. We firmly believe that our diversity is our strength, and we will not allow the actions of a few to define our town. Instead, we will use this incident as an opportunity to come together as a community and to educate ourselves and others about the importance of acceptance and respect for all.

We are grateful to be a part of a town where our neighbors, friends, and community members continue to offer their assistance and solidarity. Together, we will stand strong against antisemitism and all forms of hatred, ensuring that Laconia remains a place of unity and compassion for all."

Ahead of the meeting, city leaders firmly condemned the vandalism, which was discovered during the Jewish holiday of Rosh Hashanah.

“I am outraged by these acts,” Mayor Andrew Hosmer said Tuesday. “I feel it stands as a very sobering reminder that there are neo-Nazis and white supremacists embedded in our extended communities. We have to be vigilant in protecting our freedoms, our fellow citizens, defending our shared values in this community.”

Any act of hate is a call to action for the entire city, Hosmer said. “We'll do whatever is necessary to either educate folks about the dangers of this type of extremism, to shed some light on the darkness of ignorance that's perpetrated by these groups and to stand together for each other and not let this type of behavior divide our community.” 

“To say that we are saddened and appalled by what was found would be an understatement,” City Manager Kirk Beattie said. Working with both law enforcement and community groups, especially faith-based organizations, “we're showing a united front both in how we're investigating this, but also how we work together to move forward from what's happening.”

A year ago, also around the Rosh Hashanah holiday, Nazi symbols were found in graffiti at Opechee Park and at the Laconia Public Library. Laconia police also found antisemitic graffiti at the State School property at the end of last year.

“I think it's fair to say that what we saw in the past to what we saw now, especially where a member of the community has been named ... that there is an escalation in that,” Beattie said. “The police department is working to make sure that the member of the community who was named feels safe and knows that we are doing everything we can to find out who did this.”

"Our Civil Rights Unit is aware of the incident and is working with the Laconia Police Department, which is the point agency for the investigation, to investigate the matter. Because this is an ongoing investigation, the unit cannot comment any further at this time,” a spokesperson for the Attorney General’s Office wrote in an email response to a request for comment Tuesday.

Man Arrested for Antisemitic Outburst at New York Synagogue

A 22-year-old man faces charges after making antisemitic remarks and gestures at a Northern Westchester synagogue during Rosh Hashanah services, police said. 

The incident happened at the Congregation Sons of Israel synagogue in Briarcliff Manor, police said.

The arrest resulted from an incident on Saturday, Sept. 16 at the Congregation Sons of Israel (CSI) synagogue in Briarcliff Manor at 1666 Pleasantville Rd., according to Briarcliff Manor Police.

During Rosh Hashanah services, a verbal altercation occurred between the synagogue's security and a food delivery driver. During this, the delivery driver made antisemitic remarks and gestures that were seen and heard by the congregation, police said.

The driver's partial license plate was able to be obtained and a vehicle matching this description was soon located by authorities. 

The driver, a 22-year-old Yonkers man whose name was not released, was arrested and charged with disruption or disturbance of a religious service, a misdemeanor. He was later arraigned at the Briarcliff Manor Justice Court and released. 

He will again appear in court on Wednesday, Sept. 27. 

According to Briarcliff Manor Police, the incident is believed to be isolated and more action will be taken if deemed necessary.  

Antisemitic 'Aryan Freedom Network' Flyers Distributed in Ohio

Five Cincinnati communities were peppered with fliers supporting hateful neo-Nazi and white supremacist ideologies late Saturday, Jewish Community Relations Council Director Ari Jun said.

Rabbi Jun said the fliers were found in downtown Cincinnati, Walnut Hills, East Walnut Hills, Loveland and Anderson Township.

Julie Gore, a Jewish woman living in Anderson Township, said she found one of the fliers on her driveway when she went to collect the Sunday paper in the morning.

"I looked up and there was one across the street from me," Gore said.

At first, she felt targeted but said she knew the fliers were blanketing her community when she began to walk around and investigate.

"By the time I got to the end of the street, there were two more," Gore said.

The fliers prominently featured a website where the home page features a headline banner with Nazi imagery, and several templates for hateful fliers are a click away from the main page.

Pages linked on the left side of the home page feature conspiracy links, Nazi updates, white supremacist ideology teachings and other links including "JEW WATCH" in all capital letters.

State Rep. Rachel Baker (D-District 27) said the fliers and the connected materials were unacceptable in Eastern Hamilton County.

"This is not welcome in our community at all," she said.

Baker said several of her constituents texted her Sunday morning telling her the fliers had been dumped in Anderson Township.

"My initial reaction is just thinking of the people that live in our neighborhood, the people who woke up to this hateful rhetoric and making sure they're OK," she said.

Jun said there was no light description for the materials.

"This is straightforward hate," Jun said.

Jun said the speech is legal in the U.S. and the worst thing, legally, the distributors may be doing is littering.

"Fundamentally, being an antisemitic, being an extremist, being a Nazi is protected in this country," he said.

He suggested that if anyone received or has a neighbor that got a hateful flier they should get a bunch of signs for their yard to let people know that their hate isn't welcome in the region.

"We want to make sure they have to walk past 50 signs that tell them 'you're the minority here,'" he said.

Jun said if the fliers appear at a person's home, they should call law enforcement, document everything they receive, call the JCRC so they can track hateful events and then throw the fliers in the trash can where they belong.

Arizona Church Forced to Evacuate Due to Bomb Threats Against Local Synagogue

A local religious center had to be evacuated Sunday morning, according to the Yuma Police Department.

The Yuma Police Department said it responded to a threat made against a local Jewish congregation.

The Yuma Police Department, Yuma County Sheriff's Office, and Marine Corps Air Station Yuma bomb squad evacuated the building just after 10 a.m. during a Sunday service at the Yuma Center for Spiritual Living, located in the area of 2nd Avenue and 7th Street.

This evacuation comes after a slew of bomb threats towards synagogues around the country during the celebration of Rosh Hashanah, or the Jewish New Year. Jewish advocacy group - StopAntisemitism - shared these threats to their audience on Twitter.

Police say they made sure everything was checked and clear before people could go back to the religious center.

The threat was made via email to the only Jewish congregation in Yuma, called Beth HaMidbar.

This all comes during the Jewish New Year, Rosh HaShanah which began on Friday evening and ended Sunday night.

Congregation Beth HaMidbar said they were disappointed to hear about the threat.

And to their knowledge, there were no Jewish people in the building at the time of the threat.

Pennsylvania Jewish Community Center Placed on Lockdown Over Threatening Emails

The York Jewish Community Center (JCC) has reopened after police conducted a search of the building this morning because of a threat that was made, according to Ted Czech, public information officer for the York County Office of Emergency Management/York County 911, and the JCC.

The threat was sent in an email over the weekend, but it was not discovered until this morning, Czech said.

The first call came in to 911 at 9:18 a.m. Authorities have discovered it was a mass email that was sent to JCCs in several jurisdictions, Czech said.

York Suburban schools were asked to shelter in place, but that is being lifted, he said. York County Regional Police are investigating.

Les Cohen, interim CEO of the York JCC, posted an update on Facebook this morning:

"I want to inform you that over the weekend, there was an unsubstantiated threat. The police are investigating, and are in the building and parking lo. "In an abundance of caution, they have advised us to do a temporary lockdown. That means no one will be able to get in the building until the police have completed their review. I apologize for the inconvenience and thank you for your cooperation. We will keep you informed of updates to this situation. For now, please call before coming over to the JCC."

Missouri Town Hit with Antisemitic 'Goyim Defense League' (GDL) Flyers

Antisemitism is being spread in Cassville, Missouri. In the last two weeks, sandwich baggies filled with corn to weigh them down have also included an antisemitic flyer, containing headlines claiming “Every single aspect of the” slave trade, mass immigration, media, COVID-19, LGBTQ+ movement and gun control “is Jewish.”

The advocacy organization fighting antisemitism - StopAntisemitism - has attributed the antisemitic flyers to the Goyim Defense League (GDL). The league travels the country distributing these hateful flyers targeting Jewish communities.

Bill Shiveley, Cassville mayor, was among the first to report seeing the flyers on Sept. 4, picking up 10-12 near his home on the north end of Cassville, along County Farm, Carroll and Billy streets.

“When I saw it for the first time, I asked myself, ‘What kind of propaganda is this?’” he said. “It upset me to tell you the truth.”

Donnie Privett, interim chief at the Cassville Police Department, said police have received two official reports of flyers found in Cassville, but he has seen more than just those two being posted on social media.

“We have two reports, but on social media, I have seen a lot more; they just aren’t all reported to the PD,” he said. “The flyers are not threatening. They are full of hate speech, but there are no threats.”

One social media report claimed the flyer may have caused skin irritation when handled, but whether that was caused directly by the flyer is uncertain.

“We have not sent any to the crime lab, but if it causes a prolonged injury, they may test it,” Privett said. “With the question of the skin irritant and not knowing the cause of that person’s rash, we advise not to touch the flyers if you see them. Call dispatch and have an officer come pick it up. Definitely do not handle it without gloves on. 

“If it is inside city limits, we will generate a case report, and if it looks like something we can test, we will see what we can get.”

The flyers, printed on letter size paper, say they were “distributed randomly without malicious intent” and contain images of influential individuals with the Star of David on their foreheads, Bible verses, corporate logos, a misrepresented quote by President Joe Biden and QR codes that direct a scanner to the website of a group identified by the Southern Poverty Law Center as a hate group.

A week after Shiveley picked up flyers, another area of Cassville was impacted. On Sept. 11, flyers were distributed throughout the neighborhoods surrounding the Cassville school district campus, from the high school and south to Seventh Street by the Cassville City Park. Shiveley said flyers he picked up were mostly at the edges of driveways and in the street, and flyers distributed the week after were placed in yards, typically by a mailbox.

“I was upset at the idea of what it was trying to promote,” Shiveley said. “I don’t think it’s right. It was pretty early in the morning when I saw mine, and then I saw another and another, so I picked them up, and when I got back to my house, I opened one up. The print quality was very bad, so bad I couldn’t read most of it. I was upset for propaganda like that to be put out and that it was thrown in my driveway.”

Shiveley said he understands and respects the individual’s right to free speech, but after throwing the flyers away, he had another question.

“Do they have the right to throw those in my yard?” he said.

According to Privett, the answer is no.

“At the very bare minimum, it’s littering,” he said. “If there is something in there to cause skin irritation and we can prove it was put there on purpose, that could be fourth-degree or third-degree assault. If it causes serious injury, which is open to interpretation, it could be a felony. We usually call it a serious injury if someone goes to the emergency room or requires an ambulance.”

Privett said police are working to track down the individual responsible for distributing the flyers, searching for a black four-door Ford truck.

“If we see a truck that matches that description, we will investigate,” he said. “We’d like to have people report it when they see it if they see it, not hours later.”

Shiveley said he has taken calls from concerned residents worried about handling the flyers should there be any contamination. The group responsible for distributing the propaganda is vast, with reports of flyers being circulated in Georgia, North Carolina, California, New York, Wisconsin, Florida, Tennessee and more in 2023.

“They were in Butterfield about a month or more ago,” Privett said. “One was brought to me, and I handled it, but I did not open it and touch the flyer. At that time, I told him to throw it away. I think it’s a big group using a small group or person to get their message out, but it has the potential to hurt someone in more ways than one.”

Shiveley said though he is against the message, he did find one use for the dozen bags he collected.

“I took all the corn and put it in one bag, then gave it to a neighbor to feed to his chickens.”

Brooklyn Synagogue Receives Bomb Threat on Rosh Hashanah

The New York Police Department (NYPD) 78th Precinct warned New Yorkers to stay clear of the area around 8th Avenue and 11 Street in Park Slope Brooklyn due to a police investigation.

An NYPD spokesperson told The Messenger that the police received a call at 11:19 a.m. ET about a bomb threat towards Kolot Chayeinu, but couldn't reveal further details as officers are still investigating the situation.

The updates come in the midst of the Jewish New Year Rosh HaShanah, which is being celebrated this weekend.

Terri Gerstein, the Director of the State and Local Enforcement Project at the Harvard Law School Center for Labor and a Just Economy, tweeted that there is "bomb threat at the synagogue down the street from us."

"Police told us to shelter in place. I’m sure it will all be ok, but what a way to start the year," Gerstein said.

Meanwhile, X account user Themis Haralabides posted a brief video of what seems to be heavy police presence at Park Slope.

Northern New York Synagogue Evacuated Over Bomb Threat

Geneva Police say they were alerted to a potential bomb threat at a temple on Sunday morning.

Police say they were alerted about a potential bomb threat at Temple Beth-El. They say due to the nature of the threat, and Ontario County Sheriff’s Office Explosive Detection K-9 unit was sent out to perform a thorough inspection of the area.

Officials say the investigation showed no signs of bombs or incendiary devices in the area. They determined the threat was isolated and posed no ongoing danger to the public.

The advocacy organization fighting antisemitism - StopAntisemitism - reported on similar threats towards Jewish places of worship around the country.

Geneva Police tell News10NBC that in-person services at Temple Beth-El has ben canceled for the day and that increased security is already in place and will continue to be a priority. Officials say they have seen similar threats that specifically target synagogues and airports throughout New York and Pennsylvania.

The New York State Police Hate Crimes Task Force has been informed and will be investigating.

Upstate New York Synagogue Evacuated Over Bomb Threat

Troy Police said they responded to a threat at the Congregation Berith Sholom Synagogue Sunday morning.

No services were occurring at the time and no individuals were inside the synagogue.

The building was searched and determined to be safe, police said.

Troy Police say that they believe other similar anonymous threats were received at a variety of locations across several states Sunday morning. StopAntisemitism has been reporting on the various threats that occurred over the holiday.

California Area Synagogue Bomb Threat Disrupts Rosh Hoshana

About 11:40 a.m. Saturday, law enforcement received a call from a man claiming to have planted a bomb inside the Congregation Beth Shalom synagogue on Centre Pointe Parkway in Santa Clarita.

“Deputies are over there looking for suspicious packages, all hands on deck,” said Lt. Brandon Barclay of the Santa Clarita Valley Sheriff’s Station. “A man called and claimed he left a bomb inside Beth Shalom.”

Barclay advised that the public avoid the area, although no evacuations had been put in place.

Saturday marks not only Shabbat, the day of sabbath in the Jewish faith, but also the middle of Rosh Hashana, a two-day celebration of the Jewish New Year.

Florida City Council Member with ties to Nation of Islam Refuses to Vote Against Antisemitism

Days after a synagogue in St. Petersburg, Florida, was forced to evacuate services following a bomb threat, the local city council met to discuss a resolution about antisemitism.

The resolution was about whether to endorse a definition of antisemitism that its authors and local advocates both say can be a useful first step in fighting hatred of Jews. 

Notably refusing to cast a vote: A controversial council member and member of the Nation of Islam who voiced multiple objections to the definition, questioned Jewish community leaders about who constitutes a Jew and left the chambers so that he would be marked absent during the vote.

“I do have concerns. And my concerns are rooted in my personal experience of being falsely accused of being an antisemite,” Brother John Muhammad said at the council meeting, explaining his objections to the proposal. He continued, “It was stated that I was not qualified to do the job that I’ve been doing for the last 11 months because somebody who I’m affiliated with is called an antisemite.”

Muhammad did not specify to whom he was referring, but local Jewish groups have opposed his seat on the city council since he was appointed last year. Their objections were rooted in his refusal to disavow the Nation of Islam’s current leader, the Black nationalist Louis Farrakhan, who has a long history of making antisemitic statements.

Still, Jewish leaders had hope that they could work with Muhammad and educate him on the topic of antisemitism. “When I see a situation like this, it screams ‘opportunity’ to me,” Michael Igel, chair of the Florida Holocaust Museum, located in St. Petersburg, told the Jewish Telegraphic Agency earlier this year. The local federation said it would push the council to make a statement about the dangers of antisemitism.

Thursday’s resolution, one day before Rosh Hashanah, seems to have been the result of that effort. It called on the council to adapt the International Holocaust Remembrance Association’s working definition of antisemitism, which dozens of countries, states and municipalities have done to date.

The council was set to vote on it days after the city’s Congregation B’nai Israel was the target of a bomb threat. The synagogue’s rabbi, Philip Weintraub, delivered the meeting’s opening convocation and spoke about the threat, and other city council members praised law enforcement’s response to it.

Igel and Stuart Berger, head of the local Jewish Community Relations Council, were among the local Jews who advocated for the resolution and rose during the public comment period to endorse it. The IHRA definition, as it’s known, itself has been a subject of controversy for its classification of certain kinds of criticism of Israel as antisemitic, which another public commenter addressed, saying: “I think you can have a bold working definition of antisemitism while not coddling a Middle Eastern government that has policies of separation and absolute brutality on the Palestinian people.”

Muhammad did not mention Israel in his objections to the antisemitism resolution. Instead, he suggested that its wording was too “loose” and that “its subjective nature determining what constitutes hatred towards Jews” could lead to “the suppression of legitimate free speech.”

While saying “I don’t support any acts of antisemitism,” Muhammad listed all the ways he considered himself an ally of the local Jewish community. He participated in a reading of the names of victims of the Holocaust during Yom HaShoah; he voted on a resolution to remember the victims; and he is a member of a Black-Jewish study group. Yet during the more than 15 combined minutes when he held the floor, Muhammad found a host of reasons not to support the proposed resolution.

He cited the Black liberation activist Malcolm X, a onetime member of the Nation of Islam who espoused antisemitic views throughout his life, as an example of someone “who was considered a leading antisemite of his day.” Muhammad also asserted that “a celebrity” had recently prompted “a debate within the Jewish community themselves” about whether they had said something antisemitic — a possible reference to Jamie Foxx.

During his comment Muhammad also brought Igel and Berger up to the podium and questioned them about some of the finer points of the resolution’s wording. He asked them who is considered Jewish: “Is it a religion? Is it a culture? Is it a race?” 

Muhammad asked if Hebrew Israelites and Messianic Jews would be considered Jews who could be affected by antisemitism, to which Igel responded, “These questions are sometimes in the eye of the beholder.” Both groups are themselves often accused of antisemitism for misappropriating Jewish symbols and rituals; in addition, members of the former sometimes promote antisemitic conspiracy theories, while members of the latter often proselytize Jews.

He also prompted back-and-forth by questioning one passage of the resolution, which states that “the Jewish community has enriched our leadership through their contributions to the arts, business, academia and government.” What’s the difference, Muhammad wanted to know, between that passage and conspiracy theories about Jews controlling the media and government that the IHRA defines as antisemitic?

Muhammad concluded his objections by noting that the definition “could also have a chilling effect on our community members who might fear repercussions of expressing opinions that are not intended to be hateful but may be misconstrued as such. We have to protect the rights of those who may have unpopular or controversial views within the bounds of civility as long as they are not explicitly advocating for discrimination, persecution, hurt, harm or danger to members of the Jewish community.” 

Soon after, another council member cut him off by “calling the question” to end debate on the subject. Muhammad thanked the room and immediately left before the vote could be called.

“During the proceedings I had several questions that were not able to be sufficiently answered by those who were present,” Muhammad told JTA in an emailed statement on Friday. “Unfortunately, my comments went over the time allowed and the question was called before I could conclude. Without having the answers to my questions, or sufficient responses to my inquiries, I chose to leave the proceedings and abstain.”

He continued, “While I recognize the intent behind the proposed resolution and the urgent need to combat antisemitism, especially in the face of increasing incidents involving white supremacists, I would like to ensure we do so without compromising our commitment to free expression and the peaceful exchange of diverse ideas within our community.”

The present members of the city council passed the resolution unanimously, with some citing both St. Petersburg’s historical record of antisemitic discrimination and the recent rise of antisemitic and white nationalist activity in Florida. 

While no council members responded to Muhammad directly, one, Brandi Gabbard, gave a speech after he left that alluded to “inciting hate against any person in our community or any community.”

“We see people in positions of power specifically inciting this hate both publicly and behind the scenes,” Gabbard said. “It is dangerous. It is irresponsible. And quite frankly, it disgusts me.” Her remarks were met with applause.

Igel, the grandson of Holocaust survivors, told JTA that watching Muhammad’s objections to the resolution was “painful” and “emotional.” But he added that the experience “reminds us of the need for Holocaust education and for the IHRA definition and why it’s important, so we all can know and see antisemitism whenever it is.”

A California Mayor Denounces Group of White Supremacists Protesting Near a Jewish Center

Novato Mayor Susan Wernick this week denounced a group of at least eight masked people who held up antisemitic and white supremacist banners over the weekend on a busy corner just blocks from the Chabad Jewish Center of Novato.

StopAntisemitism shared details of the incident to their followers on Twitter.

The mayor addressed the incident on social media and at the start of Tuesday’s city council meeting.

“While it is within their First Amendment right to do so, that messaging has no place in our community or anywhere,” Wernick said at the meeting. “Novato stands united against hate and will continue to make this community a place where people with messages of hate feel unwelcome and uncomfortable.”

Mayor Pro Tem Mark Milberg concurred and thanked people who had reached out since the incident.

“I am very proud of the allies,” Milberg said at the meeting. “Being a Jewish person in this city, having allies … including the mayor — I don’t take that for granted — and the rest of the city council and the staff. So I just wanted to thank everyone for that.”

The incident happened two days before the 22nd anniversary of the Sept. 11, 2001, terrorist attacks that killed nearly 3,000 people.

On Saturday, some of the masked people carried a banner saying “Jews did 9/11” with the URL of an antisemitic conspiracy website. The incident happened around noon on a highly trafficked road in the Marin County city of around 50,000.

“Literally three blocks from our synagogue,” Rabbi Menachem Landa said.

Landa, who leads the Chabad center, said he heard about the antisemitic demonstration from passersby. “Within minutes I received a few calls from people in our community,” he said.

Police reached out to Landa and told him the protestors — some of whom held a banner saying “White Lives Matter” — left within about half an hour.

“The police were careful not to engage them too much, and they dispersed on their own,” Landa said.

Monica Castillo, a communications assistant for the city of Novato, told J. that the Novato Police Department had been “monitoring the situation in real time.”

In messages sent to Landa, Wernick called the incident “beyond upsetting” and Marin County Supervisor Eric Lucan said he was “disgusted by the hate-filled demonstration.” Landa shared the messages with J.

The false and baseless conspiracy theory that Jews were somehow behind the 9/11 attacks persists in antisemitic and white supremacist circles.

Landa said that while the protestors over the weekend rattled the community, he was gratified by the support of public officials and police. He added that he encouraged Novato’s Jews to come together for Rosh Hashanah.

“Our response has to be the shofar,” he said. “There’s no bigger call of pride.”

New Jersey Synagogue Threatened with Pipe Bombs During Jewish New Year

On the eve of Rosh Hashanah, the Jewish New Year, a Saddle River Road synagogue received a bomb threat, according to police.

An anonymous individual on a phone call to police alerted them to the threat aimed at Congregation Ahavat Achim, 18-25 Saddle River Road, on Thursday evening. Rosh Hashanah begins at sunset on Friday, September 15, 2023. Police did not say whether there was a connection with the holiday.

On 9/14/2023 at 8:01 p.m., the Fair Lawn Police Department Dispatch Center received an anonymous phone call. The caller's voice sounded as if it were a male and stated that he had planted two pipe bombs in a black backpack inside the synagogue, police said.

The advocacy organization fighting antisemitism - StopAntisemitism - shared the details to their audience on Twitter.

Fair Lawn Officers evacuated the occupants of the building, as well as the immediate area.

The Bergen County Sheriff's Department Bomb Squad responded to the scene. Police said they searched the building, as well as the surrounding area, and found no evidence of a bomb or material that could be used to make a bomb. 

Fair Lawn Fire Department, Fair Lawn Heavy Rescue, Fair Lawn Ambulance Corps, and Bergen County Sheriff's Department all responded and assisted with this incident. 

According to Toriavey.com, "Rosh Hashanah is the celebration of the Jewish New Year. It’s a very important holiday on the Jewish calendar. It is the first of what we call the High Holidays (or High Holy Days), a ten-day period that ends with Yom Kippur—the holiest day of the Jewish year. On Rosh Hashanah, Jews from all over the world celebrate God’s creation of the world. Rosh Hashanah is two days long, and it usually occurs during the month of September."