Web Analytics

North Carolina Officials Investigate Antisemitic Materials Littered in Community

Antisemitic materials were distributed in the area of Spring Mill Plantation in Calabash, according to the Brunswick County Sheriff’s Office.

Per the sheriff’s office, residents discovered the antisemitic materials early Sunday morning.

“The Sheriff’s Office takes these incidents very seriously and it will not be tolerated in our county. Detectives are diligently investigating the incident to try and identify the responsible individual,” a BCSO release states.

Anyone with information is asked to call 911.

Influencer Assaults Jewish Man,Hurls Homophobic Slurs on LAX Shuttle

Influencer Tommie Lee, 38, is in the headlines again this year for engaging in a verbal altercation with a Jewish man on the LAX Uber shuttle. In a recent incident, a former Love and Hip Hop star was caught on camera physically assaulting and threatening a Jewish man on the LAX Uber shuttle.

The incident comes four months after Lee was arrested in Miami after officers who were called to a restaurant on reports of verbal abuse discovered cocaine on the 38-year-old star.

Jewish Advocacy Group - StopAntisemitism - shared the incident to Twitter.

According to an Instagram account, Vist2israel, where the video of the recent altercation was posted, Lee, who has nearly 6 million followers, reportedly used a homophobic slur against the Jewish man before he began recording the incident.

When the man pulls out his phone to record the incident, Lee gets violent. Referencing to the camera, She is heard saying:

“Ever point your camera at me, I’ll knock your f*cking head off b*tch. Don’t play with me.”

When the man asks her not to talk to him using derogatory language, Lee lunges at him in an attempt to knock the phone off his hand.

Hamas Supporters Destroy Property and Leave Behind Antisemitic Messages

Oakland police say protesters damaged several downtown buildings during a pro-Palestinian rally on Thursday downtown.

The protest began shortly after 7:30 p.m. near the federal building on Clay Street, which police say quickly got out of hand.

Police said protesters broke windows at the Starbucks and Walgreens, and damaged an ATM at the Wells Fargo Bank. 

Vandals also spray painted graffiti  on several buildings with words like "Free Gaza" and "Death 2 Zionism."

Police said about 30 people were involved, but only two people were arrested. 

Last week, Oakland’s largest menorah was desecrated by vandals on the sixth night of Hanukkah, prompting police to investigate the act as a hate crime.

"I think we’re feeling vulnerable," said Rabbi Mates-Muchin. "Sometimes it is difficult for folks to differentiate between what is anti-Israel and what is anti-Jewish, but the desecration of the menorah was pretty clear cut."

Mansi Katchuria, a vigil co-organizer and supporter of Palestine, called the menorah destruction horrible.

"I think we have seen a rise in both Islamophobia and antisemitism over the past few months," Kathuria said. "And we unequivocally stand against hate in all its forms."

Los Angeles Synagogue Moves Shabbat Location Due to Palestinian Protest

Temple Beth Am, Los Angeles’ third-oldest Conservative synagogue, told congregants it would be moving its Saturday afternoon Shabbat services this weekend due to safety concerns over a pro-Palestinian protest happening at a nearby park.

In an email sent to the community on Thursday, Rabbi Adam Kligfeld and temple president Mark Samuel said that “out of an abundance of caution,” afternoon services would be moved to a private home. But they stressed that the synagogue did not make the decision lightly.

“I don’t remember a more agonizing decision,” Kligfeld wrote in the email, which was obtained by the Jewish Telegraphic Agency. “On one hand, not that much is at stake. This was not Kol Nidre or a bar/bat mitzvah or even ‘normal’ Shabbat AM service, times during which hundreds of people are on our campus happily and unselfconsciously and proudly doing Judaism. This was about ‘only’ the 12-16 people or so who normally show up for Shabbat afternoon services and learning. Not that momentous.”

He continued: “On the other hand, it felt hugely momentous. In 2023? In the city of Los Angeles? A Jewish community even considering not holding religious services at their own synagogue because of a looming threat posed by a rally that has a very good chance of spilling from pro-Palestinian rhetoric to virulently anti-Zionist and dangerously antisemitic? It boggles the mind that that is where we are in modern America. But it is where we are.”

The rally is being billed as “Black and Palestinian Solidarity for a Ceasefire this Christmas” and is set to take place Saturday at 3 p.m. in La Cienega Park, which is just a few minutes’ walk from the synagogue located in LA’s heavily Jewish Pico-Robertson neighborhood.

In the email, Kligfeld referenced the recent slew of antisemitic incidents in the LA area, including the death of pro-Israel protestor Paul Kessler, who was fatally injured during an altercation during dueling pro-Israel and pro-Palestinian rallies in the suburb of Thousand Oaks in early November. A man has been charged with involuntary manslaughter in the case.

In addition to Kessler’s death, there have been numerous other incidents since the Israel-Hamas war broke out on Oct. 7 that have rattled the LA Jewish community — including a hate crime against a Jewish man on his way to synagogue in Beverly Hills, a charter school housed at a synagogue teaching students that Israel was committing genocide and a break-in at a Jewish family’s home that was also investigated as a hate crime.

Kligfeld also acknowledged that “during the conversation we had about this, many expressed discomfort with the notion of cowering, rather than representing.” He encouraged his congregants to “respond to this moment … by having a large and robust crowd.”

The Jewish Federation of Greater Los Angeles said it is monitoring the situation. “We are disheartened and saddened that Jewish ritual observances have to be moved out of an abundance of caution. We continue to hope and pray for peace,” the organization said in a statement to the Jewish Journal.

Temple Beth Am is not the first synagogue to have its Shabbat services disrupted by pro-Palestinian protests. A Melbourne, Australia, synagogue was evacuated by police during Shabbat services last month after a violent turn at a major protest in an adjacent park.

Belgian Senator Spreads Malicious Antisemitic Libel

Belgium’s representative Jewish organization has angrily denounced a Socialist Party senator for comments made at a parliamentary hearing that amounted to “hateful antisemitism.”

Brussels Senator Nadia El Yousfi made the remarks at a hearing on international affairs on Monday debating the ongoing Israeli military operation in Gaza provoked by the Oct. 7 pogrom carried out by Hamas terrorists.

Accusing Israel of “genocide” and “state terrorism” while Israel’s Ambassador in Brussels, Idit Rosenzweig-Abu, observed the proceedings, El Yousfi claimed without citing evidence that Israeli rabbis have called for the rape of Palestinian women.

“I remind you that within the Israeli government, the far right is very present,” El Yousfi stated. “There are calls for hatred, calls for the destruction of Gaza, all the calls to empty Gaza of its inhabitants. And one of the elements that also shocks me is that we have rabbis … who call for the rape of Palestinian women and so on. I think it’s important to have all the facts so that we can be as objective as possible.”

In response, an incredulous Rosenzweig-Abu said her initial thought was that El Yousfi’s accusation had been mistranslated.

“It’s the first time I’ve heard that,” the envoy said. “I was so shocked that I thought it was a translation error. But that’s exactly what she said.”

She added that during “past discussions in parliament and the senate, I’ve had confrontations, difficult discussions, I’ve heard many defamatory accusations, but this is a new low.”

In a statement on Thursday, the Coordination Committee of Belgian Jewish Organizations (CCOJB) added to the condemnation of El Yousfi.

“Such statements are the expression of a particularly hateful antisemitism that has no place in the Palais de la Nation,” the CCOJB declared.

The group pointed to evidence of the systematic rape and sexual abuse of Israeli women witnessed on Oct.7, particularly at the Nova music festival in the Negev.

“The particularly unbearable nature of the remarks denounced takes on a truly abject dimension in the context of the acts of femicide, rape, disembowelment, beheadings, and other serious attacks on Israeli women, perpetrated on Oct. 7 by Hamas terrorists,” the CCOJB asserted.

Comparing El Yousfi’s words with classically antisemitic “dark rumors” about Jews, the CCOJB argued that “over and above the criminal charges that such remarks may incur, Ms. El Yousfi bears full political responsibility for them, gravely tarnishing her status as a representative of the nation.”

“In view of the seriousness of Ms El Yousfi’s remarks, we feel that the most severe measures against her are called for,” the statement concluded.

Joel Rubinfeld, president of the Belgian League Against Antisemitism, situated El Yousfi’s speech in the context of growing antisemitism faced by the community since Oct. 7.

“The Jews in Belgium experienced a double trauma: the images of Oct. 7 with these pogroms, and the political reactions, the press, or even universities,” Rubinfeld told the French language service of Israeli broadcaster i24.

“Every weekend, demonstrations take place and bring together up to 50,000 people with antisemitic slogans. This climate contributes to the departure of many people,” Rubinfeld added.

Ohio Police Chief Suspended Over Antisemitic Message Exchange

East Cleveland Police Chief Brian Gerhard will be suspended amid an internal investigation surrounding leaked text messages from 2019 to 2022 containing antisemitic, pro-Nazi, racist and homophobic memes.

Gerhard is out on vacation until Jan. 2, 2024, and his suspension will begin once he returns, East Cleveland Mayor Brandon King told the Cleveland Jewish News Dec. 22.

“We have already talked to our legal counsel about starting an investigation,” King said. “... We have a zero-tolerance policy for this and we will deal with it.”

The messages appearing to be sent by the chief were leaked to the public through a news release by attorneys Allison Hibbard, Kimberly Kendall Corral and Gabrielle Ploplis, who have been representing police officer clients in the East Cleveland force for bribery. Two former police officers were convicted in Cuyahoga County Court of Common Pleas Judge on Dec. 20.

The messages appear to have been sent by Gerhard and contain references to Hitler and racial slurs. In one message, Gerhard allegedly tells a colleague whose name is redacted that they would “look good” wearing a Nazi helmet out on patrol. In another, he sends a meme about gas chambers being a method of “Jews emigrating.” He also allegedly sent a meme that contained a statement attributed to Klaus Barbie, referencing a Nazi soldier.

Another meme uses a racist slur multiple times to refer to Black people, and depicts a Black person’s head on a SpongeBob SquarePants character.

Additionally, one image read: “If I think of all those homosexuals in Germany today, I think I’d hand my German passport back, if I had one.”

Other memes shared include the “happy merchant” antisemitic image of a man with exaggerated stereotypically Jewish features saying “Mfw it’s Thursday. I can just smell the shekels coming” – an image which is included in the Anti-Defamation League’s hate symbols guide that says the meme is “popularized by the alt-right.” Another meme says “American presidents are slaves of the Jews” and uses an antisemitic slur to refer to Jewish people.

The CJN is not showing images that contain racial slurs.

At the time of Gerhard’s promotion to police chief last year, King was not aware of the messages, he said.

“I’m finding out about it as many others are. I believe it was eight this morning I was made aware of this,” King said Dec. 22. “I still have not physically seen any of the messages.”

Corral, the defense attorney of Law Office of Kimberly Kendall Corral in Cleveland, was made aware of the messages from a comment made by an officer after Cuyahoga County Prosecutor Michael C. O’Malley made a statement about “leaving the police department in good hands,” she said. The officer claimed that “everyone knows he (Gerhard) is a Nazi,” Corral said.

Corral then sent a message to other officers on the force and began to receive screenshots of the messages they allegedly received from Gerhard.

“Within five minutes, I began to receive those messages that he had sent to other people,” she told the CJN on Dec. 22.

She learned of the messages late on the evening of Dec. 20, she said. She wanted to release the information as quickly as possible because she was “disgusted and appalled” and it “weighed really heavy” on her that a community with a large minority population was being policed by someone who would say these things, she said.

She confirmed the information through her sources, who “received the messages directly from Chief Gerhard,” Corral said.

Gerhard was promoted to police chief in the October 2022, after multiple police officers were suspended due to an investigation of nine other police officers. He has been a member of the force since 1995.

Multiple attempts by the CJN to reach Gerhard were unsuccessful as of Dec. 22. When the CJN contacted the police department on Dec. 22, it was told Gerhard was on vacation. However, he provided a statement to News 5 Cleveland that did not deny the messages existed.

“The ridiculous and unwarranted attack on my character by the attorney’s representing former East Cleveland police officers facing charges and convictions in Cuyahoga County Court won’t have an impact on the cases against them,” Gerhard said in a statement to the news station. “The memes involved were simply World War II content sent to my personal cellphone.”

The message sequence indicates the offensive and graphic images were sent from Gerhard’s iPhone.

Gerhard also provided comments to Fox 8 News: "The memes in question were sent by me to the former chief. Being of German heritage we often exchanged WW2 related memes, no ill intent on my part, satirical in nature not intended to offend anyone. What I find most perplexing is at the time he was chief of police, why even save them or wait over three years to mention them? Or better yet, why was I not disciplined by him? Maybe he feels attacking me will help him with his multiple felony indictments. As I stated, no ill will intended to disparage any ethnic group."

The Cuyahoga County Prosecutor’s Office declined to comment.

Several Oakland Buildings Vandalized During Pro-Palestinian Rally

Oakland police say protesters damaged several downtown buildings during a pro-Palestinian rally on Thursday downtown.

The protest began shortly after 7:30 p.m. near the federal building on Clay Street, which police say quickly got out of hand.

Police said protesters broke windows at the Starbucks and Walgreens, and damaged an ATM at the Wells Fargo Bank. 

Vandals also spray painted graffiti  on several buildings with words like "Free Gaza" and "Death 2 Zionism."

Police said about 30 people were involved, but only two people were arrested. 

Last week, Oakland’s largest menorah was desecrated by vandals on the sixth night of Hanukkah, prompting police to investigate the act as a hate crime.

"I think we’re feeling vulnerable," said Rabbi Mates-Muchin. "Sometimes it is difficult for folks to differentiate between what is anti-Israel and what is anti-Jewish, but the desecration of the menorah was pretty clear cut."

Mansi Katchuria, a vigil co-organizer and supporter of Palestine, called the menorah destruction horrible.

"I think we have seen a rise in both Islamophobia and antisemitism over the past few months," Kathuria said. "And we unequivocally stand against hate in all its forms."

Georgia Woman Appalled by Antisemitic Note Left on Car Windshield

Police are looking for the person who left an antisemitic note on a woman’s car while she was at a doctor’s appointment.

Virginia Pierce-Kelly still can’t believe what happened outside her chiropractor’s office just a few days ago. She told WSB Tonight’s Larry Spruill that she was getting ready to leave when a staff member told her a woman had left a note on her window.

“I read it, and I was just shocked, appalled, and surprised that someone would say such mean and hateful things,” Pierce-Kelly said.

According to Pierce-Kelly, the letter was on the front windshield when she walked to her car.

The following is the message that was left on her car: “A dream catcher on your mirror and an Israeli flag on the back of your car during a genocide, you’re a [expletive] word idiot and the reason humans suck. Reevaluate your entire existence.”

“I was emotionally distraught at first. It affected my mental capacity,” she explained. “Am I safe coming to this place or coming to this area?”

Pierce-Kelly said she believes that the items on her car should not be a reason for anyone to respond with hate. “If someone is that angry, upset, or frustrated about what’s going on in their life or in the world. I think they should not be putting hateful and unfriendly, unloving words on people’s private property. This is the first time in my 61 years of living on this Planet Earth that someone put a hateful sign on my car,” Pierce-Kelly said.

Sandy Springs Police are investigating this incident.

Vandals Target Jewish-Owned Businesses in Connecticut

Hartford police are searching for three people who spray painted antisemitic messages around the city.

Crews spent Thursday power washing the graffiti.

“FREE GAZA” was spray painted on a sidewalk, and then “INTIFADA REVOLUTION” was spray painted on a building. Intifada refers to Palestinian uprisings. StopAntisemitism shared photos of the graffiti on Twitter.

The messages were found at four downtown locations: the Gold Building, the Travelers Building, the Wadsworth Museum, and on the corner of Prospect and Front streets.

One of the messages also called out Senator Richard Blumenthal, saying he supports genocide.

As Eyewitness News drove around Hartford Thursday, we also saw graffiti at a bus stop that read there’s blood on Chris Murphy’s hands.

Police are looking for three females. Officers aren’t sure if they’re adults or not.

They do have video, and said the women were all wearing dark clothing and face masks Wednesday night.

“Very very childish and they’re going to suffer when they get caught. If they get caught,” said Iman Moustafa of Hartford.

Police have not released the video yet.

New Jersey Middle School Vandalized with Swastikas

Scotch Plains police are investigating the culprits responsible for a number of drawn and etched swastikas that were discovered in one of the restrooms and on one of the hallway lockers in Terrill Middle School in Scotch Plains on Wednesday afternoon. 

"We condemn this symbol, which represents hate and prejudice, and violates our community values," wrote Scotch Plains-Fanwood SPFK12 superintendent Dr. Joan Mast in a letter sent to parents. "Such a hateful act in a space that is meant to be welcoming and in a place where all students, staff, and families should be able to be their full and authentic selves, is unacceptable and deeply upsetting. Please know that we take acts of hate and intolerance very seriously, and we will continue to do so. Acts such as these will have serious implications and will be met with serious consequences."

"We encourage you to speak with your children about these kinds of matters and the related stories that they may hear in the news," Dr. Mast added. "The district will continue to work with the Ministerium and community leaders to create peace and an environment where 'all to here belong,' in our schools and across the community."

Elected officials also spoke out against hate speech. 

"These are difficult times, when cases of hate continue to rise at an alarming rate. We must remain ever-vigilant, proclaiming in a unified voice that any offensive/hateful vandalism of any type is completely unacceptable in Scotch Plains," said Scotch Plains Mayor Losardo.

Fanwood Mayor Colleen Mahr also commended Dr. Mast for quickly responding to the incident.

"I applaud Dr. Mast for sharing the information, educating our young people about antisemitism, and for continuing to have zero tolerance for hate speech," said Mayor Mahr.

The Scotch Plains police department is conducting an investigation to find those responsible. Anyone with information is urged to contact Sgt. Jason Everitt at 908-322-7100 ext. 113. Residents with information may also submit their information through this anonymous form or reach out directly to SPF administrators or counseling staff.

New Jersey Synagogue Vandalized with Costing Thousands in Damages

When Rabbi Jan Rosenberg was called to check out vandalism at his congregation's property on West Veterans Highway, he expected the usual. There would likely be some physical damage, even the possibility of objectionable graffiti.

What he encountered was a "war zone," with as many as 60 broken windows, including the front door, and the distinct smell of fireworks someone had shot off indoors.

"We've had thousands of dollars worth of damage before, and now it's in the tens of thousands," Rosenberg said.

What remains unclear are the motivations that led to the incident, far from the first time vandals have defaced a building that the congregation, called Beth Zion, has long hoped to convert into a synagogue.

The congregation purchased the site in 2001 and received township approval for the construction. But it's an expensive undertaking, and Rosenberg has been hesitant to start site work after the COVID-19 pandemic.

From the street, it looks like a simple yellow building with a large barn on one end. There isn't any fixed signage, just the occasional temporary lawn sign redirecting new congregants to the nearby Hope Chapel, where the congregation meets for its services.

Jackson Police Chief Matthew Kunz described the case as an incident of "adolescent-type criminal mischief." Police haven't made any arrests but Kunz said it was likely juveniles.

The building has been vandalized before, enough that Jackson police officers routinely patrol the premises — a patrolling officer noticed and first reported the damage on Dec. 14. The building is set back a few hundred feet from West Veterans Highway, in a dimly lit and rural area.

"I believe it's simply a crime of opportunity," Kunz said. "But there's no way to know until we actually identify an offender."

While Jackson has a growing Orthodox Jewish community, Beth Zion is a Messianic Jewish congregation. Messianic Judaism teaches Jewish law but also regards Jesus Christ as the Messiah. Most major Jewish denominations reject the faith, which shares similar teachings as Christian organizations.

That hasn't stopped vandals from defacing the building with antisemitic graffiti. Nearly 10 years ago, someone spray-painted "Jews stay out" on the building, Rosenberg said. And last year, the building was vandalized with graffiti praising Adolf Hitler and denigrating Jewish people.

"We've been here 20-something years, and never really thought of ourselves of being a victim of these things or in that category (of hate crimes)," Rosenberg said. "But even if it turns out just to be kids, where do they make that connection?"

According to the FBI, more than half of all religion-based hate crimes last year were driven by anti-Jewish bias.

In New Jersey, there were 512 bias incidents targeting Jewish people in 2023 through October, according to state police data, already more than the 446 reported in all of 2022. A total of 133 bias incidents targeting Jewish people were reported in October alone, a trend State Attorney General Matthew Platkin said accelerated after the war between Israel and Hamas began on Oct. 7.

And in 2022, more than one in six bias incidents against Jewish people occurred in Lakewood, Jackson, Toms River and Howell, according to police bias incident reports.

Over the last year, an Orthodox Jewish community has rapidly expanded in Jackson, and tensions have grown in lockstep. Last week, the Jackson Township Council approved a series of ordinances regulating religious uses — such as private religious schools and houses of worship — agreed to as part of settlement agreements with the Department of Justice, New Jersey Attorney General's Office and an Orthodox Jewish advocacy group.

Numerous residents criticized the ordinances as caving to the township's Orthodox community, which was accused of everything from "getting everything they want" to a "hostile takeover" and even "cultural genocide." In week since, the fervor has grown across social media.

While Rosenberg walks around Jackson with a yarmulke and tzitzit, ritual tassels worn by some observant Jews, he said he's never faced overt bigotry in person.

"These are things that solidify us, in a sense," Rosenberg said. "They don't care which kind of Jewish you are."

Lincoln Memorial Vandalized by Pro-Hamas Supporters

The Lincoln Memorial closed temporarily on Wednesday after its steps were vandalized with graffiti reading “Free Gaza” in multiple places.

U.S. Park Police are investigating the graffiti, which was discovered Wednesday morning at the Washington, D.C. monument, according to ABC News. Crews were dispatched  to clean up the vandalism. The steps of the memorial were splattered with red paint and pro-Palestinian messages, which the National Park Service said could take some time to complete.

“National Park Service conservators have begun the process of removing the paint this morning, though it may take multiple treatments over several days to remove all of it,” spokesperson Mike Litterst said Wednesday.

By the evening, according to a local Fox affiliate, most of the paint was removed. One more treatment of the graffiti was scheduled for Thursday morning.

Images from the scene show that the words “Free Palestine” and another message that includes the phrase “land back” were spray-painted at the base of the memorial near the reflecting pool.

Last month, protestors spray-painted “Free Palestine” on several statutes at Lafayette Square, a park near the White House.

Jewish sites in the United States and across the world have been hit with antisemitic and anti-Israel graffiti since the war between Israel and Hamas began on Oct. 7. The targets have included several synagogues, the New York office of a Jewish member of Congress and London’s Holocaust library.

South Carolina Councilmembers Receive Antisemitic Postcards

Antisemitic postcards were delivered to two Mount Pleasant Town Councilmember’s home addresses this week. The mail delivery follows the first reading of a potential hate crime ordinance for the town.

“All of a sudden this postcard sort of jumped out at me with some pretty incendiary things about Jewish people and sort of an argument against what the town is trying to do in passing a hate intimidation ordinance,” Councilman Daniel Brownstein said.

The postcard called Brownstein a “traitor” and claimed the ordinance would not silence them. This isn’t the first time the town has experienced something of this nature. A few months back, antisemitic flyers were found in seven different neighborhoods.

“It’s very unsettling to them,” Brownstein said. “Particularly the Jewish people who have received them, they are afraid to go to public religious events, afraid to put menorahs in their windows, to wear Jewish jewelry.”

Councilman Carl Ritchie received the same piece of mail and said receiving postcards and flyers such as this would not deter him from protecting the community.

Brownstein said there is only so much the town can do and it’s time for the state to step up and pass a hate crime law.

“We’re one of only two states in the country who hasn’t done that yet,” he said. “I realize in the grand scheme of things a postcard sent to a town councilman’s house is probably a small matter, but I hope it contributes to the overall effort of getting this passed in Columbia.”

The first council vote for the hate crime ordinance in Mount Pleasant passed unanimously and the final vote will be at the next meeting in January.

Amazon Continues to Sell Antisemitic Items Despite Complaints

Amazon continues to market antisemitic paraphernalia through its online marketplace, despite rising concerns about hatred and violence toward Jews following Hamas’ Oct. 7 attacks on Israel.

The Seattle-based e-tailer allows vendors to sell Nazi-themed collectibles such as stamps, antisemitic books promoting conspiracies, flags containing fascist symbols, and literature from the Nation of Islam and its firebrand leader Louis Farrakhan.

Amazon is selling stamps and coins that feature the likeness of Adolf Hitler. Other stamps include the Nazi swastika as well as images depicting a Nazi rally through Brandenburg Gate in Berlin.

Nazi listings on Amazon as of Thursday also included a flag that bears the symbol of the Arrow Cross Party, the far-right group that ruled Hungary in late 1944 and is thought to be responsible for the killings of tens of thousands of Jews and other citizens.

“If we discover a product was undetected by our proactive checks, we address the issue immediately,” an Amazon spokesperson said in a statement. “We are in the process of investigating the listings in question.”

Another vendor on Amazon is selling a book titled “Land of the ZOG” — a reference to the antisemitic acronym that means “Zionist-occupied government.”

The concept of “ZOG” is a frequent trope employed by neo-Nazis alleging that the United States government is controlled by Jewish interests.

“Land of the ZOG” is a 1994 novel that depicts a “battle between White Nationalists of the United States and ‘their’ government”,’ according to a description on the book-selling web site Alibris.

The book has been compared to “The Turner Diaries,” the white nationalist dystopian novel that is blamed for inspiring anti-government attacks and hate crimes such as the 1995 bombing of the federal building in Oklahoma City.

“We do have an issue with the antisemitic book, ‘Land of the ZOG’ being sold without a disclaimer, however, and will be reaching out to Amazon to ask them to add language that clearly identifies it as hate literature.”

Shoppers on Amazon can buy a book titled “Land of the ZOG” for just under $10. The book alleges that the US is run by a “Zionist-occupied government.”

Vendors on Amazon are also selling literature and audio books from the Nation of Islam and its leader, Farrakhan, who has said that Judaism is a “deceptive lie” and who has also made references to “Satanic Jews who have infected the whole word with poison and deceit.”

Farrakhan also is host of a podcast titled “Birth Of A Nation,” which can be accessed through Amazon-owned audio book shop Audible.

Amazon also offers books written by Elijah Muhammad, the late leader of the Nation of Islam, an organization that has been labeled as a hate group by the Southern Poverty Law Center.

Last December Amazon CEO Andy Jassy said that his company would continue to sell an antisemitic film that was endorsed by basketball superstar Kyrie Irving.

“As a retailer of content to hundreds of millions of customers with a lot of different viewpoints, we have to allow access to those viewpoints, even if they are objectionable — objectionable and they differ from our particular viewpoints,” Jassy said.

Weeks later, Amazon agreed to remove certain antisemitic-themed items after being reprimanded by the Simon Wiesenthal Center.

The Los Angeles-based Jewish organization lashed out at Amazon for allowing the sale of a swastika pendant that attaches to a necklace; patches that bear “pirate skull crossbones” images; a skull badge metal pin brooch; and several other items said to contain neo-Nazi overtones.

Californian Synagogues Part of State-Wide Bomb Threat Hoax

Congregation B’nai Tikvah in Walnut Creek was among a dozen Northern California synagogues known to have been emailed a false bomb threat early Saturday. 

The email was part of a wave of “swatting” incidents and false bomb threats that hit over 200 Jewish congregations and institutions across the U.S. over the weekend, according to the Secure Community Network, which works with the Jewish Federations of North America to coordinate safety for the organized Jewish community. Swatting incidents are hoaxes designed to send heavily armed police to a target location.

Lori Siegel, president and interim executive director of B’nai Tikvah, said the email’s subject line read “Explosives inside of the Synagogue.”

Synagogues in Berkeley, Los Altos Hills, Pleasanton, San Francisco, Redwood City, Davis, Napa, Grass Valley, Carmel, Carmichael and Sacramento were copied on the same email, which was seen by J.

“We knew that we were one of many,” Siegel said. The Contra Costa County Sheriff’s Department immediately got involved, and Siegel called them “a great partner” in an email to the congregation.

None of the threats were deemed credible after local investigations, the Jewish Telegraphic Agency reported.

“What was a common occurrence — a few such emails every month in Northern California for the past few years — became a concerted nationwide email blitz this past weekend,” said Rafi Brinner, director of security with the S.F-based Jewish Community Federation and Endowment Fund, which runs regular security trainings for the region’s synagogues and Jewish organizations.

SCN posted on social media on Monday that it has tallied more than 449 swatting incidents and bomb threats this year. That’s up 541% from 83 incidents in 2022.

Waves of bomb hoaxes have disturbed the peace of synagogues, Jewish day schools and organizations for years, often ramping up around Jewish holidays. But they’ve increased since the Oct. 7 Hamas massacre in Israel, Brinner said.

In swatting attacks, a hoax 911 call is made to local police with a false story such as a hostage situation, which is intended to draw an armed response. Swatting has led to deaths and is considered very dangerous. Bomb threats also create disruption. They often result in an evacuation while police assess the situation.

Brinner pointed to the FBI’s recent arrest of a 13-year-old California boy who is accused of being part of a group that in July and August organized swatting attempts and false bomb threats against Jewish institutions, including at least 25 synagogues in 13 states.

In recent years, lawmakers have worked to boost the amount of grant money available for “target hardening” of synagogues and Jewish organizations to make them less vulnerable.

Siegel said B’nai Tikvah has already received two such grants and has applied for two others.

“Just ensuring our community is safe is our most important priority right now,” she said. 

Arizona Police Release Image of Arsonist Who Left Antisemitic Papers at Scene

Phoenix Police are asking for help in identifying and locating a suspect in two arson fires that damaged multiple businesses that 12News first reported last month.

During the investigation, police said, “antisemitic papers were found at one of the locations.”

12News obtained photos of two “papers” that suggested taking responsibility for other fires at businesses in past years. The second note threatened more fires would be set if tenants didn’t move out.

On Tuesday, police released two pictures of the suspect who they said was seen on surveillance video starting the fires on Nov. 27.

The man first set a business office complex on fire around 4 a.m., near 16th Street and Indian School Road. A doctor’s office sustained heavy damage there. Multiple other businesses were also affected by smoke.

An hour later, the man allegedly set a retail shopping center on fire near 21st and Glendale avenues.

The suspect put debris inside a tire and lit it on fire, leaving it in front of Hair Again Salon. The fire burned the front of the business, traveled inside, and extended to the back wall. It was destroyed.

Millie’s Dog World, two doors down, was also impacted by the flames. Firefighters forced their way in and extinguished flames that traveled inside through the vents, the business owner, Millie Spinelli told 12News.

Spinelli has operated her shop at this location for 25 years. November’s fire was the second time in eight months that flames damaged her store, she said.

“It took a whole entire year to get the shop back together and two days later, after everything was put back together, we had another fire,” Spinelli said. “Today, I walked in, and the shop was flooded because there’s holes in the roof from where they were putting out the fire.”

Spinelli said she will remain open for business as her roof gets fixed.

As for Kara McAllister, the owner of Hair Again Salon, she is in the process of rebuilding a new salon in a different suite, but in the same shopping center. The building owner fronted some of the costs, she said.

“The amount of support that I’ve received has been amazing,” McAllister said. “I’m glad with my decision to stay here.”

McAllister has owned the salon for a decade, after purchasing it from her boss who operated it for more than 30 years.

Spinelli and McAllister said nothing will force them out of the community they love to serve.

“This has gone far too long, too many people have been affected,” McAllister said. “Businesses are not coming back from having fires at their places, but Millie and I aren’t going to be run out of here. We’re not going to let the bad guys win.”

Ohio Synagogue Target of Swatting Threat

A Valley synagogue was the target of a hoax bomb threat on Monday.

The Ohev Beth Sholom synagogue received the bomb threat early in the work day, prompting an investigation from the OBS team, Youngstown Police Department, and Federation security team. They quickly deemed the threat not credible.

Sarah Wilschek, Executive Director at OBS, says at no point were congregants or others in the synagogue in any danger. There is also no active threat o the congregation.

"We understand that such situations are unsettling, but we want to reassure you that the safety and security of our congregation remain our top priority," added Wilschek. "We will continue to remain vigilant and work closely with local authorities to ensure the security of our facility."

Officials from the Youngstown Area Jewish Federation issued a joint statement on the threat, highlighting the recent uptick in swatting activities against the Jewish community. Swatting is considered "the action or practice of making a threat in an attempt to bring about the dispatch of a large number of armed police officers to a particular address."

"Though the increase of these threats is disconcerting, we have no reason to believe there is any credible threat to our local community," said Andrew Lipkin, Youngstown Area Jewish Federation CEO, and Bonnie Deutsh Burdman, Executive Director of Community Relations and Government Affairs. "We will continue to work closely with local and federal partners to address these threats.

"The safety of the entire Jewish community is of utmost importance to us."

Montana State University Under Investigation Once Again for Antisemitism

Montana State University faces another federal investigation, one from a complainant who alleges the Bozeman flagship discriminated against students of Jewish ancestry and against female students.

It’s the second time this year the U.S. Department of Education’s Office for Civil Rights has informed the state’s largest public university it is under investigation for discrimination.

In this complaint, the Office for Civil Rights said it will investigate whether MSU failed to respond to allegations of harassment of students “and other individuals” on the basis of national origin, specifically Jewish ancestry, and harassment of female students on the basis of sex.

The letter from the federal agency follows a separate letter to MSU this fall about another civil rights investigation.

In October, the federal agency informed MSU President Waded Chruzado it had received more than 20 complaints alleging the university failed to respond to threats against a campus group that supports LGBTQ+ students, the Queer Straight Alliance.

MSU provided the Dec. 5 letter to the Daily Montanan following a request for the status of the earlier probe and any additional notices from the agency.

The Office for Civil Rights enforces regulations that prohibit discrimination, including on the basis of national origin and on the basis of sex.

“As the university receives federal financial assistance from this department, it is required to comply with these federal civil rights laws,” the letter said.

The letter requests data from MSU, such as copies of discrimination complaints involving antisemitism and witness statements. However, it does not further detail the allegations in the complaint that prompted the investigation.

In an email, MSU Vice President Tracy Ellig said the university is cooperating with the OCR process; it provided all the information requested in response to the first investigation and plans to do so for the second as well.

“While we are always willing to collaborate and assist OCR in their processes, it is important to note that these are allegations that are under investigation,” Ellig said. “OCR has not issued any findings indicating MSU’s response was lacking.”

In an email, Commissioner Clay Christian, who oversees the Montana University System, said he takes all complaints of discrimination seriously and is in regular contact with MSU leadership.

“If OCR finds we can do more to protect students, we welcome those recommendations,” Christian said in an email provided by a deputy with the Office of the Commissioner of Higher Education. “We are always looking to improve how we support students in an ever-changing environment.”

The new investigation follows recent national attention to antisemitism — and free speech — on college campuses. It also comes after a death threat to the Queer Straight Alliance at MSU in February and ensuing criticisms from students who described a pallid response from administrators last semester.

At the time, law enforcement said it didn’t find a credible threat of violence, and the event promoted by the Queer Straight Alliance took place safely. However, MSU administrators didn’t publicly acknowledge the situation for weeks, raising the ire of club members and other students and supporters on campus.

A student who is part Asian and faced her own separate ongoing harassment at MSU — and, she believes, MSU’s apathy — put up posters last semester and this one to encourage other students on campus to file any discrimination complaints with the Office for Civil Rights.

In a text, Alexandra Lin, who is part Taiwanese, confirmed the Office for Civil Rights informed her she also could file a formal complaint against MSU given the information she already provided to the agency about her ongoing harassment there.

Lin said she plans to do so. She said she encouraged students to file complaints directly with the federal agency as opposed to the campus office that investigates discrimination because she believes MSU fell short in her own case — which preceded the death threat against the QSA last semester — and cases filed by other students.

“The university has shown a lack of transparency and accountability for their actions and inaction,” Lin said. “I hope that encouraging students to engage in the OCR process will allow for more meaningful resolutions.”

The federal agency typically does not discuss investigations while they are underway, and it wasn’t clear if the investigation into antisemitism and sexism are linked to the profusion of complaints last semester.

However, the Daily Montanan earlier spoke with six students who filed seven complaints with the Office for Civil Rights last semester, including one who said she found Nazi propaganda on her car and around a campus parking lot and reported it.

The students generally alleged MSU was not doing enough to ensure the campus is a safe place for minority students, and they argued money and politics play an undue influence on Cruzado and MSU leaders, who they said kowtow to conservatives in Montana.

Antisemitism on college campuses has been in the national spotlight lately following Hamas’ attack on Israel in October and Israel’s invasion of Gaza. The University of Pennsylvania president resigned after critics said she didn’t take a strong enough stance against antisemitism at a congressional hearing, and the leaders of Harvard University and MIT also faced pressure to step down.

Just last week, U.S. Sen. Steve Daines, a Montana Republican, announced he is sponsoring legislation to defund colleges and universities that promote antisemitism. However, in his email, Daines blamed “diversity, equity and inclusion” policies he said push “a liberal worldview.”

The conflict abroad has heightened debates about free speech on university campuses in the U.S. in the wake of protests by supporters of Palestine.

MSU has not issued a message to students or the campus community about the discrimination investigations, and Ellig did not directly address whether President Cruzado believes the university needs to make any improvements given the mounting federal scrutiny.

In his email, Ellig said MSU is “committed to fostering a campus environment that is conducive to learning and free from discrimination and harassment.” He also said the campus is cooperating with OCR in any way necessary.

“To safeguard the integrity of this and any other investigation, MSU refrains from publishing statements or making expressions regarding these processes,” Ellig said.

He also said MSU has offices that support students, including a Title IX office that investigates complaints of discrimination and harassment, and others that “empower and assist” students with physical and mental health and wellness on and off campus.

“We are proud of the dedicated staff who provide these services every day with attention and care to our students,” Ellig said.

Commissioner Christian, too, touted existing and new services and programs, “from campus events focused on student belonging, education about resources if a student experiences discrimination or feels unsafe, and adding additional security measures.”

In an earlier interview, the Board of Regents chairperson noted campuses provide many services, but students don’t always know about them.