
Jewish groups in Chicago say local leaders must ‘stop tolerating hate' after Washington, DC fatal shootings
Flanked by officials from the American Jewish committee's Chicago office, the Jewish United Fund, the Simon Wiesenthal Center and several aldermen, the Anti-Defamation League's David Goldenberg said 'this is a major problem here in Chicago, and too many of our elected and civic leaders have not only been silent on the issue, but some continue to fan the flames of hate and antisemitism.'
Although Goldenberg, who is the ADL's Midwest regional director, did not specifically call out anyone by name for their rhetoric, he was critical of Mayor Brandon Johnson for 'elevating people who have a history of being hostile to members (of) the Jewish community.'
The alleged shooter, Chicagoan Elias Rodriguez, was charged Thursday in U.S. District Court with murder after shooting two staff members of the Israeli Embassy in Washington on Wednesday night as they were leaving an event at the Capital Jewish Museum. The two were identified as Yaron Lischinsky and Sarah Milgrim.
Authorities said Rodriguez 'spontaneously stated on scene to (police) 'I did it for Palestine, I did it for Gaza,' and a social media account attributed to the suspect shared a manifesto condemning the deaths of tens of thousands in Gaza and how civil protests had fallen short in stopping the war.
Ald. Deborah Silverstein, 50th, the lone Jewish member of the Chicago City Council, said that 'the unpermitted protests that have overtaken our streets, the unsanctioned encampments on college campuses, the orchestrated walkouts in CPS schools … are not expression of free speech. These are breeding grounds for dangerous ideologies.'
'When our elected leaders enable and praise this behavior, it creates an atmosphere that encourages people to go out and harm Jews,' she said. 'We need our leaders to work to lower the temperature and defuse these extremist organizations that are spreading antisemitism and hate when it comes from within our own parties and from our own political base.'
Johnson has overseen a sharp split among the Chicago City Council over the war in Gaza, including a heated debate over a resolution calling for a ceasefire in which the mayor became a tiebreaker to approve it. It came on the heels of a separate resolution also condemning the October 2023 Hamas attack.
Johnson has described the war in Gaza between Israel and Hamas as 'genocidal,' also calling for 'the immediate releasing of hostages, the end of these acts of terror and the end to this war.'
Johnson committed to lowering the temperature at a Thursday press conference where he and CPD Supt. Larry Snelling addressed the incident.
'There's been so much animus that has been directed towards the Jewish community, and it's our collective responsibility,' the mayor said before pausing and saying, 'to be far more thoughtful about how we express our politics.'
Ahmed Rehab, executive director of Chicago's Council on American-Islamic Relations, said he disavowed the violence, but disagreed with the idea local protests sparked it.
He argued protests have 'all been peaceful' and added that local protest groups do not know Rodriguez.
'I'm seeing the re-definition of antisemitism to include legitimate criticism of the genocide in Gaza in order to give cover,' he said. 'I see that as gaslighting.'
Rodriguez participated in protests for progressive causes, including opposition to the war in Gaza, against Amazon's expansion locally and the police response to the death of Laquan McDonald.
The spotlight on Rodriguez's politics also led to false and misleading claims circulated on social media of the alleged shooter's ties to Johnson allies, underscoring how charged the situation has become since Johnson made waves as the first big city mayor to endorse a ceasefire last year.
Several viral social media posts incorrectly purporting to show Rodriguez alongside Johnson and several progressive aldermen in a political group's 'family photo' were seen by hundreds of thousands of users online. Ald. Rossana Rodriguez Sanchez, 33rd, who is also in the picture, confirmed the man falsely identified as the shooter was actually her former political director, Chris Poulos. Poulos confirmed to the Tribune that he was the man in the photo.
'This is exhausting and harmful. They can really put people in danger,' Ald. Rodriguez Sanchez said of the viral, incorrect posts. 'Our message has always been about peace.'
Though some social media users deleted their claims about the photo when Poulos identified himself, Ald. Raymond Lopez, 15th, left several posts of the image up, one with the caption, 'Birds of a feather.'
'What they are inferring … is open to interpretation,' Lopez told the Tribune. He refused to say whether he meant to imply the shooter was pictured but said he would not take the photo down.
Shlomo Soroka, a lobbyist for the Jewish orthodox organization Agudath Israel of Illinois, told the Tribune on Thursday that Johnson had called that morning to offer condolences and also 'conceded that perhaps he could have done better and can do better in terms of dealing with our community and the sensitivities we have.'
The mayor's office did not respond to a request for comment on the conversation. Soroka said the mayor had given him permission to post about their conversation on social media.
Soroka said he told the mayor 'a lot of the people he surrounds himself with and is associated with are responsible for what happened. There's a movement that has created a climate in which it's acceptable to talk in ways that facilitate violent behavior against Jewish people (that have) nothing to do with the Middle East conflict … you're going to have to be more vocal and call out people that are your friends and allies. And he said, 'You have my word and my commitment.''
But during Friday's press conference, which was also attended by Nancy Andrade, the chair of the city's Commission on Human Relations, Goldenberg and others had harsh words for the mayor. Goldenberg pointed the controversy over the mayor's previous handpicked school board president, Pastor Mitchell Johnson, who resigned last year after coming under fire, in part, for social media posts that were deemed antisemitic, misogynistic and conspiratorial.
'If you're the mayor, you stop appointing and elevating people who have a history of being hostile to members to the Jewish community. And when you find out that they have that history, you get rid of them,' Goldenberg said, adding he was speaking for the ADL. 'Think about Pastor Johnson. The antisemitism isn't what doomed him. It was the 9/11 conspiracies. The antisemitism was known for multiple days, and the mayor continued to allow him to have the job of being the head of the CPS board. It wasn't until he came out that he was in a 9/11 conspiracy theorist and said it was an 'inside job,' that he lost his gig and was forced to step down.'
Goldenberg on Friday said state elected officials could take concrete steps to curb antisemitism, including passing a pending bill that mandates hate crime training for law enforcement, develop a statewide plan to combat antisemitism and for the state's department of education to implement digital media literacy curriculum so children could spot online hate. The hate crime training bill, Goldenberg said, was being held up by members of the General Assembly's progressive caucus.
'This legislation has now been in the House for two years, and we've had a number of conversations about it,' state Rep. Bob Morgan, the bill's sponsor, told the Tribune Thursday. Members have 'expressed concerns to make sure that whatever this training is, that it's done in a way that really is protecting all communities.'
'It's certainly on top of my mind to make sure we do this and do this quickly,' given Wednesday's shooting, Morgan said.
Abdelnasser Rashid, the first Palestinian-American to serve in the Illinois General Assembly, said he 'had been engaging in good faith' efforts to amend the bill to ensure that those supporting Palestinian rights that wear or display the watermelon symbol or wear a keffiyeh, for example, aren't deemed antisemitic.
Conflating 'advocacy for Palestinian rights with antisemitism … is abominable.'
Leaders have an obligation to call out messaging that 'celebrates and calls for violence against Jews,' Goldenberg said. 'Saying 'Free, free Palestine, in and of itself, is not antisemitic,' he said, but signs or chants about globalizing the intifada or glorifying martyrdom should be 'shut down.'
'The irony that these young folks, 26 and 30-years-old, about to get engaged on a trip to Israel, were gunned down as they exited this (diplomatic) event after dedicating their lives towards the progress of peace is the actual illustration of what is going on on our planet right now with antisemitism,' Beth Ida Stern, the interim regional director of the American Jewish Committee Chicago office said. 'The only solution is for us to coalesce, build understanding, overcome our differences and realize that our similarities are what tie us together as human beings.'
Hashtags

Try Our AI Features
Explore what Daily8 AI can do for you:
Comments
No comments yet...
Related Articles
CNN
39 minutes ago
- CNN
Freed hostage says he lives with guilt every day
Eliya Cohen was held hostage for 505 days in Gaza, telling CNN's Clarissa Ward in an exclusive interview that he was chained, shared scraps of pita with other hostages and learned English courtesy of a book gifted to him by a fellow hostage who was subsequently executed by Hamas.
CNN
an hour ago
- CNN
Freed hostage says he learned English while in captivity
Freed hostage says he learned English while in captivity Eliya Cohen was held hostage for 505 days in Gaza, telling CNN's Clarissa Ward in an exclusive interview that he was chained, shared scraps of pita with other hostages and learned English courtesy of a book gifted to him by a fellow hostage who was subsequently executed by Hamas. 02:57 - Source: CNN Vertical World News 11 videos Freed hostage says he learned English while in captivity Eliya Cohen was held hostage for 505 days in Gaza, telling CNN's Clarissa Ward in an exclusive interview that he was chained, shared scraps of pita with other hostages and learned English courtesy of a book gifted to him by a fellow hostage who was subsequently executed by Hamas. 02:57 - Source: CNN Zelensky prepares for White House meeting In the wake of the Alaska summit between President Donald Trump and Russian President Vladimir Putin, European leaders joined Ukraine's Volodymyr Zelensky for a conference call ahead of the leader's meeting with the US president at the White House on Monday. 01:24 - Source: CNN Nationwide demonstrations across Israel demanding hostage deal A planned nationwide strike in Israel on Sunday saw hundreds of thousands take part to call on the government to bring the remaining hostages in Gaza home. CNN's Oren Liebermann reports from Tel Aviv. 01:23 - Source: CNN Witkoff hopeful of trilateral meeting US envoy Steve Witkoff told CNN's Jake Tapper he believes a trilateral meeting between Donald Trump, Volodymyr Zelensky, and Vladimir Putin is possible. 00:39 - Source: CNN Canadian government orders end to Air Canada strike After more than 10,000 Air Canada flight attendants went on strike seeking wage increases and paid compensation for work when planes are on the ground, the Canada Industrial Relations Board has ordered them to return to work according to an announcement by Canadian Jobs Minister Patty Hajdu. 01:05 - Source: CNN Hong Kong's poorly housed bear the brunt of climate change Climate change is making Hong Kong's summers hotter. Yet tens of thousands of residents remain sardined into homes smaller than a parking space, where staying cool is a luxury few can afford as the climate warms. In small, enclosed spaces with little ventilation or cooling, indoor temperatures can soar past 100°F (37.7°C), posing serious health risks for the city's most vulnerable. 01:31 - Source: CNN London's toxic trash 'volcano' Arnolds Field landfill on Launders Lane in east London is better known to locals as the 'Rainham volcano.' The site was used as an illegal dump for years and now, every summer, it bursts into flames, sending plumes of acrid smoke over nearby homes, parks and schools. CNN's Laura Paddison speaks to residents who feel abandoned and trapped. 02:05 - Source: CNN Protesters condemn 'no deal' outcome of Trump-Putin talks Protesters in Alaska said they're not surprised that President Donald Trump and Russian President Vladimir Putin didn't reach a deal on the war in Ukraine. 01:08 - Source: CNN Russian media reacts positively to Trump-Putin Summit Russian state TV gave a positive coverage of the outcome of the Trump-Putin summit in Alaska, celebrating the handshake between the two leaders. Russian officials also stated that the meeting resulted in progress on sanctions and opened up room for future negotiations. CNN's Fred Pleitgen reports. 01:23 - Source: CNN Trump-Putin summit ends with no deal US President Donald Trump said he and Russian President Vladimir Putin 'made some headway' and 'great progress' in their bilateral meeting, but added that 'there's no deal until there's a deal.' 01:15 - Source: CNN Putin makes faces as journalists ask about Ukraine Russian President Vladimir Putin did not respond to reporters' questions about the war in Ukraine as his meeting with President Donald Trump and top aides was set to begin. Putin appeared to make a confused expression as multiple journalists began shouting questions. 00:13 - Source: CNN

Newsweek
an hour ago
- Newsweek
Donald Trump Suggests He's A War Hero: 'I Guess I Am'
Based on facts, either observed and verified firsthand by the reporter, or reported and verified from knowledgeable sources. Newsweek AI is in beta. Translations may contain inaccuracies—please refer to the original content. President Donald Trump suggested on Tuesday that he's a war hero, telling the conservative media host Mark Levin, in part, "I guess I am." Trump made the comment while talking to Levin, a staunch pro-Israel advocate, about working with Israeli Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu to free the remaining hostages held by Hamas in the Gaza Strip. Trump called Netanyahu "a good man," adding that "he's in there fighting." The U.S. president went on to say that although some want Netanyahu to be prosecuted on war crimes charges, "he's a war hero." "He's a war hero because we worked together," Trump told Levin. "He's a war hero. I guess I am, too. Nobody cares. But I am, too. I mean, I sent those planes." Trump has never been deployed or fought in a war. When he told Levin on Tuesday that he "sent those planes," he was referring to ordering airstrikes in June targeting three critical uranium enrichment facilities in Iran. Donald Trump on Benjamin Netanyahu: 'I worked with your friend a war hero. I guess I am, too.' — The Bulwark (@BulwarkOnline) August 19, 2025 Former Republican congressman Adam Kinzinger, an ardent Trump critic who served in the Afghanistan and Iraq wars, expressed shock at the president's remarks, writing on X: "Trump just called himself a 'war hero.' Wow." This is a breaking news story. Updates to follow. The Associated Press contributed reporting to this article.



