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Fear in America's Jewish community intensifies after latest antisemitic attack

Fear in America's Jewish community intensifies after latest antisemitic attack

CNN03-06-2025

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The Middle East
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Like many Jewish Americans, Hannah Gay Keao has been living on edge and fear of antisemitism since Hamas' deadly October 7 terrorist attack on Israel.
But when her daughter asked why she was sad hours after a man targeted Jewish people and set them on fire at a community event in Boulder, Colorado, Gay Keao paused.
The firebombing attack happened just 25 miles from where Gay Keao serves on the Edgewater city council, and she said she searched for a way to explain the antisemitism unfolding in their backyard in terms the 4-year-old could understand.
'She's Jewish,' Gay Keao said. 'It's important for her to know the realities of the world.'
Jewish leaders have been alarmed by the historic rise in antisemitic threats since the war between Israel and Hamas began in 2023. That fear has only heightened this week with the attack in Boulder, the third violent attack on the Jewish community in the last two months.
Two Israeli embassy workers in Washington, DC, were killed outside the Capital Jewish Museum in late May, and an arsonist set the Pennsylvania governor's mansion on fire on the first night of Passover because of Gov. Josh Shapiro's views on the war in Gaza, according to search warrants.
'I wish I could say I was surprised by these events, but Jews have been sounding the alarm on the rise in antisemitism since October 7,' Sheila Katz, the CEO of the National Council of Jewish Women said. 'This is what happens when we allow antisemitism to go unchecked.'
The attack on Sunday came during a peaceful demonstration aimed at raising awareness of the remaining hostages in Gaza. Twelve people were injured, and two remain hospitalized, officials said.
The suspect, Mohamed Sabry Soliman, told investigators he 'wanted to kill all Zionist people' and had planned the attack for a year, according to an affidavit. He was captured on video by bystanders yelling 'Free Palestine' before police arrested him.
Soliman now faces a federal hate crime charge and state charges of attempted murder.
'Most Jews right now are feeling unsafe and unsure about where to show up,' Katz said. 'Killing and burning Jews does nothing to make Palestinians safer or more free.'
'Antisemitism will never be a path to justice.'
Sunday's attack came hours before the start of Shavuot, the holiday commemorating the day God gave the Torah to the Jewish people.
At the Main Line Reform Temple just outside of Philadelphia, Senior Rabbi Geri Newburge said the past several weeks have been brutal, leaving her 'pretty demoralized and heartbroken.'
The aftermath of October 7—combined with escalating protests against Israel's war in Gaza— made an attack like this feel inevitable, she said.
'It doesn't feel like such a stretch to me at this point that the rhetoric would move from posters or chants to doing something violent,' Newburge said.
The rabbi noted she and members of her congregation have also felt antisemitism increasing across the country — and it's taking a toll.
'It's exhausting — spiritually, emotionally and even physically,' Newburge explained.
Across the country, Jewish schools, synagogues and community centers continue to have tight security. Oftentimes, there is a visible police presence or armed security guards.
Michael Bernstein, board chair of the Tree of Life in Pittsburgh, attended an event last Wednesday for a local Jewish organization where some of the attendees were non-Jews. He called the necessary security an 'unfortunate tax' and a measure most other communities don't need.
This latest wave of attacks has left many Jewish leaders wondering what more can be done. Bernstein said Jews needed to secure their spaces, but security and the Jewish community alone wouldn't solve antisemitism.
'This is an American problem, it's not a Jewish problem,' he said, and pointed to Pittsburgh community after the massacre at the Tree of Life synagogue.
The 2018 shooting, the worst attack on Jews in American history, left 11 worshippers dead and six others wounded.
Pittsburgh, he said, came together to say antisemitism wasn't acceptable.
'An attack on one group is an attack on all of us,' Bernstein said. 'And the community held us.'
'It's an all-of-society approach.'
Outside the Capital Jewish Museum in Washington, candles and flowers mark the spot where Sarah Milgrim and Yaron Lischinsky were gunned down on May 21.
The white lilies placed at the memorial hadn't even started wilting yet when the firebombing in Boulder began.
Milgrim and Lischinsky attended an event to discuss how multi-faith organizations could work together to bring humanitarian aid to war-torn regions like Gaza. Their friends and colleagues said they were devoted to the peace process in Israel.
The suspected gunman, whom DC police later identified as 31-year-old Chicago native Elias Rodriguez, shouted 'Free Palestine' after he was arrested.
Katz, who said she knew Milgrim professionally and had been invited to the event, but was unable to attend, stressed 'non-violence must be non-negotiable.'
'Anyone who wants to see peace, who wants to see an end to the war, who wants to see the hostages to be released, who wants to see a better future for Palestinians and Israelis, has to understand that violence towards Jews in America or around the world is not going to make that peace happen,' Katz said.
Antisemitism has surged globally, according to the Anti-Defamation League, and rose after the start of the war in Gaza. Threats to Jews in the United States tripled between October 7, 2023 and September 2024, the organization said.
Gay Keao said she has been critical of Israel's action toward Palestinians but has also witnessed a disregard for Jewish safety since October 7. Now, she often wakes up wondering, 'What's going to happen next?'
'I just refuse to believe that the cyclical violence is inevitable,' she said. 'As a Jewish person, I can't embrace that. I'm here for breaking those cycles.'
Nearly 2,000 miles away, sitting beneath his synagogue's serene outdoor Holocaust memorial, Philadelphia Rabbi Shawn Zevit said his diverse urban congregation has been experiencing a mix of emotions.
But, he said, reaching out to Jewish loved ones is critical at this moment, so his community does not feel alone.
'Just the message of 'I'm thinking about you,'' Zevit argued, can be comforting to Jewish people feeling upset.
But the rabbi also noted calling out even minor instances of antisemitism is key to preventing future attacks.
'Treat those moments as gateways for increased solidarity and vigilance,' he said.
Katz said people knew how to call out antisemitism when it was 'bullets in synagogues or Nazis with tiki torches' but needed to be able to recognize it in all of its forms.
'Antisemitism doesn't begin with bullets or firebombs,' she added. 'But it ends there when it's ignored.'
Bernstein, the chair of the board of the Tree of Life, warned antisemitism doesn't stay a Jewish issue. He pointed to a mass shooting in Buffalo, New York, where 10 people were killed in a racially motivated mass shooting at a supermarket.
'This hateful ideology,' he said, 'it comes after everybody.'
CNN's TuAnh Dam contributed to this report.

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LA Protests: National Guard Troops Have Detained Protesters (Live Updates)
LA Protests: National Guard Troops Have Detained Protesters (Live Updates)

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time28 minutes ago

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LA Protests: National Guard Troops Have Detained Protesters (Live Updates)

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June 7The Los Angeles County Sheriff's Department said it had arrested two people Saturday evening for alleged assault on a police officer, stating multiple officers had been injured by a Molotov cocktail, the Los Angeles Times reported. 10:34 exhibited 'violent behavior' toward federal agents and local law enforcement, the Los Angeles County Sheriff's Department said in a statement, while clarifying it is not involved in federal law enforcement response and is instead focused on crowd and traffic control. 10:22 a post on X, Newsom said the federal government is taking over the California National Guard and deploying soldiers in Los Angeles solely to create a 'spectacle.' 10:06 announced in a post on X the Department of Defense is 'mobilizing the National Guard IMMEDIATELY to support federal law enforcement in Los Angeles,' stating Marines are standing by for deployment in case of violence. 9:17 House press secretary Karoline Leavitt announced Trump would deploy 2,000 National Guard troops to Los Angeles to address 'lawlessness,' citing protests targeting immigration officers. Similar protests have spread to other cities across the U.S., including San Francisco, New York, Chicago, Denver, Las Vegas, Philadelphia, Seattle, Boston, Santa Ana, California, and parts of Texas, including Dallas, Houston, San Antonio and Austin. At least 80 protesters were arrested in New York, while 15 were arrested in Philadelphia, more than a dozen were arrested in Austin and one was detained in Dallas. At least two police officers were injured during protests in Philadelphia. Los Angeles Metro Police officers stand on the road in front of city hall Tuesday night. People take part in an anti-ICE protest in New York City on Tuesday. Protesters walk by the Cloud Gate sculpture in Chicago on Tuesday. Los Angeles Mayor Karen Bass will hold a press conference at 2 p.m. EDT Wednesday. Protests broke out Friday and Saturday in Paramount and Compton, cities adjacent to Los Angeles, over immigration raids conducted by ICE, during which the agency detained 44 immigrants Friday and 118 immigrants Saturday, the Associated Press reported. Police and protesters clashed over the weekend, according to local reports and videos on social media, with law enforcement using tear gas and flash grenades to break up the crowds while some protesters threw rocks and lit vehicles on fire. Glendale, California, announced Sunday the city had terminated an agreement with Homeland Security and Immigration and Customs Enforcement that allowed the agencies to house federal detainees at the city's police facility. Glendale officials said the move was 'a local decision and was not made lightly,' as the city 'recognizes that public perception of the ICE contract—no matter how limited or carefully managed, no matter the good—has become divisive.' Glendale's city manager opted to end the contract after 'careful evaluation of legal, operational and community considerations,' the city said, noting the decision was not 'politically driven.' Trump reportedly said in a memo he is invoking Title 10 of the U.S. Code on Armed Services, which allows the federal government to deploy the National Guard if the United States is 'invaded or is in danger of invasion by a foreign nation,' or if there is a 'rebellion or danger of a rebellion against the authority of the Government of the United States.' Vice President JD Vance said in a post on X on Saturday night the influx of immigrants, which he called 'Biden's border crisis,' amounts to an 'invasion,' rebuffing critics who have questioned whether Trump had the authority to deploy troops. Trump's move has faced some pushback from constitutional scholars. 'For the federal government to take over the California National Guard, without the request of the governor, to put down protests is truly chilling,' Erwin Chemerinsky, dean of the University of California Berkeley School of Law, told the Los Angeles Times. The legal issues raised by Trump sending the National Guard to L.A. (Los Angeles Times)

No new trials for Michigan school shooter's parents despite violation by prosecutors, judge rules
No new trials for Michigan school shooter's parents despite violation by prosecutors, judge rules

Associated Press

time30 minutes ago

  • Associated Press

No new trials for Michigan school shooter's parents despite violation by prosecutors, judge rules

DETROIT (AP) — A judge on Wednesday denied requests for new trials by the parents of a Michigan school shooter, despite finding that prosecutors had committed a violation by failing to disclose agreements with two important witnesses. Setting aside the involuntary manslaughter convictions of James and Jennifer Crumbley and starting over would be too severe, Oakland County Judge Cheryl Matthews said. 'The court would effectively be ignoring the impact of dozens of hours of testimony, postulating a basis for the jury verdict, dismissing a plethora of other evidence suggesting guilt, and impermissibly speculating about what 'might have happened,' ' Matthews said. The Crumbleys are serving 10-year prison sentences. They didn't know their son had planned to commit a mass shooting at Oxford High School in 2021. But they were accused of failing to lock a gun at home and ignoring Ethan Crumbley's mental health needs. Four students were killed. The parents didn't take Ethan home on the day of the shooting when they were confronted with his macabre drawing of a gun, blood and dark messages. School administrator Nick Ejak and counselor Shawn Hopkins testified about that meeting. But unknown to jurors and defense lawyers: The men earlier had given interviews to investigators with the promise that their words would not be used against them. They were never charged. Lawyers for the Crumbleys argued that producing those agreements was a fundamental obligation of prosecutors. They said trial attorneys would have further tried to cast doubt on the credibility of Ejak and Hopkins during cross-examination. 'The lack of disclosure ... is in itself disturbing,' the judge acknowledged. Prosecutor Karen McDonald's team had argued that the deals weren't immunity agreements and didn't need to be shared. Jennifer Crumbley's appellate lawyer said the fight will continue in higher courts. 'So the prosecution intentionally cheated and violated the court rules, but they didn't cheat hard enough for the court to do anything about it,' Michael Dezsi said. Ethan Crumbley is serving a life prison sentence. Crumbley, now 19, is serving a life prison sentence. His parents, James and Jennifer Crumbley, are each serving 10-year sentences for involuntary manslaughter. Prosecutors said they had ignored his mental health needs, bought him a gun as a gift and then failed to safely secure it.

FBI assisting in investigation of two bodies found at Michigan's Isle Royale National Park
FBI assisting in investigation of two bodies found at Michigan's Isle Royale National Park

CBS News

time31 minutes ago

  • CBS News

FBI assisting in investigation of two bodies found at Michigan's Isle Royale National Park

The FBI confirmed that it is assisting in an investigation after the bodies of two unidentified campers were found on Monday at Michigan's Isle Royale National Park. Federal investigators say they routinely assist in investigations if requested, but this does not mean they will open an investigation. "FBI policy prohibits the confirmation of the existence of investigations, the release of information on investigations and any public report on the closing on an investigation," the agency said in a statement. Authorities say that at about 4 p.m. on June 8, two park rangers responded to reports of two people dead at a remote campground within the park. After hiking 11 miles to the campground, the rangers found the two people on Monday. Additional ground and aviation resources responded to the scene. The cause of death is unknown.

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