It’s come to this with left wing domestic terrorism by Hamas supporters in by cites like L.A. and New York. After multiple, brutal attacks on Jewish people out out a meal or walking to synagogue, officials instead of dealing with the problem of left wing domestic terrorism, are instead telling Jews to “hide religious symbols”.
Of course, this isn’t being covered one bit by the terrorist supporting media. Instead, it takes The Times of Israel to report what is really going on with left wing terrorism in this country. It’s come to this.
And of course, because empty head Biden is too afraid of the communist squad and the rest of the anti-Semites in the Democrat party and media, he has not uttered a word abut the attacks on Jews in this country, nor has Kamala. Even in Los Angeles, the partly Jewish mayor Eric Garcetti, a real piece of shit has remained silent.
As Gaza conflict triggers antisemitism, some US Jews hide religious symbols
Jews across the United States have been attacked because of the fighting in the Middle East; national Jewish groups urge Biden to call out such antisemitism
When Ricki moved into her new ground-floor apartment in New York City less than a year ago, she felt perfectly comfortable placing a mezuzah on the front door for all who passed through the lobby to see.Today she feels less sanguine about that choice.
Ricki hasn’t removed the mezuzah, but she has asked the building’s management to put bars on her windows. And she’s still considering taking down the Jewish symbol.
“When I put it up I was really proud of it,” Ricki said, declining to use her last name due to privacy concerns. “I’m not embarrassed of being Jewish, I knew when I put it up that people would see it. But I really didn’t think twice about it.”
She’s not alone in having second thoughts now.
As footage of those attacks and others spreads online, American Jews say they are feeling a renewed anxiety around identifying themselves publicly as Jews. Some are taking off their kippas or Star of David necklaces. Others, like Ricki, are considering the removal of their mezuzahs. Some are mulling whether it’s safe to walk into synagogue.
That anxiety has long been familiar to Jews in Europe and elsewhere in the world. At times it has reared its head in the United States, like in 2018 following the massacre at the Tree of Life synagogue in Pittsburgh. A survey last year by the American Jewish Committee found that nearly a quarter of Jewish respondents avoided wearing or displaying something that would mark them as Jewish at some point in the previous two years.