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Gordon Haber

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Gordon Haber,

Gordon Haber New York City

Opinion

Attacks against Jews in my city of New York are random, but not unusual

Police statistics show Jews are disproportionally targeted in New York City, Gordon Haber writes

September 5, 2019 09:06
Members of the Strictly Orthodox community in Brooklyn, New York City, where three violent attacks were reported against Jews in the space of a week
2 min read

Last week, Brooklyn was a dangerous place to be an observant Jew.

On Tuesday in Crown Heights, a neighbourhood with a heavy Chasidic presence, a 64-year-old rabbi was bloodied by a brick to the head. On Thursday, also in Crown Heights, another rock broke the window of a delivery driver’s vehicle, injuring him in the eye. On Saturday in Flatbush, another Brooklyn neighborhood with a large Jewish presence, a Jewish man was struck in the face by a belt.

Three attacks in one week. The question is if this was an aberration, or has violence against Jews become normalised? Can we expect more of this, especially after the massacre 
in Pittsburgh?

While I’ve never been an alarmist when it comes to American antisemitism, it seems undeniable that the Brooklyn attacks, while individually random, are not unusual.