Three Jewish men ‘showing solidarity’ with BLM are chased by protesters in Philadelphia
Jewish men are chased by BLM protesters and accused of being from the ‘Synagogue of Satan’ in Philadelphia
- Footage shows as the men, two of whom are wearing kippot, are chased
- The men are asked: ‘What y’all doing down here? You don’t live here’
- When the three men respond they live nearby and were out to ‘show solidarity’, another protester replies: ‘This ain’t your fight. Get the f*** out of here’
- Incident came amid protests over the police shooting death of Walter Wallace Jr
- Public safety chair for a local Democratic Party district committee, Yaacov Behrman, said one of the victims told him he ‘feared for his life’
Three Jewish men who said they joined a demonstration to ‘show solidarity’ with Black Lives Matter, were shoved and chased by protesters in Philadelphia on Tuesday.
Footage shows the group, two of whom are wearing kippot, being accused of being members of ‘the Synagogue of Satan’ and told to ‘get the f*** out of here’.
The clip, which has been widely shared, then goes on to show as the three men are chased by the protesters, with one yelling: ‘This ain’t your fight.’
The police shooting death of black man Walter Wallace Jr had prompted protests, widespread vandalism and an overnight curfew in the city Tuesday.
Yaacov Behrman, the public safety chair for a local Democratic Party district committee, said he spoke with one of the victims who said he ‘feared for his life’ during the incident.
Behrman tweeted: ‘Orthodox Jews violently attacked by mob @ BLM protest last night in Philly. They told protesters they were there to show solidarity. Mob shouted anti Semitic & racist hate as they assaulted victims.
‘Spoke to victim, says he feared for his life. This needs to be condemned by all!’
Footage shows as the Jewish men (left and right) are confronted by angry protesters
When the three men respond they live nearby and were out to ‘show solidarity’, another protester replies: ‘This ain’t your fight. Get the f*** out of here’
The footage begins with the men being asked: ‘Amalek. Amalek. What y’all doing down here? You don’t live here.’ The Amalek tribe was first enemy of the ancient Israelites.’
When the three men respond they live nearby and were out to ‘show solidarity’, another protester replies: ‘This ain’t your fight. Get the f*** out of here.’
The man filming the footage then says: ‘Philly waking up! Revelation 2:9 Synagogue of Satan!’
One of the Jewish men appears to be pushed as all three are then chased.
Protesters confront police during a march Tuesday in Philadelphia. Hundreds of demonstrators marched in West Philadelphia over the death of Walter Wallace
Looters run out of a cellphone store following protests over the police shooting death of Walter Wallace in Philadelphia on Tuesday
As the footage was shared online the Simon Wiesenthal Center tweeted: ’40 years of Farrakhan’s @LouisFarrakhan themes of poisonous Jew hatred now embedded among young protesters.
‘Synagogue of Satan, denial that we are real Jews. Political leaders, media silent.’
Director of StopAntisemitism.org Liora Rez told The Jewish Journal: ‘From the Civil Rights Movement to Ferguson to today’s BLM protest nationally, Jews have been right by the side of the African American community.
Police officers fatally shot Walter Wallace Jr., a 27-year-old Black man, during a confrontation Monday afternoon
‘This physical and verbal assault is a spit in our faces and we demand this be addressed by the likes of Al Sharpton, Jesse Jackson, and the NAACP. We have enough division in this country, the African American leaders need to step up and denounce this immediately.’
Police say they fatally shot Wallace on Monday after he ignored orders to drop a knife, a death that intensified already heightened tensions in the presidential battleground state. Wallace’s mother said she warned police Monday afternoon that her son was in the throes of a mental health crisis.
In the days since, more than 90 people have been arrested and about 50 police officers injured in clashes with protesters and vandals, including the 1,000 or so who suddenly swarmed a shopping center Tuesday night, breaking windows and stealing merchandise.
That scene erupted on the other side of the city, miles from Wallace’ neighborhood, where protests were underway.
The unrest started Monday evening, shortly after Wallace, 27, was killed, and set off protests elsewhere, including in Washington, D.C., the Brooklyn borough of New York City and Portland, where demonstrators held their hands in the shape of a “W” in his honor.
People stand near the scene of the police shooting in Philadelphia, Monday