Lodi News-Sentinel

Man shouts ‘Heil Hitler, Heil Trump’ during ‘Fiddler on the Roof’

- By Christina Tkacik, Sarah Meehan and Lillian Reed

BALTIMORE — A man shouting a pro-Nazi and proDonald Trump salute during a performanc­e of “Fiddler on the Roof ” in Baltimore has reignited discussion­s of antiSemiti­sm amid increases in hate crimes nationwide.

Audience member Rich Scherr said the outburst, during intermissi­on at the Hippodrome Theatre on Wednesday, prompted fears that it was the beginning of a shooting. The man, who had been seated in the balcony, began shouting “Heil Hitler, Heil Trump.” Immediatel­y after that, “People started running,” Scherr said. “I’ll be honest, I was waiting to hear a gunshot. I thought, ‘Here we go.’”

Samit Verma was seated in the balcony when he heard shouting and saw a man holding his hand straight up in a Nazi salute, he said in an email Thursday. Ushers rushed over to the man while audience members quickly made their way out of the theater and into the hall, Verma said.

“The people around me appeared to be quite shaken by the incident,” Verma said in the email. “There were some people in tears.”

Baltimore Police were called and security escorted the man out a few minutes later, a police spokeswoma­n said, and the show continued. Witnesses told the Baltimore Sun that the audience applauded as the man was removed.

Police issued a stop ticket to the man, but he was not arrested, police said. A stop ticket is the least severe measure police can take when responding to a complaint, followed by citations and arrests. Stop tickets do not carry any fines or other penalties and do not require follow-up from the recipient.

“As reprehensi­ble as those words are, they are considered protected free speech because nobody was directly threatened,” police spokesman Matt Jablow said in an email.

The outburst occurred during intermissi­on, immediatel­y following a scene that depicts a wedding interrupte­d by a pogrom — an attack on Jewish people which can range from destructio­n of homes or property to outright massacre.

For some, it was an eerie moment of life imitating art. Audience member Theodore Casser said the incident at intermissi­on made the following act all the more poignant for him as a person of Jewish faith.

“It is a story inherently about Jews being made not to feel welcome, and here is this bozo who decided to express that he felt we should not be welcome here either,” Casser said.

Fresh on the minds of many was the shooting last month at a Pittsburgh synagogue that killed 11 people inside. Witnesses in that instance said the gunman shouted “All Jews must die,” before opening fire.

But Scherr, 49, said it was hard to focus on the play after the outburst. “My heart was just racing. I didn’t even really pay attention to the second act.”

“Fiddler” tells the story of a Jewish family as it faces persecutio­n in tsarist Russia. It’s based on “Tevye the Dairyman,” a series of fictional stories by author Sholem Aleichem, originally written in Yiddish. The play opened Tuesday and runs through Sunday in Baltimore.

In a statement, Hippodrome officials apologized to patrons and emphasized that a full team of security is always onsite during live performanc­es to check bags and screen patrons, as well as monitor cameras throughout the venue.

“Our venue has a proud tradition of providing shared experience­s to people from all walks of life, right in the heart of this wonderfull­y diverse city, and we intend to continue that tradition in the spirit of bringing people together, not dividing them.”

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