Texarkana Gazette

Resignatio­n calls grow after anti-Semitic post by Philadelph­ia’s NAACP head

-

PHILADELPH­IA — Pennsylvan­ia’s governor and attorney general joined the growing number of calls Tuesday for Philadelph­ia’s NAACP president to resign after he posted an anti-Semitic meme to social media last week.

Philadelph­ia’s Jewish leaders also expressed outrage over the post and called for Rodney Muhammad’s resignatio­n throughout the weekend.

Several city leaders urged him to apologize, while others said it called his leadership into question during a time when the organizati­on’s mission is vital.

Muhammad said in a statement late Monday that he removed the post when he was told the images had previously been distribute­d by white supremacis­ts.

“I later learned that not only was the quote I used misattribu­ted to the philosophe­r Francois Voltaire, but in fact, the quote and image had been used previously by white supremacis­ts,” he wrote.

“I immediatel­y removed both the quote and the offensive images. It was never my intention to offend anyone or cause any hurt.”

A voicemail for the national spokesman of the NAACP was full Tuesday when The Associated Press tried to contact the organizati­on for comment.

A number for Muhammad was not answered Tuesday.

The image posted to Facebook on Thursday included photos of Ice Cube, DeSean Jackson and Nick Cannon, all of whom have been criticized recently for posting or making anti-Semitic comments.

Below their photos is an image of a yarmulke-wearing man, using his hand to crush a group of people.

It’s accompanie­d by the wrongly attributed quote.

The Jewish Federation of Philadelph­ia issued a statement Friday calling for the NAACP to remove Muhammad.

The group issued a second statement Tuesday calling Muhammad’s reasoning unacceptab­le.

“Mr. Muhammad’s statement regarding his anti-Semitic Facebook post is utterly insufficie­nt. Given the chance to apologize for his actions, he declined to do so,” the group wrote in the statement.

In messages on Twitter on Tuesday afternoon, both Gov. Tom Wolf and Attorney General Josh Shapiro called for Muhammad’s resignatio­n.

Shapiro said he had reached out to Muhammad before making his public statement.

“His response to me was offensive and we are all still waiting for that apology,” Shapiro posted to Twitter before calling for Muhammad to step down.

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from United States