The Reporter (Lansdale, PA)

Jewish centers coping with bomb threats, vandals

- By Michael Rubinkam

Jewish centers and schools across the nation coped with another wave of bomb threats Monday as officials in Philadelph­ia made plans to repair and restore hundreds of vandalized headstones at a Jewish cemetery.

Jewish Community Centers and day schools in at least a dozen states received threats, according to the JCC Associatio­n of North America. No bombs were found. All 21 buildings — 13 community centers and eight schools — were cleared by Monday afternoon and had resumed normal operations, the associatio­n said.

It was the fifth round of bomb threats against Jewish institutio­ns since January, prompting outrage and exasperati­on among Jewish leaders as well as calls for an aggressive federal response to put a stop to it.

“The Justice Department, Homeland Security, the FBI, and the White House, alongside Congress and local officials, must speak out — and speak out forcefully — against this scourge of anti-Semitism impacting communitie­s across the country,” said David Posner, an official with JCC Associatio­n of North America. “Members of our community must see swift and concerted action from federal officials to identify and capture the perpetrato­r or perpetrato­rs who are trying to instill anxiety and fear in our communitie­s.”

The FBI and the Justice Department’s Civil Rights Division are probing the threats.

Attorney General Jeff Sessions called the vandalism and bomb threats serious, unacceptab­le behavior and said the department will “do what it can to assist in pushing back ... and prosecutin­g anybody that we can prove to be a part of it.”

“We are a nation that is a diverse constituen­cy, and we don’t need these kind of activities,” Sessions said.

In Philadelph­ia, police investigat­ed what they called an “abominable crime” after several hundred headstones were damaged during the weekend at Mount Carmel Cemetery, a Jewish cemetery dating to the late 1800s, said Steven Rosenberg, chief marketing officer of the Jewish Federation of Greater Philadelph­ia.

Police said the vandalism appeared to be targeted at the Jewish community, though they cautioned they had not confirmed the motive. Philadelph­ia Mayor Jim Kenney said authoritie­s were doing everything possible to find those “who desecrated this final resting place.”

“I’m hoping it was maybe just some drunk kids,” said Aaron Mallin, who discovered the damage during a visit to his father’s grave. “But the fact that there’s so many, it leads one to think it could have been targeted,” he told WPVI-TV.

The vandalism comes less than a week after a Jewish cemetery in suburban St. Louis was targeted. More than 150 headstones there were damaged, many of them tipped over.

Both acts of vandalism spurred offers of help.

The Philadelph­ia Building & Constructi­on Trades Council, an umbrella group for more than 50 union locals that work in the constructi­on industry, offered to repair the damage at Mount Carmel free of charge, calling it a “cowardly act of anti-Semitism that cannot be tolerated.” A community cleanup organized by the Jewish Federation was to begin Tuesday with as many as 50 volunteers per hour.

And in Missouri, a Muslim crowdfundi­ng effort to support the vandalized Jewish cemetery near St. Louis had raised more than $136,000 by Monday, with organizers announcing they would use some of the money for the Philadelph­ia cemetery.

Monday’s bomb threats caused no physical damage but were no less worrisome.

“There’s plenty of people who are scared,” said Rosenberg, who denounced the hoaxsters as “an embarrassm­ent to civilized society.”

Some 200 people were evacuated from a Jewish Community Center in York, Pennsylvan­ia, after a caller told the front desk there was a bomb in the building, said Melissa Plotkin, the York JCC’s director of community engagement and diversity. Police entered the building and cleared it, she said.

 ?? JACQUELINE LARMA — THE ASSOCIATED PRESS ?? Joe Nicoletti and Ronni Newton of the Taconey Holmesburg town watch group pay their respects at a damaged headstone in Mount Carmel cemetery Monday in Philadelph­ia. More than 100 headstones have been vandalized at the Jewish cemetery in Philadelph­ia,...
JACQUELINE LARMA — THE ASSOCIATED PRESS Joe Nicoletti and Ronni Newton of the Taconey Holmesburg town watch group pay their respects at a damaged headstone in Mount Carmel cemetery Monday in Philadelph­ia. More than 100 headstones have been vandalized at the Jewish cemetery in Philadelph­ia,...

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