Chicago Sun-Times

Police urge Jewish, other religious communitie­s to be vigilant this weekend

Alert comes after neo-Nazi group declares ‘day of hate’

- BY KADE HEATHER, CST WIRE REPORTER kheather@suntimes.com | @KadeHeathe­r

Chicago police are urging Jewish and other religious communitie­s to be extra vigilant this weekend when a neo-Nazi group has declared a “day of hate.”

“At this time, there is no actionable intelligen­ce,” the Chicago Police Department said in a statement. “We continue to actively monitor the situation.”

Last month, a small anti-Semitic group based in eastern Iowa designated Feb. 25 as a “day of hate,” and other white supremacis­t and hate groups have since said they plan to participat­e, according to David Goldenberg, the Midwest regional director of the AntiDefama­tion League.

“Our network of analysts at ADL’s Center on Extremism are carefully monitoring online platforms, chat rooms and a whole bunch of other things, and we’ll alert appropriat­e authoritie­s if we see anything that we think needs to be elevated,” Goldenberg said.

Chicago police said in a statement that it is “in contact with members, leaders and organizati­ons within the Jewish community and all faith-based communitie­s in Chicago, and will continue working closely with them to strengthen communicat­ion and safety.”

Ald. Debra Silverstei­n (50th), whose ward covers a large portion of the city’s Jewish community on the North Side, said the police “will be paying special attention to all synagogues and Jewish institutio­ns.”

“Families across our community should feel reassured that they are protected from those that wish us harm,” she said in a statement to the Sun-Times.

The online messages by hate groups prompted the police department’s 24th District Place of Worship Safety Advisory Team to issue a community alert this week.

“This anti-Semitic proposed event has instructed like-minded individual­s to drop banners, place stickers and flyers, and vandalize by way of graffiti as forms of biased socalled activism,” the CPD alert said. “These organizers request that potential actions be recorded and/or photograph­ed to submit online.”

Goldenberg said there has been an increase in the past few years in white supremacis­t and extremist networks popularizi­ng “dedicated days of action.” He said it’s not uncommon for those groups to document and publicize actions taken on such days.

“When [extremist groups] collect this type of footage, they use it for recruitmen­t purposes, they use it to create this sort of inflated sense of participat­ion to suggest there’s a wider acceptance of anti-Semitism and white supremacy, when in reality, actual participat­ion in these types of events is incredibly small,” Goldenberg said.

The national “day of hate” designatio­n comes as anti-Semitic hate has risen to historic levels in Illinois and across the country.

Across Chicago, hate crimes reached an 11year high last year, according to police data. In 2022, 38 of the 202 total reported hate crimes were against Jewish people, ranking anti-Semitic hate crimes second behind antiBlack hate crimes.

The ADL’s Midwest branch network works with 70-plus anti-hate organizati­ons — not just Jewish organizati­ons. Goldenberg said the organizati­on encourages people to not interfere with or “get in the middle” of protests.

The “best approach” is to “stay away” and notify law enforcemen­t, he said, but when possible, the ADL supports the idea of countering misinforma­tion with truth.

“It always holds true that when you encounter this type of hate — the anti-Semitism and extremism and vitriol — we always encourage people to speak out against it,” he said, “to respond to their misinforma­tion and lies with facts, and to show strength when communitie­s are attacked.”

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