The Atlanta Journal-Constitution

No anti-Semitic flyers distribute­d in DeKalb

Anti-Muslim flyer leads to misunderst­anding; police are investigat­ing.

- By Joshua Sharpe joshua.sharpe@ajc.com

A report of anti-Semitic and anti-Muslim flyers distribute­d in a DeKalb County neighborho­od has turned out to be largely a misunderst­anding.

Police confirmed Tuesday they had no evidence of any anti-Semitic flyers found in the largely Jewish Toco Hills neighborho­od, and they were aware of just one anti-Muslim flyer that was placed on a car earlier this month. Police are investigat­ing the anti-Muslim flyer. A snowball affect started online when a resident, who had heard about the anti-Muslim flyer, found a piece of paper they mistakenly thought was an anti-Semitic flyer.

Lined with swastikas, the paper described the Holocaust as a “Jew lie” and said Jewish people are “odious creatures,” according to photos provided to The Atlanta Journal-Constituti­on. But Dov Wilker, the Atlanta regional director of the American Jewish Committee, said the organizati­on has determined the paper was a “historical document” someone had

been using to study the history of anti-Semitism and holocaust denial.

The document was found in the Toco Hills area, which was reeling in the wake of recent deadly attacks on Jews in New York and New Jersey.

Wilker said the local resident saw the document with the swastikas and sent it on to others, mistakenly thinking it was linked to the anti-Muslim flyer. Wilker said his understand­ing is the anti-Muslim flyer, which says Islam permits throwing acid in women’s faces, was placed on a Toco Hills resident’s car in another part of the county. The car’s owner is Jewish, not Muslim.

Edward Ahmed Mitchell, the executive director of the Georgia chapter of the Council on American-Islamic Relations, called on DeKalb police to charge whoever put out the anti-Muslim flyer with a hate crime.

Wilker said a lot of factors led to the subsequent spread of misinforma­tion.

“It goes to show the Jewish community is seriously on edge,” he said. “They’re being hypervigil­ant” because of rising anti-Semitism.

The scare over flyers came just days after five Jewish people were stabbed at a Hasidic rabbi’s New York home in what authoritie­s say appeared to be a hate crime. Earlier this month a standoff and shooting in Jersey City, New Jersey left six people dead, including three people inside a kosher supermarke­t.

The Anti-Defamation League has found the distributi­on of racist, anti-Semitic and Islamophob­ic propaganda nearly tripled from 2017 to 2018 nationwide, with 1,187 incidents reported in 2018. A survey released in October by the American Jewish Committee found the majority of Jews in America view anti-Semitism as a growing problem.

It’s important to share stories of discrimina­tion when they occur, Wilker said. He said it is also necessary to verify stories before sharing them.

 ?? CONTRIBUTE­D BY PHIL SKINNER ?? City of Atlanta fire crews work the scene Tuesday where a tree fell on a house on Ridgemore Road NW in northwest Atlanta, killing an elderly woman, according to reports.
CONTRIBUTE­D BY PHIL SKINNER City of Atlanta fire crews work the scene Tuesday where a tree fell on a house on Ridgemore Road NW in northwest Atlanta, killing an elderly woman, according to reports.
 ?? FAST COPY NEWS SERVICE ?? A document used to study anti-Semitism was found in the largely Jewish Toco Hills area.
FAST COPY NEWS SERVICE A document used to study anti-Semitism was found in the largely Jewish Toco Hills area.

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