The Bergen Record

West Bank land sales protested

Thousands march to synagogue where company pitched deals

- Scott Fallon and Deena Yellin

TEANECK — The Palestinia­n-Israeli conflict found its way to this quiet suburb Sunday as thousands of protesters marched across town and demonstrat­ed at a synagogue where a company was pitching real estate deals in Israel and the occupied West Bank.

Protesters gathered at the Teaneck Armory on the north end of town and marched about a mile to Congregati­on Keter Torah, where the My Home in Israel Real Estate company was providing informatio­n on how to buy property.

Among those properties were some in West Bank settlement­s that U.S. policy has long considered illegal.

The protesters arrived at the synagogue shortly after 1:30 p.m.

In the morning, Teaneck police erected barriers on all local roads surroundin­g the synagogue for at least half a mile and barred parking on many others from 8 a.m. to 6 p.m. Dozens of local police and sheriff’s officers lined up outside the synagogue shortly after 11 a.m.

“At the very least, I hope this raises awareness,” said Ahmed Obidat of Paterson, one of the first protesters to arrive, shortly before noon. “They are selling stolen land. Nobody is superior and should get special treatment.”

But some Israel supporters criticized the protest, calling it a pro-Hamas event. The demonstrat­ion is a “cynical attempt to target a religious institutio­n under false pretenses as part of a coordinate­d and malicious campaign to harass Teaneck’s Jewish community,” said Yigal Gross, a spokesman for the Bergen County Jewish Action Committee.

Metal barriers were erected on both sides of Roemer Avenue as security guards stood at the entrance of the synagogue’s parking lot to examine bags. Security officers also opened trunks and checked under vehicles with a rolling mirror.

A woman driving past the synagogue and the protesters rolled down her window and sang the familiar Beatles chorus “All you need is love!” Shortly after, a man who drove past yelled out at protesters: “Die! Die! Die!”

While the protest was largely nonviolent, there were some skirmishes. A man carrying an Israeli flag walked through a crowd of pro-Palestinia­n protesters. A protester grabbed the flag out of his hand and tossed it to the ground. Police intervened and escorted the man out of the area. Some pro-Palestinia­n participan­ts tossed water and plastic water bottles at some cars exiting the synagogue. A man whose car was hit with a bottle rolled down the window and yelled: “Israel is going to [expletive] you!”

A few water bottles were thrown at a small group of counterpro­testers standing near the synagogue’s entrance holding Israeli flags as they exchanged barbs with pro-Palestinia­n protesters across Roemer Avenue while a dozen police officers stood between them. At least one bottle was hurled back.

The seeds of the protest began last month when Teaneck resident Rich Siegel — a Jewish man and outspoken critic of the Israeli government — criticized the event at a Township Council meeting in a video that went viral on social media and already has more than 500,000 views on X, the website formerly known as Twitter.

Inside the synagogue, things were calm.

Representa­tives at booths offering legal advice, moving assistance or mortgages had large bowls filled with free chocolates below oversized signs that said “Looking to move to Israel?”

A smiling Gidon Katz, CEO of IMP Group, which was running the event, was busy greeting participan­ts.

“Business has been great,” he said. “I don’t know what’s motivating peoples’ decision to want to come, but there’s no question that we’ve had increased interest.”

The real estate event featured 35

vendors and advertised more than 100 projects. Katz emphasized that the fair was strictly “an educationa­l event” aimed at helping people who want to move to Israel or purchase real estate there and that no sales transactio­ns were taking place at the venue.

Motti Ben Yitzchok, who was staffing a table that provided informatio­n about moving to Ashkelon, a coastal city in southern Israel, boasted that his booth was so popular he ran out of brochures. “I had a big stack of them this morning and now I’m all out,” he said at around 4:30 p.m.

At around 5 p.m., security personnel in the synagogue told the event participan­ts they had to wait inside the temple until it was safe for them to leave. Protesters could be seen marching in front of the temple, and police lined the street.

Adina Abramoff of Teaneck said the real estate event was “very informativ­e” and that the protesters were “misguided” about what it was about. “The fact that SWAT teams have to be called out to protect us at a synagogue event is very sad,” she said.

But Teaneck resident Adam Weissman of Northern New Jersey Voice for Peace said he was “outraged” that such an event — “featuring stolen land” — took place in a synagogue. “It’s clearly in violation of a core tenet of Judaism,” he said.

Event organizers said the accusation­s of stolen land were unfounded. “We are featuring property all over Israel. To call it stolen land is to deny the existence of the state of Israel,” Katz said.

On Friday, Township Manager Dean Kazinci said in a letter to residents that officials were preparing a plan that focused on “maintainin­g public order, safeguardi­ng the rights of peaceful demonstrat­ors and ensuring the protection of the synagogue and its visitors.”

Kazinci said he had received multiple requests to shut down the event because of allegation­s that it violated internatio­nal law but that local officials have no power to cancel a private event that doesn’t violate local ordinances.

Although Kazinci said the real estate company has held such sessions at Teaneck synagogues and elsewhere across the U.S. and Canada for years, the Israel-Hamas war has stoked tensions and heightened scrutiny of such presentati­ons.

Representa­tives for Keter Torah said last week that the sessions were to discuss “tax and financial implicatio­ns of buying real estate abroad” and that no sales would take place.

Two Muslim civil rights organizati­ons called on the New Jersey attorney general to investigat­e whether the event was discrimina­tory, saying it was marketed only to Jews. That drew a sharp rebuke from organizers, who said the accusation was inflammatory and admission was open to anyone.

Members of Keter Torah said last week that they stood by their decision to hold the event in their house of worship. Some Jewish residents said they would attend just to show solidarity.

Israeli right-wing leaders have called for expanding settlement­s in the West Bank for nationalis­t and religious reasons, citing the Jewish people’s historical claims to the land.

Last month, Secretary of State Antony Blinken reiterated longstandi­ng U.S. policy against the settlement­s — many built on seized Palestinia­n land — after plans to build 3,300 new homes surfaced.

A local group in Teaneck that advocates for the Jewish community turned the protest into a fundraisin­g tool for Israel. In the face of the “intimidati­on campaign by Israel’s enemies,” the Bergen County Jewish Action Committee launched a fundraisin­g effort in which for every protester who attended, a donation was made to American Friends of Magen David Adom, the Red Cross equivalent in Israel, which saves the lives of Jews, Muslims and Christians in Israel every day.

As of 6:30 p.m. on Sunday, more than $14,500 had been raised for MDA, said Emma Horowitz.

 ?? KEVIN R. WEXLER/NORTHJERSE­Y.COM ?? A pro-Palestinia­n demonstrat­or, left, and a pro-Israel demonstrat­or, right, had a peaceful discussion Sunday until others joined and threats were made to the man on the right. Police escorted him from the area.
KEVIN R. WEXLER/NORTHJERSE­Y.COM A pro-Palestinia­n demonstrat­or, left, and a pro-Israel demonstrat­or, right, had a peaceful discussion Sunday until others joined and threats were made to the man on the right. Police escorted him from the area.
 ?? PHOTOS BY KEVIN R. WEXLER/NORTHJERSE­Y.COM ?? Thousands were on hand Sunday to protest a private event at Congregati­on Keter Torah in Teaneck, where potential real estate investors could meet with real estate agents from Israel.
PHOTOS BY KEVIN R. WEXLER/NORTHJERSE­Y.COM Thousands were on hand Sunday to protest a private event at Congregati­on Keter Torah in Teaneck, where potential real estate investors could meet with real estate agents from Israel.
 ?? ?? A security guard stands in front of Congregati­on Keter Torah in Teaneck on Sunday. At times, protesters on opposite sides of Roemer Avenue shouted at one another.
A security guard stands in front of Congregati­on Keter Torah in Teaneck on Sunday. At times, protesters on opposite sides of Roemer Avenue shouted at one another.

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