The assault at P.S. (Public School) 682 in
the Gravesend neighborhood took place after the fifth-grade graduation,
when Lana and Johan tried to take family pictures and the
Arabic-speaking family tried to push them out of the way.
“We told them there was space for both
families,” Lana recalled. “An older man turned to us and said ‘Free
Palestine!’ for no reason. My husband told him this was not the time or
place for that but the man cursed at him in Arabic, and shouted, ‘Free
Palestine, Gaza is ours, death to Israel.'”
While Johan clashed with the man and told
him to back off, another man “just came out of nowhere, punched me in
the head, and it was a scuffle,” he told the Post. “From there,
I don’t remember, because there was so much going on and so many people
on top of me. Then I was put in a chokehold. Somebody was holding my
leg. It was chaotic.”
The couple’s 16-year-old son tried to help
his father but was also assaulted, as was Lana when she attempted to
film the incident.
“A woman from the group came up from
behind me, pulled me by the hair, and knocked me down on the ground,
shouting, ‘I will kill you,'” she said. Two male teachers eventually
broke up the fight, the family said.
The NYPD arrested Ez-Al Dean Bazar,
26, who punched and dragged Johan, according to a criminal complaint
filed by the Brooklyn District Attorney’s office. The police complaint
makes no mention of an antisemitic motive, and the suspect was
released without bail.
While Lana claimed authorities initially
told her the incident was not probed as a hate crime as she is not
visibly Jewish, the NYPD told the Post on Saturday that its Hate Crimes Task Force was investigating.
Meanwhile, a spokesperson for the New York
City school system shifted the blame to the Jewish family, saying:
“Initial reports we have received from multiple witnesses indicate that
both families engaged in aggressive behavior, but we are still
investigating the matter and are simultaneously engaging with families
as we work towards a resolution.”
The statement was disputed by Lana and her
husband, who said the U.S. Department of Education was “trying to sweep
it under the rug to avoid further scrutiny of this heinous antisemitic
act.”
A surge in antisemitic incidents
New York City has seen an uptick in
antisemitic incidents in the wake of the Hamas terrorist attacks in
southern Israel on Oct. 7, which resulted in the slaughter of some 1,200
people and the kidnapping of more than 250 others, primarily civilians.
Earlier this month, pro-Palestinian protesters rushed the Brooklyn Museum,
assaulting public safety officers and damaging artwork as they made
their way inside and occupied the lobby. The NYPD arrived in force about
an hour later, taking 34 people into custody.
Six were charged with crimes ranging from
trespassing to assault, while 23 received summonses for misdemeanors,
including trespassing, graffiti and resisting arrest. The New York Daily News said that at least one faces charges for assaulting a police officer.
In a separate incident on June 12, the family homes of the Jewish director of the Brooklyn Museum and other officials were vandalized.
The assailants smeared red paint and
graffiti on the Brooklyn Heights home of Anne Pasternak, director of the
museum, and hung a banner at the entrance to her apartment building
that accused the Jewish woman of being a “white supremacist Zionist.”
“Blood on your hands” was also splashed in
red paint on the walkway leading to her residence. The homes of two
trustees and the museum’s president and CEO Kimberly Panicek Trueblood,
whose husband is Jewish, were also targeted in the coordinated attack.
In April, NYPD officers
arrested approximately 200 people at Brooklyn’s Grand Army Plaza, one
block from the home of Senate Majority Leader Chuck Schumer (D-N.Y.).
Chants at the rally included “Disclose, divest, we will not stop, we
will not rest. Disclose, divest” and “Let Gaza live.”
1 comment:
Alvin Brag doesn't give a shit, so nothing will happen.
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