Diaspora Jewry
Rupert Nathan is waiting for the Crown Prosecution Service to decide whether to press charges for his alleged derogatory online remarks • The U.K. has recently drawn headlines for clamping down on “hateful” online speech, with critics accusing it of a “two-tier” justice system.
“We have committed to engage across government departments to ensure the action we need to reclaim our streets, campuses and community buildings,” the groups said.
“The Palestinian cause becomes a license to hate,” stated Yonathan Arfi, president of the Representative Council of Jewish Institutions of France.
The organizers, including Christians for Israel, are considering legal action, according to news reports.
“It’s very scary to see these students siding with a terrorist organization that tried to murder me,” Sarri Singer tells JNS.
“In this election, we have seen how Jewish values vote, and increasingly, they vote red,” stated the analytics firm behind the report.
Adolescents with weaker Jewish backgrounds were found to express more sympathy for the Hamas terror group.
One woman was detained on suspicion of racially or religiously motivated criminal damage, according to the Metropolitan Police.
Dutch Justice and Security Minister David van Weel is set to present a broad strategy in the fight against Jew-hatred on Friday.
“Federations have a duty to support Ukraine’s vibrant and active Jewish community,” said Eric Fingerhut, the organization’s president and CEO.
The plaintiffs have obtained original documents demonstrating Tehran’s involvement in helping Hamas prepare the deadly attack.
Rupert Nathan says his remarks were not illegal or antisemitic.