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Antisemitism ad that runs during Oscars draws criticism

“I’m sure they had decent intentions, but this ad sends a poor message,” wrote Jewish educator Dovid Bashevkin.

Police Tape
Police Tape. Credit: Matt Gush/Shutterstock.

An ad purchased by the Foundation to Combat Antisemitism that ran during the Academy Awards on Sunday is drawing criticism for depicting a bar mitzvah celebrated in a church.

“I’m sure they had decent intentions but this ad sends a poor message,” wrote Dovid Bashevkin, director of education for NCSY. “We are grateful to our non-Jewish neighbors, but we don’t take kindly to seeing a bar mitzvah in a church.”

“Our history of forced conversion and assimilation makes such imagery honestly too painful to bear,” he added.

Rabbi Shlomo Litvin, a Chabad rabbi in Kentucky called the ad “absolutely moronic.”

“A bar mitzvah takes place in the middle of the night and gets a bomb threat, so they go next door to a church to finish the ceremony,” he wrote. “What in the ignorant savior foolishness motivated the script? Maybe stop Jew-hatred by meeting a Jew.”

The ad states that “895 Jewish temples received bomb threats last year,” adding that “this is one of those stories.”

Police cars rush to the synagogue and officers interrupt the service. The rabbi and congregants retreat to an adjacent church, as a SWAT team searches the building.

The commercial concludes with the rabbi stating in the church sanctuary, “Thank you for welcoming us,” before continuing with the bar mitzvah celebration.

“Hate loses when we stand together,” the ad states.

The memo calls on the party to be aware of “the strategic goal of groypers across the nation” to take over the Republican party from within.
The New York City mayor said that he is “grateful that Leqaa has been released this evening from ICE custody after more than a year in detention for speaking up for Palestinian rights.”
“I hope all the folks from Temple Israel know that we’re praying for them,” the U.S. vice president said. “We’re thinking about them.”
The co-author of the K-12 law told JNS that “this attempt to undermine crucial safety protections for Jewish children at a time when antisemitic hate and violence is rampant and rising is breathtaking.”
The measure has drawn opposition from civil-liberties groups, including the state’s ACLU.

Israel Airports Authority confirmed that the planes were empty and no injuries were reported.