HATE IN QUEENS: 11 Swastikas Discovered in Two Parks
Authorities are investigating a series of antisemitic vandalism incidents in Queens after nearly a dozen swastikas were discovered spray-painted in two public parks on Sunday, continuing a troubling pattern of anti-Jewish hate crimes in New York City.
Officers from the NYPD’s 104th Precinct responded to a bias complaint near Highland Boulevard and Vermont Place in Ridgewood, according to amNewYork. Police arriving at Highland Park and the Ridgewood Reservoir located five swastikas painted on signs, pavement, and other public property throughout the area.
The discovery came just hours after a separate incident was reported within the confines of the 102nd Precinct in Richmond Hill. Around midday, officers were called to the area near 72nd Road and Union Turnpike, where six more swastikas had been painted along the walls of an underpass adjacent to the Forest Park Playground.
Police said the incidents remain under active investigation, though no suspects have yet been taken into custody. The latest acts of vandalism come one week after antisemitic graffiti was found on two shuls and two private homes elsewhere in Queens.
New York City Council Speaker Julie Menin sharply denounced the incidents and posted photos of the graffiti online, calling the acts an attempt to frighten Jewish residents.
“Highland Park and Forest Park in Queens were vandalized with at least 11 swastikas. Just a week ago today, similar antisemitic graffiti was found at two synagogues and two private homes in the borough. This is yet another hateful incident meant to intimidate Jewish New Yorkers and divide our city. And we want to be clear: We cannot and will not accept this as normal,” she wrote.
Menin pointed to the City Council’s ongoing efforts to combat antisemitism, referencing the body’s Five-Point Action Plan aimed at addressing hate and increasing accountability and education throughout the city.
The city’s Parks Department has been alerted and is expected to remove the graffiti while detectives continue searching for those responsible.
The incidents come amid continued concern over the high number of antisemitic hate crimes in New York City. NYPD statistics released last week showed that Jews were targeted in 30 of the city’s 50 confirmed hate crimes in April — approximately 60% of all reported incidents — despite Jews making up roughly one-tenth of the city’s population.
Police data showed that nine hate crimes targeted Black individuals, three targeted Hispanics, five involved sexual orientation, two were religion-based, and one was tied to gender. No incidents were reported against Muslims, Asians, or white individuals during that period.
Although antisemitic incidents declined from 43 reported cases during the same month last year, officials still recorded 21 such incidents in February and 32 in March.
Between February and April, authorities documented 83 confirmed antisemitic hate crimes out of 143 total hate crime incidents citywide, meaning anti-Jewish attacks accounted for roughly 58% of all cases during that stretch. The incidents ranged from graffiti and threats to physical assaults and harassment.
{Matzav.com}
