Professional Palestinian protesters rally exterior of a synagogue, to protest a company that promotes Aliyah to Israel, as counter protesters collect in opposition.
Picture by Yoav Ginsburg/ZUMA Press Wire
A distinguished New York rabbi is asking on Mayor-elect Zohran Mamdani to push for legislative motion that might prohibit demonstrations from being held straight exterior homes of worship.
Rabbi Marc Schneier, president of the Basis for Ethnic Understanding primarily based in NYC, mentioned he had a “productive” dialog with Mamdani lower than two days after the headline-making, chaotic protest exterior the Higher East Facet’s Park East Synagogue on Nov. 19.
Professional-Palestine demonstrators gathered that night to oppose a scheduled occasion on the synagogue by Nefesh B’Nefesh, a company that assists Jewish immigration to Israel. The protesters uttered slurs corresponding to “Globalize the Intifada” and “Death to the IDF,” leaving many Jewish and non-Jewish New Yorkers outraged. Days after the protest, Police Commissioner Jessica Tisch apologized to the Park East congregation for her division’s failure to cease the demonstration successfully.
The mayor-elect had contacted Schneier, a worldwide chief in interfaith diplomacy, as he was en route to satisfy with President Donald Trump on Nov. 21. The telephone name got here amid outrage from New Yorkers who known as Mamdani’s preliminary response to the protest exterior Park East Synagogue “weak” and deeply troubling.
Mamdani’s workplace transition workforce confirmed to New York News that the telephone dialog passed off final week, however didn’t elaborate additional on the small print.
In the course of the telephone name, Schneier instructed that the mayor-elect assist laws that might bar demonstrations straight exterior homes of worship. Mamdani, the rabbi defined, responded positively to the concept.
“I said, ‘When you become mayor, why don’t you pass legislation that would forbid any protest or demonstration in front of a house of worship, whether it’s a synagogue, church, mosque,’” the rabbi defined to New York News. “He told me, ‘Rabbi, I love the idea and I can’t thank you enough.’”
Schneier, whose father, Rabbi Arthur Schneier, runs the Park East Synagogue, described Mamdani’s response to the demonstration as a “half-baked” condemnation.
Dora Pekec, Mamdani’s spokesperson, issued a press release that appeared to additional gas outrage over the protest. Whereas she indicated that Mamdani “discouraged the language used,” she nonetheless implied that the occasion contained in the synagogue promoted “activities in violation of international law.”
Pekec’s assertion didn’t straight condemn the rhetoric used throughout the protest, and the implication of a world legislation violation solely added to the anger many Jewish and non-Jewish New Yorkers felt over the episode.ged.
“Instead of condemning the protestors, Mamdani’s spokesperson victim-blamed the members of the synagogue by making the absurd claim that the synagogue program broke international law,” Rabbi Chaim Steinmetz of Congregation Kehilath Jeshurun in Manhattan mentioned. “And she refused to condemn the protesters, only offering the vapid, mealy-mouthed thought that the mayor had ‘discouraged’ such rhetoric in the past.”
A potential assembly with Muslim leaders
Though the dialog between the 2 leaders was nice, Schneier didn’t shrink back from addressing Mamdani’s previous criticisms of Israel.
“I said to him, ‘Not only are you out of touch with the Jewish community, but you’re out of touch with the Islamic world,’” he defined. “I mentioned countries like Indonesia, Saudi Arabia, UAE, they all support a two-state solution, ‘and you refuse to recognize Israel’s right to exist.’”
Rabbi Marc SchneierPhoto by Ido Siman-tov
Schneier additionally instructed Mamdani that he may introduce the Mayor-elect to a number of leaders within the Muslim world who’ve cast peace with Israel and those that are getting ready to take action. He defined that non-public conferences may assist him higher perceive Israel, anti-Zionist rhetoric and the impression such language has on Jewish communities, corresponding to in NYC, residence to the biggest Jewish group exterior of Israel.
The rabbi mentioned Mamdani appeared equally within the concept of assembly with Muslim leaders as he was in supporting the proposed laws barring protests exterior homes of worship.
“I think it piqued his curiosity,” Schneier mentioned. “I don’t think anyone has ever said that to him before.”
He added that assembly with Muslim leaders would “broaden [Mamdani’s] horizons” about relations between Israel and close by Arab nations.
“I want him to go on a journey with me in terms of learning more about where the Muslim world is today when it comes to Israel, when it comes to a Palestinian state,” the rabbi mentioned. “All these countries want to see a Palestinian state, but not at the expense of a Jewish state.”
State Sen. Liz Krueger, who represents elements of Midtown and the Higher East Facet, mentioned following the protest in her district final week that, “No one should feel attacked for their religion going into or out of their place of worship.”
In accordance with a New York Occasions article, Krueger mentioned she is contemplating introducing laws just like Schneier’s concept in Albany.
In the meantime, since his dialog with Schneier, Mamdani appeared to vary his tone barely relating to the protest, at the least in line with his assertion within the New York Occasions article.





