Rabbi Mordechai Liebling has been attending counter protests for 50 years and never saw this level of ‘chaos and hatred.’

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The violence that occurred at a white supremacist rally in Charlottesville, Virginia on Saturday is a result of President Trump’s rhetoric and actions, Jewish leaders said following the deadly event. During the controversial rally, a 32 year old woman and two State Troopers were killed and 19 others injured.

While American Jewish leaders have urged Trump to speak out against such hate, the President only made vague statements condemning violence on “many sides” and claimed that these kinds of events have been going on for a long time throughout American history.

“President Trump’s 2016 campaign fanned the flames of racial and religious bigotry,” President of the Interfaith Alliance, Rabbi Jack Moline said. “While running for office, and now as president, he has regularly embraced figures and policies beloved by the extreme right.”

Sunday’s tragic events, Rabbi Moline added, highlight the “urgent need for President Trump to formally and forcefully disavow white supremacy.”

“His remarks thus far are woefully inadequate,” he continued.

Moline stressed that “the bigotry and violence on display in Charlottesville, Virginia must be denounced by all political leaders in no uncertain terms.”

“It’s unthinkable that in 2017 we would see crowds of torch-wielding white supremacists and neo-Nazis proudly displaying their swastikas and Confederate flags on the University of Virginia campus,” he concluded and called on President Trump to “prove [his] critics wrong.”

The Jewish mayor of Charlottesville, Michael Signer also pointed fingers at the President and his administration.

“I place the blame for a lot of what you’re seeing in America today right at the doorstep of the White House and the people around the president,” he said.

Several American Jewish groups joined in condemning the hate in Charlottesville. The Anti-Defamation League described the event as “the largest and most violent gathering of white supremacists in decades.”

The initial gathering started as a protest against the dismantling of the statue of General Robert E. Lee, general of the Confederate army during the American Civil War. The white supremacists chanted, “Hail Trump, Blood and Soil!” references to the Nazi-era slogans.

The Simon Wiesenthal Center also issued a statement condemning the alt-right and sent condolences to the family of the woman who was killed by the car as well as two state troopers who died in a helicopter crash while responding to the violence.

“Americans have the right to debate civilly the removal of a statue, the status of a flag or [the] renaming of a park, without turning to violence and worse.” The Center’s statement urged the president to condemn the alt-right and white nationalists and concluded that “extremists, left or right, have no place in the mainstream of our nation.”

One thought on “How They Do It–American Jews Demand Trump Denounce White Supremacist violence in Charlottesville”
  1. Ah, the hypocrisy of American Jews who piously denounce racist activity in Amerika but condone and support it in Palestine…. Does anyone think that a parallel to the final quotation above would EVER be issued by the ZioWiesenthal Center with respect to the extremist settlers and their enabling regime and general Zionist populace in the “holy” land?

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