EJP

Ice menorah smashed at Upper East Side Chabad

The ice-carved menorah commissioned by Upper East Side (UES) Chabad Israel Center, before and after it was smashed. Picture from Twitter.

Shattered Hanukkah menorah stationed at East 93rd Street and 2nd Avenue marks the second holiday attack that occurred at the same center.

By JNS

The ice-carved menorah commissioned by Upper East Side (UES) Chabad Israel Center was smashed in an apparent antisemitic attack on Wednesday night. This incident follows a previous act of vandalism that took place at the same center in October during the Sukkot holiday.

“This was definitely a malicious and intentional act,” said Rabbi Uriel Vigler, who heads the Chabad Israel Center on the UES, in a statement to the @Jews_of_NY Instagram page. “The ice was smashed from both sides. Also on Sukkot we faced this kind [of]hate when our sukkah was vandalized.”

Prior to this incident, the center’s sukkah was vandalized overnight on a Saturday just before the start of Sukkot. Video footage showed a person urinating on the sukkah before kicking it in. The vandalism ended when an unidentified heroic New Yorker intervened.

“On Hanukkah Jews light the menorah purposely at night time in order to spread light, because just a bit of light dispels the darkness,” the rabbi’s statement continued, in reference to the symbolism behind the ongoing Jewish holiday.

Earlier this week, on the second night of Hanukkah, New York leaders spoke out against antisemitism for the “Shine A Light” event. Speakers included New York Governor Kathy Hochul, New York Attorney General Letitia James, CEO of The Jewish Community Relations Council of New York Gideon Taylor and CEO of UJA-Federation of New York Eric Goldstein.

“The darkest place right now is in the heart and soul of some individuals who perpetrate antisemitism and harm individuals who I represent, with words, physical actions, with assaults, with messages on social media,” Hochul said at the event, adding that she views such actions as an attack on her and all New Yorkers.

Vigler concluded by saying that “the forces of hatred will never be victorious,” and that the Chabad center would still light the menorah “and pray that light will win over darkness like it always has for the Jewish people.”

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