Middle-age man stabs rabbi in London neighborhood of Stamford Hill
A Jewish man in his 50s was stabbed on Friday morning in the Hackney section of London in an apparent antisemitic attack.
The victim was reportedly standing outside of a bank when the attacker stabbed several times. The assailant was then tackled by several bystanders and held until police arrived.
Several outlets identified the victim as Rabbi Alter Yaakov Schlesinger of the Stamford Hill section of London, known as a heavily Orthodox Jewish area.
Jews have become a daily target in London😢😢 pic.twitter.com/GDAM0okIs6
— Jacklondon ابو رمانة (@aburummana) June 12, 2020
Further video footage of the man who knifed a Rabbi Alter Yaakov Schlesinger being apprehended by passers by. Thank you to all those brave people who restrained him. pic.twitter.com/p38P74Vmq9
— (((GnasherJew®גנאשר))) #LabourAntisemitism (@GnasherJew) June 12, 2020
On Twitter, the Hackney Police said that the attacker is a man in his 40s and has been “arrested on suspicion of attempted murder. … We are not treating this as terror-related.”
UK: U/D Clip, Moments after stabbing Orthodox Jewish man in London suspect was tackled by construction workers and arrested by police pic.twitter.com/kAql8tSjL9
— Yiddish News (@YiddishNews) June 12, 2020
The president of the Board of Deputies of British Jews, Marie van der Zyl, said in a statement “Our thoughts are with the victim and we pray for his speedy recovery. … We hope justice will be swiftly served.” It went on to thank the bystanders “who restrained the attacker, incapacitating him until police arrived.”
A report from the Community Security Trust found that there had been a record 1,805 antisemitic incidents across Britain in 2019—the highest-ever annual total—and the “fourth consecutive year in which CST recorded a new annual high.”
That total, the report went on to say, did not include “a further 566 potential incidents were received by CST but not included in the total as they showed insufficient evidence of antisemitic targeting, content or motivation.”
JNS
There have been many instances of antisemitism in the area of Stamford Hill. I would be more inclined to think of this act as antisemitic until proved otherwise. I wonder what CST consider to be sufficient evidence?