‘We stand up for our neighbors’: Thousands march against anti-Semitism in New York City

Thousands gathered in New York City to protest the rise in anti-Semitism the region has seen over the past several months.

Several prominent New Yorkers, including Rep. Hakeem Jeffries, Sen. Chuck Schumer, and Mayor Bill de Blasio, joined the Sunday march against anti-Semitism. The group marched across the Brooklyn Bridge to honor those who have fallen victim to hate crimes.

“I am proud to march with people of all faiths in New York today to say in a united voice: No Hate. No Fear,” Schumer wrote. “We will not stand for anti-Semitism, bigotry, and hatred.”

De Blasio added, “Anti-Semitism is an attack on ALL New Yorkers — and we stand up for our neighbors in this city.”

The march follows a violent anti-Semitic attack at a Hanukkah celebration last week, in which five Hasidic Jews were harmed in a machete attack. The attack was the 13th anti-Semitic hate crime in two weeks during the holiday season, prompting Gov. Andrew Cuomo to call it an act of domestic terrorism.

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