Hundreds of mournings gathered in wind and rain on Friday for a vigilance, which added sorrow and disregard in the memory of two men, who were killed when a knife -walled attacker attacked his court English Manchester city.
Police are standing behind Cordon, which still surrounds the Heton Park Hebrew Congress Aradhanar in the city’s serpent neighborhood, saying that they had forgotten by a society that has allowed the unrelatedness to grow in the UK in the last two years.
Politicians and other leaders have failed to reject the anti-anti-opponent-Jewish He said that to speech or save Jews from hate crimes, he said.
“We are Jews, but we are English. We live in Manchester for 150 years. We are here,” Simon Burton, who works in sales, told the Associated Press. “We think, as a community, we are not always heard. We feel.”
On Thursday, when people gathered at the synagogue to convince Yom Kipping on the holiest day of the Jewish calendar, the attacker took his car to the people outside the building and stabbed a person. Police said that another person was inadvertently shot by the police, who faced the attacker. Three other people were seriously injured.
The attack was declared an act of terrorism
Officials declared the attack an Act of terrorism, although they are still investigating what the attacker inspired, which was identified as a natural British citizen of the Syrian dynasty. He was shot by the police.
“Now, our hearts are shattered,” said on Friday, the lead Rabbi Empiram Mirvis. “The transparented that was done yesterday was a terrible blow for us, something that really was afraid that this action could be caused by the construction of this action.”
As evidence of the climate of intolerance BritainSome people pointed to anti -Palestinian protests in London, which proceeded on Wednesday night, even Jews across the country hurting death in Manchester.
Police in London urged the organizers to stop a demonstration planned for Saturday to oppose the government’s decision to ban Group Palestine’s action, which was given a terrorist organization label after attacking Israeli defense contractors and Royal Air Force aircraft in support of war in Gaza.
The organizers rejected the request.
The group said in a statement, “The cancellation of peaceful protest allows terror to win terror.”
Protests and counter-protects in Britain have caught cities across Britain since the Hamas-led attack on Israel about two years ago.
Pro-Pricin march has become loud and brutally cruel amid criticism of Israel’s aggressive criticism in Gaza. Some Jews say that they feel threatened by mantras such as “from the river to the sea, Palestine will be free”. The protest has been largely peaceful.
Israeli Prime Minister and his supporters have often accused the conduct of war in Israeli critics or antisementism. Israel’s blockers see it as an attempt to reduce valid criticism.
The number of antisementic phenomena has increased
According to the Community Security Trust, the attack on Hamas by Hamas on Israel, the number of antisemtic incidents described in the UK since October 7, 2023 has increased, which works to protect the Jewish community. The group recorded 1,521 antisemtic incidents in the first half of this year, which was above 965 in the same period of 2023.
But in the series, the neighbors of all religions banded together on Friday to support each other, focusing on their mutual hatred in violence on their multicultural community during seven minutes on Thursday morning.
A local businessman Sham Raja said, “There is no place for this.” “The Jewish community, of course, they are very upset that has happened, and there is no place for antisemic. And as a British Muslim, I fully support the Jewish community and work shoulder to shoulder with them.”
Josh Eronson, a Jewish person who lives near the synagogue, said that people of all religions went out to show their solidarity.
“Yesterday I had a story that … one of my neighbors, who is a Muslim and another neighbor who is a Christian, and himself, we embrace together and it seems that they can be in this community,” he said.
But the air of solidarity was shattered during Friday’s vigilance, when Deputy Prime Minister David Lammi was introduced to the crowd. Lammi was a UK Foreign Secretary a few weeks ago and is seen as a government’s architect of the government’s decision to criticize Israel in Gaza and identify a Palestinian kingdom.
Lemy “not today” and “shame on you.”
Mark Adults, President of Jewish Representative Council Greater ManchesterFinally calming the crowd, “Okay, we have heard a lot. We know how you feel.”
The Prime Minister Kir Stmper, who visited the synagogue on Friday, said the attack was designed for “fear” on the Jewish community.
The Jews in Manchester are firm to carry forward. Orthodox Jews hurry to make their shopping ahead of Sabbath, but all journalists were looking for their views. Was they afraid? Did they see it coming?
Yes, there was grief for those who were lost. Yes, there was a fear of growing antisementism. But there was also a disregard there.
“We are not going away,” said Issaq Freedlander. “We are not going to hide. … We are going ahead with our life.”