Hate graffiti, knife found at Israeli Reform synagogue
JERUSALEM — Israeli police on Thursday found hate graffiti against liberal streams of Judaism scrawled on the walls of a synagogue affiliated with the Reform movement, as well as death threats addressed to some of the movement’s leaders and a knife.
Photographs in the Haaretz newspaper showed envelopes with names of leaders, including the president of America’s Union for Reform Judaism, Rabbi Rick Jacobs, and Anat Hoffman, the chair of a group fighting for egalitarian prayer at the Western Wall, the holiest site where Jews can pray. Police spokesman Micky Rosenfeld said an investigation is underway.
The incident highlighted tensions between the liberal Reform and Conservative Jewish movements and the Orthodox establishment in Israel, which has a monopoly over Jewish rituals such as marriage, burials and conversions. While the liberal streams are dominant among U.S. Jewry, they are marginal in Israel and have struggled to make inroads there.
A statement from Jacobs called the vandalism “reprehensible.” He called on Israeli Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu to improve the standing of Reform Jews in Israel.


