The head of an organization representing Orthodox Jews in Brooklyn has urged the city of New York to launch an antisemitism awareness program in the city’s public schools while praising new Mayor Eric Adams’ determination to stamp out hate crime.

Rabbi David Niederman, president of the United Jewish Organizations of Williamsburg and North Brooklyn, told The Algemeiner on Monday that the latest antisemitic attack in the city on Friday night, in which a Jewish teenager was punched in the face by an unidentified assailant, underlined his concern that attacks on Jews in New York are becoming normalized.

“It doesn’t make a difference if it’s in Flatbush or Williamsburg or Crown Heights, it’s an attack on a Jew, and that is unfortunately no longer a traumatic event, because it happens so often,” Rabbi Niederman said.

Niederman emphasized that he was impressed with new Mayor Eric Adams’s response to hate crime on a weekend that witnessed not just the assault in Flatbush, but also the shocking murder of a 35-year-old Asian woman, Christina Yuna Lee, who was stabbed by an assailant who followed her into her apartment building in the Chinatown section of lower Manhattan. Both the Jewish and Asian-American communities in New York have suffered from an increase in hate crime in recent months, some of it connected to falsehoods and conspiracy theories relating to the COVID-19 pandemic.... Read More: Algemeiner