1968Ku Klux Klan Bombing of Beth Israel Synagogue

During the American Civil Rights Movement in the 1960s, the ...
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1925
1960
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1969

🔥 Rise of Antisemitism in the US led by the Ku Klux Klan

Outbreak of antisemitism in United States, led by Ku Klux Klan.
Rise of Antisemitism in the US led by the Ku Klux Klan (1921)
AntisemitismKu Klux KlanHate GroupsUnited StatesRacismWhite SupremacyEarly 20th CenturyNativism
United StatesUnited States

📖 Bishop Alma Bridwell White's "The Ku Klux Klan in Prophecy"

The Ku Klux Klan in Prophecy is a 144-page book written by Bishop Alma Bridwell White in 1925 and illustrated by Reverend Branford Clarke. This book primarily espouses White's deep fear and hatred of the Roman Catholic Church while also promoting antisemitism, racism against African Americans, White supremacy, and Women's equality.
Bishop Alma Bridwell White's "The Ku Klux Klan in Prophecy" (1925)
Ku Klux KlanAntisemitismWhite SupremacyRacismReligious ExtremismUnited StatesPropagandaEarly 20th Century
United StatesUnited States

💥 Synagogue Firebombing and Shooting in Mississippi

On 25 March, 1960, the synagogue Congregation Beth Israel and its members were subject to an antisemitic attack. About 180 members were attending a Friday evening service to dedicate the new Zemurray Social Hall, and led by then-rabbi Saul Rubin and Rev. John Speaks and Dr. Franklin Denson of First Methodist Church, when windows were smashed and the synagogue fire-bombed. Two members—Alvin Lowi and Alan Cohn—who rushed out to see what was happening were met by Jerry Hunt, a 16-year-old Nazi sympathizer, who wounded them both with a shotgun, then fled. Lowi was just shot in the hand, but one of Cohn's aortas was nicked, and he almost died, requiring 22 US pints (10 L) of blood. Earlier that week Hunt had attended a rally for antisemitic and white supremacist politician John G. Crommelin, and had had a fight with a Jewish boy over a chess game at the Gadsden Community Centre.
Synagogue Firebombing and Shooting in Mississippi (1960)
AntisemitismViolenceSynagogueHate CrimeWhite Supremacy1960sCivil Rights MovementSouthern United States
United StatesUnited States

💥 Dynamite Bombing of Congregation Beth Israel

In 1967, Congregation Beth Israel moved to its current location, a building on Old Canton Road described by Jack Nelson as "an octagonal structure dominated by a massive roof". On 18 September 1967 the new building was wrecked by a dynamite bomb placed by Klan members in a recessed doorway. According to Nelson, the explosion had "ripped through administrative offices and a conference room, torn a hole in the ceiling, blown out windows, ruptured a water pipe and buckled a wall." The perpetrators were not discovered. In November of that year the same group planted a bomb that blew out the front of the house of Dr. Perry Nussbaum (Beth Israel's rabbi from 1954 to 1973), while he and his wife were sleeping there.
Dynamite Bombing of Congregation Beth Israel (1967)
AntisemitismViolenceSynagogueHate CrimeKu Klux Klan1960sCivil Rights MovementSouthern United States
United StatesUnited States

💣 Ku Klux Klan Bombing of Beth Israel Synagogue

During the American Civil Rights Movement in the 1960s, the leadership of Beth Israel spoke out against the Ku Klux Klan's attacks on black churches. In response, Thomas Tarrants of Mobile, Alabama, who had helped bomb the synagogue building of a different synagogue, Beth Israel Congregation, and its rabbi's house there (see previous entry in this timeline) bombed Beth Israel's education building on 28 May 1968. The force of the blast knocked down several walls of the education building and caved in part of the roof while also destroying a door at the opposite end of the synagogue building. A hole approximately 24 inches (61 cm) in diameter was left in the concrete floor, and damages were estimated to be around $50,000 (equivalent to $452,000 today). According to Sammy Feltenstein, past president of Congregation Beth Israel, pieces of stained glass that survived the bombing were salvaged and adorn the front window of the synagogue today. Later that year, on 30 June, Tarrants returned to Meridian to bomb the home of Meyer Davidson, an outspoken leader of the Jewish community, on 29th Avenue. But the FBI and police chief Roy Gunn convinced Raymond and Alton Wayne Roberts, local Klan members, to gather information about the Klan's operations, and leaders of the Jewish communities in Jackson and in Meridian had raised money to pay the two informants, who tipped off the FBI about the attack before it happened.
Ku Klux Klan Bombing of Beth Israel Synagogue (1968)
Ku Klux KlanBombingSynagogueCivil Rights MovementUnited States1960sWhite SupremacyAntisemitismHate Crime
United StatesUnited States

💣 Attempted Bombing of Berlin Jewish Community Center

Tupamaros West-Berlin attempted to bomb of West Berlin's Jewish Community Centre. The bomb, supplied by the undercover government agent Peter Urbach, failed to explode.
Attempted Bombing of Berlin Jewish Community Center (1969)
BombingJewish Community CenterGermanyWest BerlinLeft-wing Terrorism1960sTerrorismAntisemitism
GermanyGermany