British Jew victim of two antisemitic incidents in same evening

Both incidents took place on public transportation, the first on the London Underground and the second on the bus.

Demonstrator holds up sign reading "Solidarity with British Jews" at "Together Against Antisemitism" rally in London (photo credit: SARKIS ZERONIAN)
Demonstrator holds up sign reading "Solidarity with British Jews" at "Together Against Antisemitism" rally in London
(photo credit: SARKIS ZERONIAN)
A Jewish man was the victim of antisemitic abuse on public transport in London twice on Saturday night, his brother said on social media.
The first incident happened on the Underground, on the escalators leading down to the train platforms.
The video shared on Twitter showed a group of teenage boys laughing in his presence, chanting “we’ve got a Jew behind us,” and “we f***ing hate the Jews,” as the escalators descended.

An hour later he was harassed again. The man’s brother Shlomie Liberow said on Twitter that his “brother [who is visibly Jewish] was attacked on the 113 bus, heading in the direction of Oxford Circus... and the abuser threatened to ‘slit his throat for Palestine.’”

The video showed the man who had threatened him banging violently on the door of the bus, and shouting antisemitic slurs.

In response to the attacks, an official from Transport for London retweeted Liberow, saying they were “really sorry to hear that this has happened on a London bus,” and told his brother to contact the police to investigate the incident.
Metropolitan Police said they had launched two antisemitism investigations and would be meeting the victim to gather further information.
“How proud I am to be English tonight where someone visibly Jewish cannot use public transport without hearing ‘I [f***ing] hate the Jews,’” Liberow said, and called it “so depressing.”
British Jewish comedian David Baddiel responded to the incident on Twitter, noting the only people who had condemned the incident or tried to raise awareness about it so far had been Jews.

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“The lack of non-Jewish allies,” said Baddiel, “as so often in these situations creates a kind of astonished despair.”