Blunderbuss Firozabad
Made of Pumpkin pie
San Diego Rabbi Aaron Shapiro, 65
"Rabbi Shapiro, while wearing his Yarmulke and tzitzits, which are traditional Jewish garments, he walked into 7-Eleven store near San Diego State to get two sodas when someone walked in behind him and asked him if he was Jewish.
“And then without taking a breath, he launched into a tirade against Israel, against the Jews; ‘all Jews should be dead, all Jews deserve to die,’” Shapiro said.
That volatile volley of words wasn’t the only thing Shapiro said happened to him inside the store.
“Then he just ran at me and, as you can see, I wear my tzitzits out.
The tzitzits are attached to a four-cornered garment, and he pulled one of them, yanked it off, threw it on the floor, said something completely vile, and ran out the door,” Shapiro said."
Here's the asshole.
To be fair, no doubt he has had multiple, horrifying experiences with Jewish people on the beaches of San Diego.
" The suspect is described as a white man, aged in his late 20s to early 30s, who stands about 5’8” with an average build and long wavy hair, possibly dreadlocks."
" Lt. Shark [was asked] if there was a rise in anti-Semitism in San Diego. He responded,
“In hate crimes, not necessarily. But what we have seen, and the news has reported, are these anti-Semitic or hate incidents. I'm referring to the flyers that have been put up in different parts of San Diego and usually the eastern part: Lake Murray, Del Cerro, San Carlos area."
And guess who did that?
The GDL.
San Diego Police investigate attack on rabbi as hate crime
A local rabbi said he was inside a College Area 7-Eleven store when a man confronted him and "launched into a tirade against Israel, against the Jews ..."
Residents react to antisemitic flyers found in San Diego neighborhoods
Residents in San Carlos, Santee, and Del Cerro found flyers on their car windshields with hate-filled messages against the Jewish and LGBTQ communities.
They generally hang from a prayer shawl, undershirt.
"San Diego Rabbi Aharon Shapiro describes the importance and meaning behind some of the traditional Jewish garments.
“So, it’s similar like we wear our Yarmulke that reminds us that God is always above us. We wear the tzitzits to remind us to do acts of goodness and kindness,” Shapiro said."
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