Wednesday, / April 24, 2024
Home / news / Photos

Police arrested a man suspected of causing widespread damage by smashing windows and other glass surfaces at a Jewish school in Vienna early Sunday using an iron rod, a spokesman said.

The man’s motive was not immediately clear. He was refusing to answer questions, police spokesman Herbert Hutter said.

Images on the Web site of Austrian broadcaster ORF showed the building’s hallways littered with glass. Doors and glass display cases were also damaged, ORF reported.

The Austria Press Agency cited Chabad’s Rabbi Jacob Biderman, head of the school’s administration, as saying that the man told the police officers who arrested him that his name was Adolf Hitler.

The school, which has 360 pupils from kindergarten to high school-age, was unoccupied and unguarded in Sunday’s early hours. A police spokesman said the man was detained at the scene after residents nearby called in noise complaints to police.

Jewish community leaders denounced the vandalism of a Jewish school as the worst anti-Semitic incident in Austria for two decades and showed reporters a trail of destruction on all three floors of the Lauder Chabad School in the capital Vienna.

Jewish community leader Ariel Muzicant said the incident could not be likened to arson attacks on synagogues in France in recent years or the 1938 "Kristallnacht" (Night of Shattering Glass) pogrom against Jews in Nazi Germany.

"I don’t want to create the impression that Jews face once again being beaten on the streets of Austria," he said amidst heaps of glass shards including from a display case whose sports trophies lay on the floor, misshapen from heavy blows.

"This is an act of vandalism, it’s not a tragedy. Nothing was burned down, no one was hurt. We don’t know whether this was the act of a mentally ill person or an (organized) political act. We must avoid making generalizations," he told reporters.

"However, it is no doubt an anti-Semitic act, done out of rage and hatred. It’s very disturbing. But we will not be intimidated," Muzicant added, saying he hoped the incident would spur efforts to improve public education against bigotry.

Rabbi Biderman said classes would resume on Monday after a cleanup.

Colorful paintings and drawings by schoolchildren were left untouched, and no swastikas or anti-Semitic graffiti were found.

Muzicant said the last serious anti-Semitic attack in Austria was in the mid-1980s when a number of gravestones were desecrated by neo-Nazis.

Austria’s small Jewish community leads a generally well integrated life, although its schools in Vienna have police guards when classes are in session.

There are two small, far-right parties in Austria’s parliament who deny periodic accusations that some members harbor neo-Nazi sympathies.

Former Freedom Party leader Joerg Haider drew international condemnation for praising Nazi Germany’s employment policies and Hitler’s Waffen SS elite force, but later apologized

Comment

Be the first to write a comment.

Add

More Galleries
3,000 Teens Converge on Times Square In A Show of Jewish Pride
More than 3,000 Jewish teenagers representing the largest network of Jewish teens met up in New York City at the annual CTeen International Shabbaton on…
At the Farmer’s Market
Been to the Farmer’s Market lately?   The freshly-baked hand-braided breads—courtesy of your local Chabad center—are selling out fast.  From Setauket, N.Y. to Petaluma, California, from…
Zambia’s Chabad Rabbi Meets Presidents of Zambia, Israel
Zambia’s brand-new Chabad rabbi Mendy Hertzel recently met with the president of Zambia, Hakainde Hichilema, at a dinner hosted in President Hichilema’s honor by Israel’s…
700th Chapter for Cteen in Estonia!
During the Havdalah Ceremony in Times Square, CTeen announced the launch of its 700th chapter, founded in Estonia under the directorship of Rabbi Michi and…
81st Annual Commemoration of Babi Yar Massacre in Kyiv
Today, on the 81st commemoration of the Babi Yar massacre, Chabad emissary and Kyiv Chief Rabbi Yonatan Markowitz lit candles and led the annual memorial…
97-Year-Old World War II Vet Gets Surprise Medal Ceremony at Chabad of San Antonio
Ninety-seven-year-old Gerald Teldon was in Chabad of San Antonio for his great grandson’s bar mitzvah when Lieutenant Colonel Andrew Stein surprised the World War II…
Rabbi Shalom Stambler Awarded for Work With Warsaw’s Jewish Community
Poland’s Minister of Foreign Affairs, Zbigniew Rau, awarded Chabad of Warsaw’s Rabbi Shalom Stambler an honorary badge, recognizing his 17 years of work advancing the…
Kosher Cuisine comes to Rwanda
Rabbi Chaim and Nechama Dina Bar Sela opened the first kosher restaurant in Kigali, Rwanda, bringing kosher Israeli cuisine to central African locals and travelers…
Newsletter
Donate
Find Your Local Chabad Center
Magazine