Jan. 6, 2021
A white supremacist group from New Jersey posted more than a dozen antisemitic flyers on Staten Island.
The flyers, found over the weekend in the New York City borough, are emblazoned with a Jewish star and falsely claim that Antifa, the loose anti-fascist network, is a Jewish organization that is anti-white.
“The original Antifa was a Jewish anti-Nazi militia,” the flyers said, according to the New York Post. “There is a war against all non-Jewish European-American nationalists.”
The flyers also claim that “600 + Jewish Orgs Support BLM Communist Terrorists,” likely a reference to a statement in support of Black Lives Matter signed last year by hundreds of Jewish organizations.
According to
SILive, four fliers in total were spotted on a single commercial stretch, with two on a medical office building, another at a bus stop, and a fourth on a sign in a supermarket parking lot.
Another flier was seen on Friday.
The New York Police Department’s Hate Crimes Task Force is investigating the fliers, according to a spokeswoman.
The name and website address of a New Jersey-based white supremacist group, the New Jersey European Heritage Association (NJEHA), is listed on the fliers.
The group’s website claims that “White European peoples” in the US are being overrun by non-whites, and that “we must secure the existence of our people and a future for White children.”
Anti-Semitic fliers calling Antifa ‘Jewish anti-Nazi militia’ posted around New Dorp
Updated Jan 02, 2021;
STATEN ISLAND, N.Y. Anti-Semitic fliers claiming that “Antifa [an anti-fascism group] is a Jewish communist militia” were spotted in the New Dorp area on Saturday morning.
In bold text, the fliers read, “The original Antifa was a Jewish anti-Nazi militia. There is a war against all non-Jewish European-American nationalists.”
Anti-Nazi, according to the flier, means “anti-white nationalist, anti-American, anti-Christian.” The flier also maintains that anti-fascism is equivalent to communism.
The Advance/SILive.com observed four fliers in total on the commercial stretch between Sterling Ave. and Penn Ave. on Hylan Blvd.