The Jewish couple are Americans who have been living in Berlin for the past five years.
By Jacob Frankel, The Algemeiner
A Jewish couple, returning from an ice cream shop, was attacked by a mob of anti-Israel protesters in Berlin on Friday after they noticed a Star of David necklace, according to German media.
As a motorcade of demonstrators chanting anti-Israel slogans passed by on the Torstraße, a demonstrator filmed people on the sidewalk, including the couple identified as Adam, 27, and Hannah, 30, as they walked with their ice cream, the German tabloid newspaper Bild reported.
However, when Adam and Hannah indicated they did not want to be filmed and the former showed his middle finger in anger, the situation escalated.
The couple found themselves confronted by “about 15 big guys there, all right in front of us,” Hannah said, according to Bild.
“One of them said, ‘I’ll show you my finger, it will go inside your girlfriend, and when I’m done with her, it will go inside you,’” Adam recounted one of the protesters saying.
Then the mob noticed that Hannah was wearing a Star of David around her neck.
One of the man “spat in my face,” Hannah said, and “everyone shouted something in Arabic and spat at us. I instinctively threw my ice cream at him. Then they went after Adam.”
Adam was then reportedly pulled Adam to the ground by his hair, where his head hit the asphalt and he suffered a concussion.
Berlin police, who eventually rescued the couple, are investigating the incident, and two protesters have so far been arrested for assault.
The Jewish couple are Americans who have been living in Berlin for the past five years.
Meanwhile, in a separate incident, a high school in Berlin that recently canceled its graduation over fears of anti-Israel demonstrations was attacked on Sunday by arsonists who also graffitied a wall of the school with harrowing messages in German such as “Gaza burns, Berlin burns,” according to German media.
The Tiergarten Gymnasium’s suffered roughly €250,000 in damages.
The Social Democratic Party of Germany wrote on X/Twitter in response to the arson, “We condemn the arson attack at the Tiergarten Gymnasium. Politically motivated violence has no place in Berlin or anywhere else.”
The AJC Berlin, a Jewish organization dedicated to fighting antisemitism, also condemned the arson on X/Twitter, writing, “Those responsible must be identified quickly. Schools must be safe places!”
Antisemitism in Germany has exploded since Hamas’ massacre in Israel on Oct. 7, when the Palestinian terrorist group killed 1,200 people and kidnapped about 250 people during the onslaught.
According to German Interior Minister Nancy Faeser, antisemitic hate crimes rose a staggering 95.5 percent in 2023 compared to the prior year.