“As Jews of Astoria, Queens, District 36, Zohran’s Assembly district, we live in a world where his tenure and campaign have fragmented our community, fractured our trust in each other, and upended our sense of belonging and safety. We are left-wing Jews, right-wing Jews, and out-of-the-box Jews who want nothing more than to focus on the kinds of policy questions that affect our lives as New Yorkers.”

JTA On Oct. 8, 2023, just hours after the Hamas attack in Israel, Zohran Mamdani opted for a political statement of blame, rather than words of comfort and care so desperately needed by his own constituents. Since then, we’ve seen graffiti reading “Long Live Hamas,” “Sinwar Lives,” “Kill Yourself Zionist,” and Hamas red triangles spray-painted on residential buildings and businesses. Flyers attacking “Zionist capital” were distributed during a local rezoning debate, and people waving Hamas flags have rallied in our streets.

Our experience in our neighborhood has torn us away from everyday concerns like making the rent and paying for groceries. That’s because the vision that Zohran said drew him to the Democratic Socialists of America five years ago — a stance on Palestine that calls for the isolation of Zionists, rejects “normalization” or relationships between anti-Zionists and supporters of Israel, and sanctions armed violence — has shaped what it’s like to live here since Oct. 7, 2023.

Here, with the collective input of local Jews — religious and irreligious, traditional, Mizrahi, Sephardi and Ashkenazi — we explain why our objections to a Mayor Mamdani are rooted not in abstract fear or deep-seated bias, but the product of daily life in a community shaped by Zohran’s public political choices.

At a holiday block party, a mother was called a “genocidal killer” in front of her preschool-aged children; another was called a “bitch” by a man miming throat-slitting while she scraped graffiti from a lamp post. At a neighborhood bar’s karaoke night, a man sang “Deutschland über alles” while giving a Nazi salute. Posters and stickers with keffiyehs and machine guns have regularly appeared near playgrounds and public spaces.

Our teens have skipped school on cultural appreciation days to avoid being ostracized, and our hearts have shattered as our children reassure us of their safety with phrases like “don’t worry, no one knows I’m Jewish.” Signs that welcome the stranger, the immigrant — a longstanding Jewish value immortalized in verse by the Jewish-American poet Emma Lazarus — now live alongside swastikas and hate-speech on lampposts and shop windows across the district.

What we haven’t seen is any meaningful response to just how normal this has become. When a local business hung a massive, blinking “Fuck Israel” sign alongside a portrait of Hitler, we spoke up at our community board meeting in front of a silent Mamdani representative, to no response. We have filed complaints, we’ve removed stickers, we’ve spray-painted over violent imagery — and we’ve been at it alone. This is not the New York we want to live in, and this is not the New York of equality, safety and inclusivity that Zohran is promising.

In a city as diverse as New York, where nearly 40% of residents are immigrants and many more are part of transnational or multicultural communities, Jewish New Yorkers are not unique in carrying layered identities. The 80% of American Jews that consider Israel to be an “essential or important component” of their identity, are mirrored by Indian, Korean and Dominican Americans who feel the same connection to their homeland. What is unique, and unacceptable, is being sent the message that this connection is somehow at odds with our identity as New Yorkers.

This election is not a referendum on Israel or the place of Jews in New York City. It is, more pointedly, a reflection of a referendum that has already taken place; one that shaped the culture in which Zohran was raised as a cosmopolitan scion of the academic and cultural elite, with access to some of the best resources this city has to offer.

These resources — private grammar schools, specialized high schools, wealthy neighborhoods, the glitter- and literati — hold hints of old-boys-club antisemitism filtered through the lens of new-age anti-Zionism. Left unquestioned, they lay the foundation for an unrecognizable New York. When 54% of all hate crimes last year targeted Jews, we would argue we are already halfway there. When we heard Zohran describe the fear of his Muslim family members in the aftermath of 9/11, we wondered why he can’t see the fear of most Jewish New Yorkers today.

We took notice when he said, as he was reported as saying in Brooklyn, that he would be here for us “when the mezuzah falls.” We want to be clear: a mezuzah doesn’t fall. A mezuzah is taken down discreetly while the streets echo with calls to globalize the intifada. It is kissed one last time, while the memory of being called a genocide lover in front of your children infuses the parchment. It is wrapped and placed in a box alongside other whispering mementos from grandparents who survived Iraq, Morocco, Poland, France, Uzbekistan, as we wonder if its hum has gotten loud enough for us to listen and know that the time to leave has come once more.

Our pain and fears are real and valid; the frustrations on all sides of the Jewish spectrum come from a shared concern for the wellbeing of our city and all of humanity. In our synagogues, alongside the prayer for Israel, we say the prayer for our country and wish wisdom upon its leaders, just as Jews have wished upon the leaders of every Diaspora nation where we have lived.

Our history has taken us, the Jewish people, through many lands, from our origins as a people called Israel in the Levant through thousands of years of exile, transfer and return. Today, just over a million of us — still that same people — are proud to call New York City home, and we want to keep calling this city home. We have given deeply to this place, pouring in whatever we had in every generation: labor, culture, protest, philanthropy, policy, innovation. So, too, have we been nourished by this city.

We love New York. We want to stay, not in silence, not on sufferance, but fully and without fear. We wonder if that is possible in a city led by Zohran Mamdani?

Living by this bastard is like a wine it gets better as time goes on only here it wont get better and this, what we have here is only the beginning of the benefits of the religion of freedom. to prove my words take a look at london and all of britain plus the whole eu and then you might understand what i mean here.
So why do so many Jews vote for the Islamic creep for mayor? Why do so many Jews vote for Bernie Sanders, who supported the Moslem anti-Semite mayor? Sanders is a hypocrite socialist.
The reason dates back to the early 20th century when Jewish immigrants started coming to the US from Russia and Europe in large numbers. There was a lot of hatred for newly arrived immigrant groups, i.e., Italians and Irish, and of course the Jews. Even though many of them were highly educated, they could not get jobs in major (WASP) run companies, so they did what they had to do to survive (in a country that offered no welfare benefits). They became street peddlers, selling all kinds of goods and services on the sidewalks of NY. And they worked their way up to where they could open small retail businesses and over the years, they became known for and often hated for their great business skills.
Despite their growing success in business, they were shunned by both major political parties – Democrats and Republicans. But a new party emerged – the Liberal Party – and they would accept anyone in order to build up their numbers and influence. Jews were welcome there and they became very loyal to the Liberal Party.. Fast forward to when the Liberal Party was merged with the Democrats, and Jews remained in the Democrat Party, as they were still shunned by the WASPy Republicans. So generation after generation were staunch Democrats It’s still like that for many Jews, even today, despite the fact that the Left is turning on them and the Right is very supportive of them.
Somewhere between 70 – 80 percent of Jews in NYC are still Democrats and while some of the far-left Jews did vote for Mamdani, around 80% did not. The ones who did I classify as self-hating Jews who hate Israel as well. I’ll never understand them, and would never associate with any of them myself.
One other point about the Jews who immigrated here from Russia. Back in the 1900’s in Russia, socialists weren’t killing the Jews, but the Czar was, which is why so many of them thought of themselves as socialists. If you’ve seen the musical, “Fiddler on the Roof” you’ll know what I mean.
What should anyone say here then its the people of new York that vote this in and then to bitch about it like the brits do. the ones i side with are the ones who did not vote for this scumbag, they will suffer the ignorance of the weak followers of the mudslime. these followers hope that the mudslime will like them and to say that they are the real Jews and more but they will be deeply dissapointed then the mudslime wont tolerate them at all and the same goes for the many queers for fakestine.
I have NO SYMPATHY for the IdiotLibJews who voted for bHUSSEINobama, Hilary, Biden and Kamala. You Jews are dumber’nSnow. If you couldn’t see that PRESIDENT TRUMP was the best President for Jews, for Americans and for Israel, and you voted against PRESIDENT TRUMP, well, you’ve got no one to blame but your IdiotLib selves!! As a Jew, it’s embarassing how you IdiotLibJews are a majority. You make the rest of us Jews look bad. Y’all are too stupid to know who your friends are and who your enemies are. That goes for you, as well, Schmuckie Schumer and Adam Schiff!
Couldn’t agree more!
Radical Jew’s or leftist Jews, how stupid are you? Have you not learned anything over time that Islam states to kill the Jew first yet you support the Islamist. Dumb as F*ck.
For all the right-wing Jews, you’re welcome here in Florida, the left-wingers can stay in NY and suffer the consequences of voting for a man who would not hesitate to slice their throats if he were not in the states. You will suffer the same fate as the Liberal loonies that vote for him, and you’ll get no sympathy from those of us on the right. Florida welcomes you.
Thanks for the welcome, but unfortunately left wing Jews NYC outnumber us – about 80 – 85 percent.
It truly boggles my mind that any Jew would heartily support the Democrat party. I’ve been saying this for 15 years; and as the party moves more and more towards total Anti- Semitism- still watching Jews stand up and cheer for their own demise. Truly embodies the ” Self Loathing” part.
That’s because those Jews worship the god of leftism, not Judaism.
Lower income New Yorkers don’t get their promised food allotment mayhem will descend around the office of the Mayor . I don’t think this smooth talkin muslim want to be is going to last 30 days under that pressure . He is way out of his league ! Trump will send his cavalry to quell the hostiles . all good Jews , Gentiles , commuters stay out of the inner city it will be a hot time in the old town . no other way out for New York she just went to far into the dark side … democrats have reaped the whirlwind .