Israel warns Labour must end ‘toxic wave of antisemitism’ in Britain after Manchester synagogue attack – as Rob Rinder says Britain needs to stand with Jewish people

The Israeli Foreign Minister accused the British government for ‘blocking this wave of toxic anti -Semitism’ after a ‘terrible’ attack on a Manchester synagogue today.
Isreal Foreign Minister Gideon Sa’ar condemned the ‘killer attack’, which took place outside the Heaton Park Synagogue in Manchester in the early hours this morning, and demanded the lives of two Jewish people.
X on the Sa’ar, ‘Open and widespread anti -Semitic and anti -Israeli incentives, as well as calls for support for terrorism,’ he said.
‘He allowed the British authorities to take the necessary precautions to prevent this poisonous anti -Semitism wave and continued effectively’.
“ We expect more than the words of the Starmer government. Of course, we expect and demand a change in effective action and implementation against the widespread anti -Semitic and anti -Israeli incentives in the UK.
Publisher and 47 -year -old lawyer Robert Rinder, ‘Many Jews can not imagine a future here and history tells us when it follows’ he said.
Mr. Rinder said the attack on Daily Mail today was really ‘terrible’.
In a tweet, he criticized those who allow them to cloudy their views on a terrible attack that caused the stabbing of anti -Semitism to be stabbed in Yom Kippur, the most sacred and serious day of the Jewish calendar.
‘Some still answer this persecution with “what will happen…”.
In a tweet that moves after the attack, ‘If you believe in England (wherever you come from and whatever your belief) you should stand with us’.
Mr. Rinder’s grandfather, his family fled to England after he was erased in Holocaust.
Rob Rinder called the British to support the Jewish people in this country after today’s attack
Mr. Rinder’s moving post on the attack
He said: ‘We were attacked in a Manchester synagogue on the most sacred day of the year.
‘Our children walk to school behind the barbed wire protected by weapons. Nevertheless, some still answer this savagery with “Ya” ”.
“ This is my country, my grandfather after the Holocaust after the shelter found in the shelter, under the rule of law promises freedom. Today I pray for the victims, thank you to the brave responding, and I wonder that this word is not fading. This small community cannot be alone. Many Jews cannot imagine a future here, and history tells us what it follows when it happens.
‘Many Jews cannot imagine a future here, and history tells us what it follows when it happens’.
A man with a suspicious suicide belt was shot after the Manchester synagogue killed at least two people except Manchester synagogue.
A car was deported to a crowd and stabbed at 9.31 in the morning in Yom Kippur, the most sacred day of the Jewish calendar.
The Great Manchester Police (GMP) said that the Heaton Park was in serious state in Crumpsall after the attack outside the Hebrew community synagogue.
The force is now confirmed that the suspect was dead after he could not get close to his body due to ‘suspicious items in his person’.
A member of A Jewish community has the Torah in a police cord in Manchester today.
Bomb disposal experts at the scene, but GMP, a high noise heard in the early hours of the day, as a precaution of civil servants, he said.
Previously, the hero Rabbi Daniel Walker barricaded the worshipers in the building after the suspect fell to the door and started to stab ‘anyone and everyone’.
A witness said that he had moved from the victim to the victim and acted in a ‘robotic’ way.
Later, he tried to enter at 9.38 before he was shot and killed by the armed police.
A senior safety source working in the field of armed policing for decades told Daily Mail that the man’s suicide belt looked real.
Mr. Rinder, just seven years ago, who do you think you are when entering the family history on the BBC show?
He learned how his grandmother and five children were killed in Holocaust.
Morris’s parents, four sisters and his brother died in 1940 in the Treblinka camp in Poland six months after the war eruption.
Morris passed away in London at the age of 78 in 2001, and he was a young man at that time and was accepted as strong enough to work at a glass factory in Piotrkow and forcibly employed the same fate with the rest of his family.
He was later sent to Buchenwald and Schlieben camps in Germany and finally to the Theresienstadt in Czechoslovakia, under the German occupation rescued by the Russian army in 1945, three weeks after Morris arrived.
After being brought to England by a Jewish charity, Morris met and fell in love with Rob Rinder’s grandmother Lottie.
Since his grandfather’s’ amazing ‘tale show was described in the show, the emotional TV star said that Morris would feel how lonely he would feel after his entire family was erased’.
Robert Rinder thought about who was the story of his grandfather’s family that his family was almost completely killed in the Holocaust and how he had escaped from the Nazis and found a refuge in England.
Rob’s grandfather Morris Malenicky passed away in 2001 in London at the age of 78, and his family was the only surviving member of Holocaust. His four sisters, his brother and their parents were killed in a concentration camp. In the picture: Morris and Mr. Rinder’s grandmother Lottie, on his honeymoon
Morris, a young man at the time, was considered strong enough to work, and he was forcibly employed in a glass factory in Piotrkow before he was sent to concentration camps in Germany during the war. In the picture: Rinder’s brother Craig, cousin Ben Radstone, Grandpa Morris Malinicky, Robert Rinder, Grandma Lottie Malinicky, Cousins Matt Radstone and Lucy Radstone
In 1942, Morris recorded the deaths of his family three years ago in Holocaust, and Rinder saw a document for the first time during shooting.
The document writes: ” Malenicky ”. Place of Birth: ” Piotrkow, Poland ”. Death conditions: ” four sisters, one brother, parents, Treblinka camp. Gas rooms, crematorium. ” ‘
During the shooting, Rinder went to Morris’s Piotrkow, Poland’s birthplace to learn more about his relatives.
Morris had visited the country with his grandfather when he was still alive, but he confesses that he was not ready to learn the truth about the rest of his family.
In September 1939 – five days after the beginning of the Second World War – German troops marched to Piotrkow and created the first ghetto in Europe, which hosted Morris and his family in a month.
Five months later, Morris was taken to his death in Treblinka among six million Jewish people killed by the Nazis during the Holocaust.
In the documentary, an emotional Rinder dreamed how Morris was the only one left behind.
He said: ‘[It’s] The most amazing thing on a fast train – your family went.
And then you go back to your house and you’re alone.
‘I wanted to say. It is impossible for my grandfather not to go back to anything. ‘




