The note was unsigned and accompanied by a drawing of a gold star with the World War II-era “Jude” caption, as well as SS, Nazi, and anarchist insignia.The Franklins said toilet paper and eggs had also been thrown in their yard and at their car.The Franklins took down the flag after their property management company had notified them that personal items could not be hung in the front of the building. “The purpose was to scare us, and they succeeded because we’re scared,” Mikey Franklin said. “Not that people will harm us, but that there are people that would do this in our very diverse area.”This note was left on my car this morning in Rockville, MD because I'm Jewish and I support #blacklivesmatter. Yes, that's a yellow star. pic.twitter.com/5Jd4gZfvG8
— Mikey Franklin (@mikeyfranklin) January 7, 2017
Sgt. Christopher Peck of the Rockville Police Department told Buzzfeed that the note was not antisemitic, and that he did not know what “Jude” meant.However, the police department has since described the letter as “containing references of and symbols of antisemitic hatred.” Police Lt. Brian Paul said that the incident was being investigated as a possible hate crime. Based on the handwriting and juvenile spelling in the note, police suspected children were behind the incident.According to Mikey, “It had to be someone who knew that we were Jewish.”Sonya, whose family escaped from the Soviet Union, felt similarly. “It’s just upsetting because this is something we lived through. Somehow, putting a yellow star on it, it’s made it more personal.” There has been a rash of antisemitic and racist incidents over recent months. In November, Southern Poverty Law Center looked at 867 hate incidents that occurred in the 10 days following the United States elections. Of those, over one hundred were cases of antisemitism, representing about 12 percent of the incidents. The acts targeted various minority groups, including Jews, immigrants, African-Americans, Muslims and the LGBT community.Incidents counted had been submitted through the watchdog’s website or reported in the media.Of the 100 incidents classified as antisemitic, 80 were “vandalism and graffiti incidents of swastikas, without specific references to Jews,” while others targeted Jews more overtly, such as the harassment of individuals or vandalism of a synagogue, the report said.JTA contributed to this report.Motto for 2017: no act of resistance is too small. #blacklivesmatter pic.twitter.com/KwAxY7wtr6
— Mikey Franklin (@mikeyfranklin) January 5, 2017