A crowd of about 200 pro-Palestinian protesters gathered late Wednesday outside Manhattan’s Park East Synagogue, chanting for an intifada and heckling Jewish attendees arriving for an event hosted by Nefesh B’Nefesh, the organization that helps Jews immigrate to Israel.
The protesters, including activists from groups such as Within Our Lifetime and Jewish Voice for Peace, filled East 67th Street while chanting, “There is only one solution, intifada revolution,” “No peace on stolen land,” and “We don’t want no two states, we want ’48,” a reference widely interpreted as a call to eliminate Israel. NYPD officers maintained barricades around the permitted demonstration, and no arrests were reported.
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Intifada chants outside Manhattan’s Park East Synagogue
(Photo: Screenshot from X)
The mob obstructed the view of the synagogue entrance, which is shared with the Park East Day School, and several witnesses said protesters hurled insults at Jewish community members entering the building.
This isn’t “principled anti-Zionism” (go do that outside the Israeli consulate) this is flat-out intimidation and harassment of Jews that is antisemitism.
Jews don’t show up to scream outside your churches, mosques, and shrines, there should be zero tolerance in the USA for this: https://t.co/DFxsOMJ9Yw
— Dr. Sara Yael Hirschhorn 🎗 (@SaraHirschhorn1) November 20, 2025
The setting added emotional weight. Park East’s senior rabbi, Arthur Schneier, a Holocaust survivor who witnessed Kristallnacht, leads the historic Orthodox congregation. Congregant Elizabeth Pipko said the confrontation threatened what should be a safe space, especially for young children.
Chaos erupts at park east synagogue in manhattan , while n y p d allows jih@dist supporters to stand and block the synagogue doors. This is what mamdummy new york is going to look.
Few jih@dist get neck 👊 by me pic.twitter.com/YGljmoHYXN
— proud jew ✡️ (@PhuckYourVax) November 20, 2025
Jewish groups condemned the chants as antisemitic and dangerous, warning they echo rhetoric used in past violent uprisings and come amid a sharp rise in antisemitic incidents across New York since October 2023.