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Monday, March 5, 2018

UJO of Williamsburg and North Brooklyn Condemns Blood Libel by Actress and NY Times Op-Ed Contributor Amber Tamblyn

Stereotyping all Hasidic drivers for the alleged actions of one is hateful and despicable; UJO calls for thorough accounting of the incident, and for any witnesses or anyone who may have footage of the incident to come forward; Data shows that Hasidic Williamsburg area is safer for bikers than surrounding areas

 

Accusations of several attempts to hurt her calls into question Tamblyn’s credibility. The NY Times ought to investigate if she meets their credibility standards

 

After tweeting yesterday about an alleged incident in which “a Hasidic man in grey van try to hit a woman and her baby in a stroller as she crossed a crosswalk, honking and touching the stroller with the car’s bumper,” Amber Tamblyn followed with a shocking, hateful attack on all Hasidic men. “[T]his is not the first time a man from the Hasidic community in NYC has attempted to harm me or other women I know. Any woman riding a bike through South Williamsburg can attest.”

 

The UJO condemns in the strongest terms this biased, anti-Semitic attack on the Hasidic community, and calls on The New York Times to stop publishing commentary from her and other known anti-Semites.

 

“This would have been unacceptable against any other group. Unfortunately, too often people feel that such claims can be made against Hasidim and that when attacking the Hasidic religious ​community anything goes --  from discriminating in housing against large Jewish families to attacking our religious educational​ system” said Rabbi David Niederman, President of the UJO of Williamsburg and North Brooklyn.

“This incident has to be thoroughly investigated as an individual case. We call on Ms. Tamblyn to describe the entire incident and we ask the NYPD to thoroughly investigate what transpired at this busy intersection. We further ask for anyone who witnessed the incident to come forward with information, and/or any CCTV or dash-camera footage that they have from the area.”

 

The alleged incident took place Sunday, March 4th, about 2:30PM, with a grey van, on Vanderbilt near the Atlantic Avenue intersection, touching a stroller pushed by a woman, and honking and yelling. W​e sympathize with anyone who experienced such an incident however, ​Ms. Tamblyn draws an unfair and biased analogy.

 

The UJO calls on the Ms. Tamblyn to either back up her claim about several incidents in which Hasidic men tried to attack her or other female bikers or to apologize for making such a claim. It’s unacceptable to generalize against all Hasidim, and the data shows that while there sadly were several fatalities of bicyclists in the neighboring areas, South Williamsburg didn’t have any biker fatalities at least since 2009, nor is there a higher rate of biker injuries here. To accuse Hasidic men of attempting to attack women is despicable and shameful.  (For cyclist injuries and fatalities data complied by the City of New York please visit NYC Vision Zero http://www.nycvzv.info/#)  

 

“Ms. Tamblyn ought to back up her claims against individuals, so that it can be thoroughly investigated. Blanket attacks against any group as a whole is a modern blood libel,” said Rabbi David Niederman. “As long she doesn’t back up her claims, one can’t take her seriously. It would be very odd for the NY Times to continue publishing her articles, with her credibility and judgment in question. Even if there were incidents, attacking an entire class of people based on an individual accusation is discriminatory and dead wrong.”