Chabad House at Rutgers, was the site chosen for a unique meeting that brought together many varied members and leaders of the Central New Jersey Jewish community and the leaders of law enforcement in the state. Headed by New Jersey’s Attorney General Gurbir Grewal, who opened the meeting with informative and supportive remarks, the gathering included; LTC Geoffrey Noble, Deputy Superintendent of the N.J. State Police; Zach Intrater, Assistant U.S. Attorney’s Office for the District of N.J.; Jared Maples, Director of N.J. Homeland Security and Preparedness; Christopher L. C. Kuberiet, Acting Middlesex County Prosecutor; Chief Kenneth Cop of Rutgers University Police Department.
General Grewal, specifically requested that questions be presented by students from Rutgers University on their personal experiences on campus. The students eagerly accepted the Attorney General’s invitation and spoke of their experiences with antisemitism on campus. The open forum went on for many minutes and the Attorney General pledged to continue to advance the need for preventative education and other measures to combat the scourge of antisemitism which has occurred in many parts of the state. The meeting also included Rutgers Hillel’s Executive Director, Andrew Gertraer, and leaders from area organizations and businesses.
Rabbi Yosef Carlebach, Director of Chabad House, chaired the event and summarized this unique meeting as a tremendous beginning in addressing the long term solution of the tragic and senseless killing in Jersey City. Rabbi Carlebach stated, “If governments in Europe in the 1930’s had reacted in a correct manner, perhaps, the course of history would have changed to benefit the Jewish people and all mankind.”
Photo by Tim Larsen, Office of Attorney General
Photo by Tim Larsen, Office of Attorney General
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