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Anti-Semitic Flyers Continue To Appear In Montana

Anti-semitism
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A handful of anti-Semitic flyers were left on the doorsteps of Whitefish businesses earlier this week. The Montana Human Rights Network believes it was a targeted attack as the local Jewish community begins Rosh Hashanah or the Jewish new year. 

Love Lives Here, a local affiliate of the Montana Human Rights Network, says a few businesses reported anti-Semitic flyers Monday that were left overnight.

Organizer Cherilyn DeVries says these types of public attacks aren’t incredibly common in the Flathead Valley, but she says they do happen a few times every year.

“And we will get a rash of them. Most of the time they put them on business doors. Occasionally they put them in neighborhoods," DeVries said.

Similar flyers popped up in Helena last week. DeVries says Love Lives Here and the Montana Human Rights Network don’t typically announce when attacks happen in order to avoid giving notoriety to white supremacists. However, the organization wanted to make note of recent events happening around Rosh Hashanah.

The Human Rights Network has been tracking incidents of white supremacy since 1989. Organization officials say they saw a twenty-fold increase during and following the 2016 election. Some of that spike is attributed to the public becoming more aware of attacks and reporting them.

“People are beginning to call us right away about it. In the past, people would get them and wouldn’t know what to do with them and so they would either throw them away and feel sickened by them. But they weren’t sure exactly what to do,” DeVries said.

You can find a link on how to report similar incidents along with this story atmtpr.org.

Aaron graduated from the University of Minnesota School of Journalism in 2015 after interning at Minnesota Public Radio. He landed his first reporting gig in Wrangell, Alaska where he enjoyed the remote Alaskan lifestyle and eventually moved back to the road system as the KBBI News Director in Homer, Alaska. He joined the MTPR team in 2019. Aaron now reports on all things in northwest Montana and statewide health care.
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