Anti-Semitic and white supremacist posters hung near Duke campus

One of the posters in Durham, North Carolina, showed a silhouetted man pointing a gun at an image of a stereotypical Jew.

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(JTA) — Anti-Semitic and white supremacist posters were removed from downtown Durham, North Carolina, near the Duke University campus.

City workers removed the posters on Monday, the local Herald Sun newspaper reported.

One of the posters showed a silhouetted man pointing a gun at an image of a bearded man with a long nose wearing a kippah, with tentacles wrapped around the earth. The poster reads “Right of revolution. Your ancestors threw off foreign oppression, time for you as well.”

Other posters read “Greedy Jews” and “End Zionist Oppression.”

The posters said they were sponsored by the neo-Nazi group National Socialist Legion, which according to the newspaper broke away from the white supremacist Vanguard America organization. The group’s Twitter account has been suspended.

Less than two weeks ago, the Durham City Council approved a resolution directed at Israel barring its police department from taking part in “military-style training” programs abroad.

Duke professor Gavin Yamey reported seeing the anti-Semitic posters near the East Campus and contacted the campus rabbi and other officials, according to the student newspaper, the Duke Chronicle.

“It’s not subtle — it’s violent anti-Semitic imagery, so I take this obviously very seriously,” Yamey told the student newspaper.

He told the Herald Sun: “I was deeply disturbed and, to be honest, frightened. I’m Jewish and these vile anti-Semitic threats, including the image of a gun pointing to a Jew, really rattled me.”

“I lost family to pogroms and in the Holocaust. Seeing incitements to shoot Jews in my hometown is not something I ever imagined.”

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