
King Charles Comforts Wounded Jewish Community in London’s Golders Green
Police once again locked down the heavily Jewish neighborhood of Golders Green in northwest London on Thursday, May 14 — but unlike after the stabbing attack in which a terrorist wounded two Jewish men last month, this time the cordon was welcome, as residents turned out in force to greet King Charles III. The monarch visited the head office of Jewish Care, a leading nonprofit health and social care organization serving the local Jewish community, and met with the two men who were stabbed just feet away from the building as he sought to express his support for the country’s beleaguered Jewish community.
British Chief Rabbi Ephraim Mirvis, who was also at the meeting along with Metropolitan Police chief Mark Rowley, told Charles his visit was much appreciated by the victims, 34-year-old Shloime Rand and 76-year-old Norman Shine. Mirvis later wrote on Facebook: “Thank you, your Majesty, for coming today to Golders Green to bring comfort and encouragement to our Jewish community.” Shine said the King “didn’t let go of my hand. He is the King, but I felt a genuine warmth and concern. We feel we have a genuine friend in the King.”
The trip came the day after the King’s speech marking the opening of parliament at Westminster, in which Charles outlined government plans to introduce tougher new legislation to protect the Jewish community from growing antisemitism. The stabbings were the most recent in a string of attacks on Britain’s Jewish community in recent months, amid an unprecedented spike in antisemitism following Israel’s wars in Gaza and Iran. Two men were killed during Yom Kippur services in a Manchester terror attack this past October, and four ambulances belonging to the Jewish volunteer emergency service Hatzola were torched by arsonists in March.
(TOI/VFI News)
“Blessed are those who mourn, for they shall be comforted.” – Matthew 5:4