Teens tear down missing Israeli posters on Upper East Side

Two teenagers were seen tearing down signs showing the faces of Israelis who had been taken hostage along Madison Avenue on the Upper East Side.

School-age girls were seen in video shared with X walking down Madison Avenue near 78th Street and tearing down signs depicting Israelis who have been taken hostage by Hamas terrorists.

Each girl takes a sign, tears the paper off the printer, and throws it into the trash below.

As an unidentified man asks the girls “what school do you go to?”, the girl with pink hair and heart-shaped glasses ignores him and continues tearing down signs one by one.

The other girl, seen in a dark hoodie and jeans, pointed across the street and told her friend, “There’s more there.”

It is not clear how old the girls are or what school they attend.

His act comes as other anti-Semitic efforts continue to pop up in the Big Apple, which has a large Jewish population.

Earlier this week, a trio was seen tearing down missing signs from the New York University campus. The group has been identified as students from the prestigious university.

New York University said in a statement that it was investigating the matter, and a spokesperson told The Post: “The University takes this matter seriously and we are investigating it.”

Two teenagers were seen tearing down signs showing the faces of Israelis who had been taken hostage along Madison Avenue on the Upper East Side. Instagram/Sophia Rofe¿ As an unidentified man asks the girls “what school do you go to,” the girl with pink hair and heart glasses ignores him and continues tearing down signs one by one. Instagram/Sofía Rofe¿

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Yesterday, a Jewish deli on the Upper East Side was defaced with a swastika.

2nd Avenue Deli owner Jeremy Lebewohl told The Post on Tuesday that a tenant at the Upper East Side building alerted him that the front of the store had been defaced with a hate symbol.

This is the first time Lebewohl has had a hate symbol plastered on his building, but he said he’s “always been prepared for that to happen.”

Thousands of missing posters have appeared this week on subway stations, telephone poles, in Central Park and on the streets of New York as more and more Israelis are being taken hostage by Hamas terrorists. Paige Kahn/NY Post

More graffiti has appeared in the area today, The Post discovered, and several commercial signs were defaced with swastikas and pentagrams.

According to the Gaza Ministry of Health, around 3,000 people have been killed in the Gaza Strip, while almost 10,000 have been injured. Almost two-thirds of those who have died were children.

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Source: vtt.edu.vn

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