Far Rockaway Jewish Alliance of Queens and Crown Heights Endorse Eric Adams for Mayor

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NEW YORK (VINnews/By Yehudit Garmaise) — Eric Adams’ strong emphasis on public safety, his longstanding friendship and understanding of the Jewish community, and his support of yeshiva education the reasons that the Far Rockaway Jewish Alliance Queens Jewish Community endorsed the Brooklyn borough president today, and Lubavitch community in Crown Heights did the same two days ago.

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“Adams has a proven track record in this city: a real record of a commitment to public safety and rooting out anti-Semitism wherever it rears its ugly head,” said Mr. Richard Altabe, founder of the Far Rockaway Jewish Alliance.

“Eric Adams [has] represented us in the state Senate and as Brooklyn borough president, and he has been a long-time friend to our community,” Rabbi Yaacov Behrman, one of the endorsers from Crown Heights, told Hamodia. “He has celebrated with us in good times and mourned with us in bad times. His friendship has earned our loyalty and support.”

In response, Adams tweeted that he is “proud to have earned the unified endorsement of the Jewish community in Crown Heights, a testament to our long-lasting friendship and deep mutual respect.”

Of late, Adams, a 22-year police officer, former state senator, and current president of Brooklyn, has surged to frontrunner status in three different polls from the past week, has also, in recent months, considerably strengthened his stance on yeshivas since learning more about them and even visiting one.

In February, Adams said that educational models should not be “one-size-fit-all.”

“Children have a right to receive the best education, and not all communities, and not all parents take the same approach,” Adams said.

When a reporter explained the extent to which yeshiva education anchors and forms the basis for Orthodox Jewish communities, Adams said in response, “We want to get the best outcomes of students and not rely on heavy-handed investigations that lead to distrust.

In addition, after a federal judge ordered an injunction that permanently ended Gov. Andrew Cuomo’s pandemic-related capacity limits for houses of worship in February, Adams said, “My hope is that this [ruling] is a stepping-stone for a broader appreciation of religious rights and freedoms,” and that “the New York City I envision as mayor will always recognize religion as a fundamental right, protected from politics.”

In addition to religious freedom, public safety, which is Adams’ signature issue, is another issue that is important to Jewish communities for which anti-Semitic hate crimes are a constant threat.

Adams, a longtime supporter of Shomrim, who is viewed as the toughest candidate on crime, often argues against defunding the police and other progressive approaches, while remaining sensitive to police brutality, from which he unfortunately suffered, when he was 15.

“Instead of giving in to anger,” Eric Adams’ website says, “[after] he was beaten by police in the basement of a precinct house, Eric faced a life-changing act of injustice. Eric turned his pain into purpose and decided to change the police department from within.”

Among Adams’ ideas for improving public safety in the city are re-instituting the NYPD’s plain clothes crime unit, which was eliminated by Mayor Bill de Blasio, “and turning it into an anti-gun unit,” he told BoroPark24 in April. In addition, Adams wants to focus on gang violence, “which is driving shootings.”

Adams also criticized Gov. Andrew Cuomo’s bail reform, which allows criminals back on the streets the day after committing crimes.

“Judges must be able to have the power to be able to attach bail to criminals who are going to be repeat offenders,” Adams said.

Judges, Adams also pointed out, should better use their power and legal right to require psychiatric evaluation, treatment, and medication for criminals who exhibit mental illness he said.

Other of Adams’ innovative ideas that come from 22 years of experience in the NYPD is the prevention of crime by improving public education and by better diagnosing learning disabilities.

“30% of the jail population at Riker’s is dyslexic,” Adams said. “By not properly educating New Yorkers, we are just feeding the future crime problem in our city, and we can do a better job in doing so.”

When BoroPark24 asked Adams whether the NYPD could use the $1 billion that the mayor shifted away from the department last summer, the top mayoral candidate surprisingly said, “No.”

Using his deep knowledge of the NYPD’s budget, Adams pointed out the department could save millions of dollars by hiring non-officers to do the many desk jobs that pay police officers’ salaries.

Trained police officers should be out on the street, protecting public safety, said Adams, who recently said that as mayor, he would refuse security because he would be armed himself.

State Senator Joseph Addabo Jr., Assemblywoman Stacey Pheffer Amato, and Council member Slevena Brooks-Powers, who have previous endorsed Adams, joined in the Queens’ and Crown Heights communities’ support for Brooklyn’s borough president.

Adams “cherishes his decades long friendship and partnership with the Crown Heights/Lubavitch community,” Menashe Shapiro, a consultant to Adams’ campaign said.

“Dating back to his days in the state senate, Eric has worked with this community on matters ranging from public safety and combating anti-Semitism to race relations, health care and small-business services,” Shapiro said. “Eric is particularly fond of his strong relationship with the leadership in Crown Heights, and looks forward to maintaining the direct line to the community from City Hall.”

As a fellow Brooklynite, Rabbi Behrman said that Adams “knows our community and understand our culture. “Adams stands out as the candidate most qualified in this area.”


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Judith
Judith
2 years ago

I also like Eric Adams , but why is every representative of the Jewish community always a man ? Women are also qualified and needed .

triumphinwhitehouse
triumphinwhitehouse
2 years ago

this guy is better than the Satmar endorsed Yang fellow who changes his positions on things literally everyday and is petrified of AOC.

Palibro
Palibro
2 years ago

He’s the one who has Islamic “brothers”, isn’t he?

hashomer
hashomer
2 years ago

Not Yang? Oh, he never heard of Far Rock… Or Brooklyn…

Tuchus
Tuchus
2 years ago

And he is also a health advocate who contributes his good health and cure from diabetes to eating plant based!

Rivkah
Rivkah
2 years ago

Bh far Rockaway queen’s and crown heights have smart and good leaders that are advocating for a very good candidate. As opposed to a few other frum communities in Brooklyn who are shamefully and rather it is very scary that they out there support behind Yang probably because he is promising free money. Said group is putting money over safety and a normal government!!!

I am pretty sure said group is also responsible for getting do Blasio elected. How did he turn out?

hashomer
hashomer
2 years ago

Vus? No endorsement of Yang? Feh