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Trump denounces hate after threats against Jewish centres

Donald Trump was joined by Dr Ben Carson and Martin Luther King Jr's niece Alveda King after touring the museum.

Donald Trump was joined by Dr Ben Carson and Martin Luther King Jr's niece Alveda King after touring the museum. Photo: EPA/Kevin Dietsch/Pool

President Donald Trump is calling recent threats against Jewish community centres “horrible and painful”.

Mr Trump made the remarks on Tuesday after touring the National Museum of African American History and Culture.

He said the museum was a “meaningful reminder of why we have to fight bigotry, intolerance and hatred in all forms”.

The threats against JCCs (Jewish Community Centres) are a “very sad reminder” of what still needs to be done, Mr Trump said.

The White House has posted his full speech to YouTube – his remarks about fighting bigotry start around 3:15 minutes in.

His comments are a contrast to last month when, in a statement released in his name to commemorate Holocaust Remembrance Day, he failed to use the word “Jew” or “Jewish”.

Mr Trump also came under fire at his bizarre and rambling press conference with Israeli Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu when a Jewish reporter asked him a question – he cut him off, insulted the reporter, and told him to sit down.

On Monday 11 Jewish community centres across the country, including in the Houston, Chicago and Milwaukee areas, reported receiving hoax bomb threats.

The BBC reports that last week, 27 Jewish community centres in at least 17 US states received such hoax threats.

No bombs were found at any locations, and normal services resumed following building evacuations.

Police in the state of Missouri have meanwhile opened an investigation after more than 170 headstones were damaged at a Jewish cemetery in St Louis, Missouri, on Monday evening.

https://twitter.com/JoseSalustiano/status/834102550790012928

The White House earlier denounced “hatred and hate-motivated violence” following a series of threats across the country but did not directly mention those incidents or Jews.

The FBI said it is joining with the Justice Department’s Civil Rights Division to investigate “possible civil rights violations in connection with threats” to the centres.

The White House statement on Tuesday said Mr Trump “has made it abundantly clear that these actions are unacceptable”.

It followed a tweet by Ivanka Trump on Monday calling for “religious tolerance” after a series of threats against Jewish community centres.

She tweeted” “We must protect our houses of worship & religious centres”.

https://twitter.com/GoodEvans63/status/834103305714466816

Ivanka Trump converted to Judaism ahead of her 2009 marriage to Jared Kushner.

– with agencies

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