Harlem crowd cheers as Sanders rebuffs anti-Semitic heckler
‘I am proud to be Jewish,’ Democrat presidential hopeful tells man who claims Jews ‘run the Federal Reserve, they run Wall Street’
Bernie Sanders earned applause at a Harlem event when he faced down an anti-Semitic question by saying he was proud to be Jewish.
Sanders, the Independent senator from Vermont running for the Democratic presidential nomination, appeared Saturday at Harlem’s historic Apollo Theater at an event featuring African-American celebrities and politicians who back his campaign.
A man asked Sanders, the first Jewish candidate to win major party nominating contests, about his Jewish identification and the time he spent in Israel in the 1960s, then expounded on theories of Jewish financial control.
“As you know, the Zionist Jews,” the man said, to rising cries of protest from the crowd, “they run the Federal Reserve, they run Wall Street.” Asked by a moderator to pose a question, the man said: “What is your affiliation to the Jewish community?”
“That’s not what you’re asking,” Sanders retorted. “I am proud to be Jewish.”
The audience erupted into applause.
Sanders has endeavored to peel away minority support from Hillary Clinton, the former secretary of state who is the Democratic front-runner.
“I am a strong defender of Israel but I also believe that we have got to pay attention to the needs of the Palestinian people,” he said, to another extended round of applause.
“There are wonderful people and I have met them on both sides of that issue and there are bad people on both sides of that issue,” Sanders said. “And if we are going to bring peace, hopefully, God willing, in the Middle East, we’re going to have to treat both sides with respect and equality.”
The man continued to shout protests, and the crowd drowned him out, shouting “Bernie!”