Syrian charged with attacking man wearing kippa in Berlin
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Syrian charged with attacking man wearing kippa in Berlin

Man living in Germany since 2015 accused of causing bodily harm and slander following the April attack

Screenshot of the attacker in Berlin. An Israeli-Arab was identified as one of the victims
Screenshot of the attacker in Berlin. An Israeli-Arab was identified as one of the victims

A Syrian man living in Berlin was charged with assault after he attacked an Arab-Israeli man wearing a kippah.

The alleged attacker, a Syrian Palestinian living in Germany since 2015, was identified as Knaan Al S, due to German privacy laws, according to The Associated Press. He was charged on Friday with causing bodily harm and slander. He turned himself in two days after the April 17 attack.

During the attack, the assailant lashed the man with his belt and repeated the Arabic word for Jew, “Yahudi.” The victim, Adam Armouch, an Arab-Israeli, filmed the attack on his phone. He was accompanied by a 24-year-old man also wearing a kippah who reported being accosted verbally by three men.

Armoush, 21, who is not Jewish, told the Deutsche Welle news agency that he had grown up in an Arab-Christian family in Haifa, Israel, and said he put on the kippah as an experiment to see “how bad it is to walk Berlin’s streets as a Jew today.”

The attack took place in the trendy Prenzlauer Berg neighbourhood, which is popular among many Israelis living in Berlin. It is also home to an Orthodox Jewish community centred around the Lauder Yeshivas Beis Zion and the synagogue Kahal Adass Jisroel Berlin.

The attack led thousands of Jews and non-Jews alike to don kippot and participate in “Wear a Kippah” rallies in Berlin and other German cities to protest anti-Semitism.

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