Jewish News

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Following weeks of escalating harassment and threats, organizers of Boulder, Colorado chapter of the “Run for Their Lives” hostage awareness march announced that their weekly walks will no longer be advertised publicly. Instead, they will occur at undisclosed locations under heavy security, in response to the rising danger and intimidation in public spaces in the weeks and months following a deadly terror attack.

On June 1, 2025, Mohamed Sabry Soliman, aj Egyptian Muslim man disguised as a gardener attacked participants on the Pearl Street Mall during the walk, using a makeshift flamethrower and Molotov cocktails. The assault injured up to 15 people and tragically led to the death of 82-year-old Karen Diamond Hy”d from her severe injuries on June 25. Her passing prompted an elevation of charges to include first-degree murder.

Among the injured was Holocaust survivor 88-year-old Barbara Steinmetz. Also severely injured were Dmitriy Reznik, 57, and his wife, 52-year-old Natalya Reznik, who suffered second-degree burns and remains hospitalized.

Since October 7, 2023, Boulder’s chapter of Run for Their Lives has joined thousands worldwide in holding weekly, peaceful, apolitical walks in solidarity for the hostages still held in Gaza. These events, which are quiet, are now deemed unsafe for public assembly. Organizers have made the difficult choice to move them into secure, hidden locations.

In recent weeks, anti-Israel groups, including a candidate for Boulder City Council, have been seen stalking walk participants and hurling antisemitic insults, with some even targeting organizers’ children. The Jewish Community Relations Council reviewed video footage showing slurs such as “genocidal [expletive]” “racist,” and “Nazi.” Harassment has also surged during Boulder City Council meetings, where Jewish residents have been intimidated, according to the JCRC.

Brandon Rattiner, Senior Director of the JCRC, in a statement shared with Belaaz, stated: “This walk has already been the target of deadly violence. Now participants are facing a level of harassment that makes it impossible to continue safely in public view.”
He urged everyone who condemned the earlier dehumanization of Jews to stand with the community again now.

Stefanie Clarke, Co-Executive Director of Stop Antisemitism Colorado, added: “It is unacceptable that less than three months after a deadly antisemitic attack, Jews in Boulder are once again being forced into hiding… The fact that someone seeking a seat on City Council is at the center of this harassment should be cause for alarm.”