NEW YORK (AP) — When a machete-wielding attacker walked into a rabbi’s home in Monsey, New York, during Hanukkah and a gunman fired on worshippers at a Texas church
14 hours later, the two congregations in different regions of the
country joined a growing list of faith communities that have come under
attack in the U.S.
It
is a group that crosses denominations and geography and has companions
around the world. The frequency of attacks has faith leaders and law
enforcement grappling with how to protect people when they are at their
most vulnerable.
FBI
hate crime statistics show that incidents in churches, synagogues,
temples and mosques increased 34.8% between 2014 and 2018, the last year
for which FBI data is available.
“For
a person bent on hate crime against a particular religion or race, you
go to a place where you know a lot of people in that group will be
congregating — and vulnerable,” said James Alan Fox, a criminologist at
Boston’s Northeastern University. “One place you can go to find people
of a certain religion is where they worship.” Most congregations, he
said, do not have security.
Three
of the deadliest attacks on congregation members have occurred since
June 2015, when a gunman killed nine people at Emanuel African Methodist
Episcopal Church in Charleston, South Carolina,
according to a database compiled by The Associated Press, USA TODAY and
Northeastern University. The database includes attacks where four or
more victims are killed.
However,
the database wouldn’t include the most recent attacks that have
refocused attention on the security vulnerabilities at religious
institutions.
The FBI’s hate crime highlights list
a number of crimes, including a Colorado plot to blow up a synagogue,
an Oregon man sentenced to federal prison for targeting a Catholic
Church and two guilty pleas in the bombing of an Islamic Center in
Minnesota where congregants were worshipping in the mosque.
A five-year compilation of AP reports showed the frequency of attacks countrywide.
Recent stories included the stabbing of an Orthodox Jewish man as he approached the driveway of his synagogue in Monsey in November, as well as a Las Vegas incident where a suspect torched a Buddhist temple, then shot toward at least one monk fleeing the fire.
The data is definitive enough that the FBI invited faith leaders
to its Washington, D.C., headquarters last June to discuss how to
protect themselves and their congregants from bias-based attacks.
Mark
Whitlock Jr., pastor of Reid Temple AME Church in Glenn Dale, Maryland,
said his own staff and volunteers have met five times in the last month
to discuss safety.
“Our
first responsibility is to make sure our congregants have faith in God
and second, that they are safe,” Whitlock said. “We must not create an
environment of fear but we also must not fail to recognize things do
happen and evil is present.”
Reid
has a paid security staff of about 20 who wear uniforms and are armed.
There are volunteers as well, made up of former and current federal
agents, law enforcement officers and military who also provide security,
Whitlock said.
Even
with the protection, he is watchful. On Sunday, he was in the pulpit
and saw the security force reacting to something. They explained later
it was a stranger they wanted to identify.
“When
you’re looking at thousands of people and you see your security force
walking around, your mind begins to wonder,” he said.
The
new spate of anti-Semitic attacks has added to the sense of urgency
that’s been felt by Jewish security experts since the 2018 massacre at Pittsburgh’s Tree of Life synagogue, where 11 people were killed.
“The
greatest adversary we truly face is not an external threat, it’s a
sense of denial,” said Michael Masters, national director of the Secure
Community Network. It was formed by leading Jewish organizations in 2004
to coordinate a response to security threats.
“The
conversation prior to Pittsburgh was whether safety and security was
necessary,” Masters said. “Now it’s a question of how do we effectuate
that — there’s now a reality that these events can happen anywhere.”
Sunday’s
attack in White Settlement, Texas, in which the gunman was shot dead by
a highly trained leader of the church’s security team, came barely two
years after more than two dozen people were killed at a church in Sutherland Springs, Texas. That remains the deadliest shooting at a house of worship in the U.S. in modern times.
The
two Texas attacks have heightened worries among churchgoers in
neighboring Oklahoma, said the Rev. Derrek Belase, a former police
officer turned pastor who coordinates security training for the more
than 480 United Methodist churches in Oklahoma.
“Texas is close to home for us,” Belase said. “People see it on the news and think, ‘That could be us.’”
Under
Oklahoma law, houses of worship are among the places where adults are
allowed to carry firearms, whether concealed or openly. Churches may ask
worshippers not to bring guns with them, but Belase says that’s not a
common request.
When
Belase is advising churches on security, his core recommendations are
to work in tandem with local law enforcement, be wary of for-profit
security consultants, and be sure that members of any church security
team are thoroughly trained.
The security team leader in White Settlement “wasn’t just a guy with a gun,” Belase said. “He was trained to do that.”
Pardeep
Singh Kaleka, executive director of the Interfaith Conference of
Greater Milwaukee, said his own Sikh temple has armed guards and an
evacuation plan, the result of a 2012 attack in Oak Creek, Wisconsin,
that killed six worshippers, including his father. He said the
conference members talk regularly about how to prevent the next tragedy.
“All faiths want to remain open, Buddhists, Sikhs, Muslims, Jews,
Christians, but you also have to be vigilant and institute safety
protocols.”
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Associated Press researcher Rhonda Shafner in New York contributed to this report.
___
Associated
Press religion coverage receives support from the Lilly Endowment
through the Religion News Foundation. The AP is solely responsible for
this content.
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