The moment an ‘evil old man’ destroyed an October 7 memorial in Brighton – as there were calls to track him down and arrest him for this ‘disgusting’ act, he was… .see more

This is the moment an ‘evil old man’ in Brighton heartlessly destroyed a memorial to victims of the October 7 massacre.

The man, dressed in beige trousers and a shirt with a black cap, was filmed tossing flowers, throwing the plaque, a football and teddy bears left in Hove, Brighton as a tribute to those who tragically lost their lives.

The woman filming can be heard gasping and asking ‘what the f**k…why’ quietly.

Loud bangs can be heard in the atrocious footage as he continued to mess up the mementos which had been painstakingly placed there.

He was seen picking up a planter and throwing it so that all of the soil fell out.

It comes ahead of today’s anniversary of the massacre which began with 

Hamas

 militants attacking music lovers at the Nova Festival, but continued with waves of horrifying attacks which led to 1,195 people dying.

Atrocious footage shows a man heartlessly destroying a memorial in the UK to victims of the October 7 massacre

The man, dressed in beige trousers and a shirt with a black cap, was filmed tossing flowers, throwing the plaque, a football and teddy bears which had been left in Hove, Brighton as a tribute to those who tragically lost their lives

Towards the end of June, a yellow ribbon which the wife of the Chief Rabbi tied around a tree was vandalised with stickers reading ‘Boycott Israeli Apartheid’ and ‘Free Palestine’.

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Festivalgoers flee as Hamas gunmen storm the event on October 7 last year

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An Israeli officer walks around a campsite at the festival near Re’im kibbutz on October 17

The family of Liraz Assulin, 38, who fled from the Nova festival, creates a memorial for her, near Kibbutz Kfar Aza in southern Israel, January

It was reported to Sussex Police as a hate crime.

The ribbons were also targeted by vandals when a link to an antisemitic website was scrawled on the back of them.

The shrine was created in November and people visit from all over the southeast to leave flowers and attend a daily service held there.

Adam Ma’anit is one of those behind the memorial, whose relatives were murdered on October 7 and whose cousin Tsachi Idan is a hostage in Gaza.

She told the Jewish Chronicle: ‘Israelis and Jews are targets for both the far right and the pro-Palestinian movement. They dehumanise the hostages, demonise our community and target any symbols or memorials for their hate.

‘No matter how many times they try to intimidate us, it will not work. They have destroyed our memorial 20 times, and each time, we build it back again. We will never let the haters win.’

Today marks one year since Hamas fighters crossed into Israel on October 7 and launched attacks which killed 1,195 people, including 815 civilians, and destroyed millions of lives.

Charred and damaged cars along a desert road after an attack by Hamas militants at the Tribe of Nova Trance music festival near Kibbutz Re’im in southern Israel on Saturday, October 7

Orly Efraim reacts near the marker of her niece Eden Liza Auhaion, who was killed on the October 7 Hamas deadly attack at the Nova music festival on April 7, 2024 in Re’im, Israel

Destroyed cars and belongings left at the Supernova Music Festival site where hundreds were killed and dozens taken by Hamas militants near the border with Gaza, on October 12, 2023 

A further 251 were kidnapped during the initial attack on Israel to the Gaza Strip, and many remain hostages.

The massacre was just the beginning, as Israel declared war in Gaza and launched a military campaign that has killed more than 41,000 people, mainly women and children, according to the Hamas-run health ministry.

There has also been a wave of anti-Semitic and anti-Muslim hate incidents hitting the UK.

Tell Mama UK recorded 4,971 incidents of anti-Muslim hate in the past year, the highest total in 14 years.

According to The Guardian, it said 63 per cent of the hate cases reported were abusive in nature while 27 per cent involved threatening behaviour. 

Most took place in London, the north-west of England, Yorkshire and the Midlands.

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