Slogan 'Death To The Kikes'

"Death to the Kikes" is an anti-Semitic slogan that many classify as hate speech. It is a possible translation of a slogan used in Russia in May, 2002 on a booby-trapped sign to express hatred for Jews during President Bush's visit to Russia. After attending a Russian Orthodox service and spending some time in a synagogue, doctoral student Tatyana Sapunova, then aged 27, was seriously injured when a booby-trapped poster with an anti-Semitic slogan exploded. She lost the sight of one eye and had to undergo a series of surgical procedures. According to local media reports, upon noticing the message "Death to the Kikes" in large black painted letters on a sign, she pulled to the side of the highway 20 miles southwest of Moscow, near a turnoff to Vnukovo Airport. She got out of the car and tried to yank the sign out of the ground. The blast triggered by her touch had the force of 100 to 200 grams of TNT. Prosecutor-General Vladimir Ustinov said he would take the case under his personal control, adding: "All incidents of extremism or racial intolerance will be handled with the maximum strictness allowed by law."

External link

Death to the Kikes

 

<< PreviousWord BrowserNext >>
desmond maccarthy
prince edward augustus, duke of kent and strathearn
digital8
musophilus
john daniel
jessica dubroff
google watch
gerbil
chinchilla
bill kristol
maundy money
long s
willow (movie)
law of universal gravitation
clyde tolson
hamiltonian mechanics
ananda mahidol
liber 777
queensland university of technology
the communards
wilhelm reich
bob clampett
boswell sisters
nickel and dimed
robert mckimson
carsten ramelow
barbara ehrenreich
charlestown, nevis, west indies
journey to work
loren cass
dr. feelgood (album)
frank tashlin
ngugi wa thiongo
prospect park, troy, new york
faraday's law
ubc
troy public library
lansingburgh academy
uss gato (ssn 615)
uss gato (ss 212)
crime against peace
yosemite sam
charles michel dirumberry de salaberry
ultimatum