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Nearly two dozen neo-Nazis stop outside synagogue on march to Wisconsin Capitol

The group wore shirts identifying them as part of the neo-Nazi Blood Tribe and shouted slogans against Jews and Israel

On a march from the University of Wisconsin-Madison to a city park Saturday nearly two dozen neo-Nazis stopped outside a synagogue building and the Capitol grounds, where they shouted “Israel is not our friend” and “there will be blood.”

The university’s Hillel issued a rare statement on Shabbat: “Today’s hate-filled antisemitic march and the open carrying of weapons by an extremist group requires us to speak up.”

Much of the group’s midday march was captured on video by bystanders who posted to social media and shows the group waving flags emblazoned with swastikas and giving what’s known as the “Hitler salute.” One video posted to X showed the group at the Gates of Heaven, a university-owned building which is no longer used as a synagogue, according to the Milwaukee Journal Sentinel.

“They were yelling stuff about Israel — Israel is committing genocide,” said a Jewish upperclassman who saw the marchers at the Capitol. The student, who requested anonymity for fear of backlash, said the group’s “there will be blood” chant prompted him to call the police because it sounded like a call for violence and he noticed only two officers on bicycles nearby. He said police told him that they were keeping an eye on the group, who wore red shirts with “Blood Tribe” written across the back. He said he saw no organized counter-protest but heard passersby yelling “F— off  at the group and flipping them off.”

Hillel in its statement thanked the university and local law enforcement for monitoring the marchers and enhancing security on and off campus. It opened its building Saturday afternoon to any student who wanted to “process the day’s events” with staff.

The Blood Tribe, according to the ADL, is a growing “hardcore” white supremacist group founded two years ago which sees itself as “the last remaining bulwark against the enemies of the white race.” Members of the group, which claims chapters across the U.S. and Canada, follow Christopher Polhaus, a former Marine who last year moved from Texas to Maine and is building a retreat for his followers there.

Elected and university officials strongly condemned the march.

“To see neo-Nazis marching in our streets and neighborhoods and in the shadow of our State Capitol building spreading their disturbing, hateful messages is truly revolting,” Wisconsin Gov. Tony Evers said in a statement.

“The presence of this hateful group in Madison is utterly repugnant,” university Chancellor Jennifer Mnookin said in a statement. “I am horrified to see these symbols here in Madison. Hatred and antisemitism are completely counter to the university’s values, and the safety and well-being of our community must be our highest priorities.”

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