By Joseph Marshall
Two men have pleaded guilty in England after Orthodox Jews were targeted in an antisemitic TikTok stunt in the Stamford Hill area of north London, where a group allegedly filmed themselves harassing visibly Jewish people and mocking them with money.
The incident took place Thursday in Clapton Common, part of Stamford Hill, one of England’s largest Orthodox Jewish communities. According to British authorities, the men approached a Jewish man, verbally abused him and filmed the encounter for social media. The Crown Prosecution Service said Jewish people in the area were approached, harassed and filmed.
Adam Bedoui, 20, and Abdelkader Amir Bousloub, 21, both from the West Drayton area, were charged in connection with the incident and pleaded guilty at Thames Magistrates’ Court to a religiously aggravated public order offence. They are expected to be sentenced on June 5.
The video that sparked outrage reportedly showed young men using a fishing rod with money attached to it in what was described as “fishing for Jews.” Other clips circulating online allegedly showed coins and banknotes being thrown on the ground in front of Jews, playing on the ancient antisemitic lie that Jews are obsessed with money. It was not clever. It was not edgy. It was the same old Jew-hatred, just repackaged for TikTok and performed by idiots looking for clicks.
London’s Shomrim, the Jewish volunteer neighbourhood patrol, helped circulate footage of the incident after it appeared online. The videos quickly drew public anger, especially because the men were not targeting random passersby. They went into a Jewish neighbourhood in England and targeted Jews who were visibly Jewish. That is not content creation. That is a hate crime with a camera attached.
Metropolitan Police said the attack was deliberate and targeted. Detective Superintendent Oliver Richter said the offence was made worse by the fact that it was intended for social media, where it could spread further hatred. Police moved quickly, and the men were brought before the courts within 48 hours.
Three other men were also arrested in connection with the investigation. They were released on bail while police continue to examine the case.
The incident comes amid a worsening climate for Jews in England. Police recently announced a dedicated Community Protection Team focused first on protecting Jewish communities after a sharp rise in antisemitic incidents and several serious attacks. In recent weeks, Jewish neighbourhoods have seen assaults, threats, arson investigations and harassment that has spilled from the streets onto social media and back again.
This is the part too many people still pretend not to understand. Online antisemitism is not trapped online. It trains people, rewards them, gives them applause, and then sends them into Jewish neighbourhoods looking for Jews to humiliate. The victims are not public figures. They are ordinary Jewish men walking through their own community, dressed as Jews, living as Jews, and suddenly turned into props for someone else’s hatred.
The guilty pleas are important, but the larger problem remains. A platform culture that rewards humiliation has now attached itself to the oldest hatred in the world. The fishing rod was new. The sickness behind it was not.
