The Weitzman National Museum of American Jewish History in Philadelphia has been hit twice in two weeks by vandals targeting its bold Israeli flag but now the museum says it is not backing down.
As first reported by The Montreal Jewish News, the museum announced after the August 18 attack that it would not rehang the flag. Instead, it planned to replace it with a hostage awareness banner tied to the anniversary of the October 7 massacre. That decision drew sharp criticism after it was widely seen as giving in to vandals.
The backlash only grew when the flag was struck again this Monday with red spray paint. The story was picked up by Jewish and mainstream media, intensifying the sense that the museum was under siege and that its leadership was wavering in the face of hatred.
The museum’s Instagram page was swamped with furious comments. One user wrote, “They will see removing the Israeli flag as a victory, even for a message about the hostages.” Another added, “Removing the Israeli flag will not save the museum from more attacks.”
By Thursday, the Weitzman reversed course. President and CEO Dan Tadmor conceded the plan had created the worst possible perception. “What we certainly did not intend with this plan was to create a perception that we were capitulating to vandals or had somehow walked back our position of unequivocal support for Israel and its people,” he said. “Perception is reality. As the nation’s Jewish museum, there can never be any misunderstanding. We are a proudly Jewish and proudly Zionist institution.”
Tadmor confirmed that both the Israeli flag and the hostage banner will be displayed in the coming days, signaling defiance and unity.
The incidents in Philadelphia are part of a wave of anti Jewish vandalism at museums across the country. Swastikas were painted on the Oregon Jewish Museum, the word Gaza was scrawled on a Jewish art museum in Manhattan, and pro Palestinian graffiti was plastered on the Brooklyn Museum. Even in Beverly Hills, officials warned that flying Israeli flags in schools would make them targets.
And in June, a Maryland man was arrested for threatening the Weitzman itself, invoking Kristallnacht and promising the museum would one day need to be rebuilt after its destruction.
Now, after weeks of anger and confusion, the Weitzman is drawing a clear line. The Israeli flag will not only return but will remain as a permanent symbol of Jewish pride and resilience. The message is unmistakable. No act of vandalism, no threat, and no smear campaign will ever erase the flag of Israel from the nation’s Jewish museum.
