U.S. Synagogues Tighten Passover Security Amid Rising Threats and Funding Gap
As Passover begins, Jewish communities across the United States are operating in what police and security officials describe as a sustained ‘heightened state of alert,’ citing the Iran war, recent attacks on synagogues and rising anti‑Jewish hate‑crime data from the FBI. At a pre‑Passover briefing in New York City, NYPD Commissioner Jessica Tisch told Jewish leaders that heightened vigilance will continue “for the foreseeable future,” while local and federal officials acknowledge a widening gap between the threat level and available security funding for houses of worship. The article details a March 12, 2026 incident in West Bloomfield, Michigan, where an attacker allegedly rammed a vehicle into Temple Israel synagogue and opened fire while more than 100 preschool children were inside, an attack security experts say was blunted only because trained, armed guards were on site. It also notes assaults on visibly Jewish people in California and broader fears that synagogues, schools and community centers must choose between open access and safety. Rep. Josh Gottheimer is pushing to increase the federal Nonprofit Security Grant Program to $1 billion in FY 2027, while some security advocates argue Jewish institutions cannot rely solely on government help and should harden facilities and expand lawful self‑defense training, a point that is fueling sharp debate within the community and on social media about security, civil liberties and firearms.
📌 Key Facts
- NYPD Commissioner Jessica Tisch told Jewish community leaders at a pre‑Passover briefing that the city will remain in a ‘heightened state of alert for the foreseeable future.’
- FBI data show anti‑Jewish hate crimes consistently make up the largest share of religion‑based hate‑crime incidents in recent years.
- In West Bloomfield, Michigan, a man allegedly rammed a vehicle into Temple Israel and opened fire while more than 100 preschool children were inside on March 12, 2026; armed security is credited with preventing a massacre.
- Rep. Josh Gottheimer is advocating raising the federal Nonprofit Security Grant Program to $1 billion in FY 2027 to bolster security at synagogues and other houses of worship.
- Security expert Jesse Arm argues Jewish institutions should not rely solely on government and calls for normalizing lawful firearm ownership, hardening facilities and investing in Jewish day schools and camps to strengthen communal resilience.
📊 Relevant Data
In fiscal year 2024, the Nonprofit Security Grant Program was funded at a total of $454.5 million, with $227.25 million allocated to the Urban Area Security Initiative (NSGP-U) and $227.25 million to the State program (NSGP-S).
Nonprofit Security Grant Program — FEMA.gov
Jewish Americans constitute approximately 2% of the U.S. population but were victims in 69% of all religion-based hate crimes reported in 2024.
FBI Data: 69% of religion-based hate crimes targeted Jews — Jewish Federations of North America
Antisemitic incidents in the U.S. increased by 34% in the first week following the start of the 2026 war with Iran.
Antisemitism is on the rise after start of war in Iran — with 34% spike in incidents the first week alone — New York Post
As of 2023, 29.2% of Dearborn, Michigan's population is foreign-born, with about 54.5% of residents identifying as of Middle Eastern or North African ancestry based on 2020 census data.
Dearborn, MI — Data USA
📰 Source Timeline (1)
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