Malmo, Sweden
Malmo, SwedeniStock

A rabbi living in the southern Swedish city of Malmo said that two teenagers who last year came to the local synagogue to threaten Jews apologized for their actions, JTA reported Friday.

Rabbi Moshe David HaCohen revealed the incident to the media for the first time in an interview aired Wednesday by Sveriges Radio.

The high school students, whose identity was not disclosed in the report, waited outside the synagogue in December to confront Jews, HaCohen said. They threatened to “throw bombs” on them, then fled.

The Jewish community contacted nearby high schools, leading to the identification of the teens. The principal suggested that the teens apologize, and they came to the synagogue the following week to say they are sorry, the report said.

It also said police were aware of the teens’ actions but they had not been punished.

Police have referred the case to social services, according to the report, which did not name the school.

“It’s part of a bigger picture where the Jewish minority feels threatened, it’s a product of anti-Semitic rhetoric,” Rabbi HaCohen told the radio station about the incident.

Following U.S. President Donald Trump’s recognition of Jerusalem as Israel’s capital on December 6, more than a dozen men hurled firebombs at a synagogue in Gothenburg, near Malmo.

In Malmo, participants of a protest rally against Israel chanted in Arabic about shooting Jews following the recognition.

Following those incidents, the Swedish Ambassador to Israel said that Swedish authorities had failed to protect the country’s Jewish community.

Malmo has an outsize anti-Semitism problem relative to the rest of Sweden, which has a Jewish population of some 20,000. The city’s synagogue has come under repeated attacks.

In 2014 and 2015, Sweden saw a total of 547 cases in which a hate crime targeting Jews was reported, according to the Swedish National Council for Crime Prevention, or BRA. Of those cases, a quarter were reported in the Scania region, whose capital is Malmo, where approximately 1,000 Jews live, according to an investigation by Swedish broadcaster SVT.

(Arutz Sheva’s North American desk is keeping you updated until the start of Shabbat in New York. The time posted automatically on all Arutz Sheva articles, however, is Israeli time.)