We've been given a lot of good tips regarding old and recent examples of vandalism and harassment. We're hoping our readers can step up and help us with this one as well.
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Jewish community reeling after five gravestones desecrated
Wounded, hurt, angry. 
Those feelings channeled through Rabbi Harry Brechner after learning that five historic gravestones in Emanu-El Jewish Cemetery in Victoria – all belonging to Holocaust survivors – had been desecrated.
Victoria police say the large stones were spray-painted with black swastikas and other images sometime between 8 p.m. on Dec. 30 and the early morning hours of Dec. 31.
        Those feelings channeled through Rabbi Harry Brechner after learning that five historic gravestones in Emanu-El Jewish Cemetery in Victoria – all belonging to Holocaust survivors – had been desecrated.
Victoria police say the large stones were spray-painted with black swastikas and other images sometime between 8 p.m. on Dec. 30 and the early morning hours of Dec. 31.
“I think I felt, on a certain level, violation, a  bit wounded and from there it kind of moved to anger … I think it’s  perfectly natural to be angered when you’ve been hurt,” said Brechner,  who has been a rabbi with Congregation Emanu-El, a Jewish synagogue in  Victoria, for more than 10 years. 
“Aside from maybe the Confederate flag or the  hood of a Ku Klux Klansman, (the swastika) is a symbol of hatred  directed towards us as Jews, and that’s hard,” Brechner said. 
The case is being investigated by police as a  hate crime, which potentially could result in hate crime charges in  addition to charges of mischief, said Const. Mike Russell, Victoria  police spokesperson. 
It’s not the first time a hate crime against the Jewish community has happened in Victoria. 
A city park near the Chabad Synagogue at Quadra  and Finlayson streets was tagged with spray-painted swastikas two years  ago, Brechner said. 
But the cemetery vandalism is especially shocking  to the Jewish community. There are between 2,000 and 4,000 Jews living  on Vancouver Island, most of them in the Capital Region, the Victoria  resident said. 
“I think the cemetery is sacred ground,” Brechner  said. “To enter a cemetery and desecrate graves is different than  spraying graffiti on a playground. It’s got a different impact.” 
To help heal the pain, the public is invited to  attend a vigil on Sunday (Jan. 8) at 1 p.m. at the cemetery, located at  Cedar Hill and Fernwood roads, off Hillside Avenue. 
In the meantime, Brechner plans to speak on the anti-Semitic act at his synagogue’s Saturday service. 
His message, especially to children, will be: “We’re safe, we’re strong.” 
The Jewish community has been shown tremendous  support during this difficult time, Brechner said, adding that many  people have offered to help clean up the desecrated gravestones in the  burial ground that was consecrated in 1860. 
“We’re not experiencing this alone,” Brechner said. 
A Victoria police detective is leading the  investigation, and plans to liaise with B.C.’s Hate Crime Team of RCMP  and Vancouver police officers – the only provincial hate crime policing  team in Canada, said Russell. 
Police are hoping a tipster will shed light on this case. 
Anyone with information is asked to call Crime Stoppers at 1-800-222-8477.
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