Family of Hanukkah attack victim calls for end of hatred
Monsey. Josef Neumann, a father of seven, may have permanent brain damage, his family says. "We hope he wakes to a changed world with peace, unity, and love for all,'' said his daughter Nicky Cohen.
(AP) The daughter of a man gravely wounded in an attack on a Hanukkah celebration north of New York City made an emotional plea on Jan. 2 to end hatred and anti-Semitism, saying she hopes her father regains consciousness "to a changed world.''
"We want our kids to go to school and feel safe,'' Nicky Cohen, the daughter of Josef Neumann, told reporters in front of her home in Rockland County. "We want to go to synagogues and feel safe. We want to go to grocery stores and malls and feel safe.''
Neumann, 72, has been unconscious since Saturday when an attacker with a machete rushed into a rabbi's home in Monsey, N.Y., and wounded five people during a Hanukkah celebration. Neumann remained in intensive care at Westchester Medical Center and was undergoing surgery Thursday morning, she said.
The family released a statement last week saying Neumann, a father of seven, may have permanent brain damage. The family also released a photograph of Neumann showing his head injuries.
"The doctors do not have high hopes for him,'' Cohen said. "If he wakes up he may never be able to walk, talk or even process speech again.''
"We hope he wakes to a changed world with peace, unity, and love for all,'' she added. "Let's stand up together and stop the hatred.''
The man charged with hate crimes and attempted murder in the attack, Grafton Thomas of Greenwood Lake, had handwritten journals containing anti-Semitic comments and a swastika and had researched Hitler's hatred of Jews online, prosecutors said. Thomas' lawyer and family said he has struggled for years with mental illness; they said he was raised in a tolerant home and hadn't previously shown any animosity toward Jewish people.
Cohen described Neumann as a people person and "just an all-around fabulous guy.'' She recalled a time from her childhood when he had stopped to help a man on the side of the road.
"I hope he wakes up soon and call tell you himself,'' said Neumann's son, David Neumann. "All I know is they are not very hopeful.''