A play based on October 7, 2023 in New York City is the only one requiring police security
A play telling the harrowing stories of victims, and heroes, of the October 7 attacks on Israel opened in New York this week — described by playwrights Phelim McAleer and Ann McElhinney as “a cultural moment” and “a story of resilience.”That's one of the worst things about the modern situation and atmosphere seen today. Islam was imported to areas like the USA and Canada as much as Europe, and now, unless law enforcement actually does its job, you have a situation where violent maniacs are willing to commit obscene behavior for the sake of suppressing facts.
The show, which is being put on in Midtown Manhattan beginning this week through June 16, relays the blood-curdling accounts of the worst attack in Israel’s history, in the exact words of those who experienced it, collected in a series of interviews conducted by McAleer and McElhinney. The venue is under permanent police protection.
“What we have in this theatre is a piece of magic, a piece of history,” McAleer told Breitbart News Daily on Wednesday. “We’re journalists, our background is journalism, and we thought about journalism being the first draft of history, and here it is and its history that people need to see. They need to know.”
“This is a cultural moment in New York,” he continued. “It’s the only play opening in New York that needs permanent police protection. The world has changed, let me tell you.”
The journalists who developed the play deserve much credit, certainly if they don't censor anything involving the Religion of Peace's role in last year's horror.
Update: Paramount Plus is also airing a documentary about the tragedy.
Labels: anti-americanism, anti-semitism, communications, dhimmitude, islam, Israel, jihad, military, misogyny, Moonbattery, New York, racism, sexual violence, showbiz, terrorism, United States, war on terror