By Joshua Runyan and Tamar Runyan

Berlin Mayor Klaus Wowereit, left, joins Rabbi Yehuda Tiechtel, co-director of Chabad-Lubavitch of Berlin, in lighting the Chanukah menorah in front of the Brandenburg Gate last year.

BERLIN, Germany — Berlin police arrested two teenagers suspected of attacking a van carrying Chabad-Lubavitch Rabbi Yehuda Tiechtel and several students of the local Lubavitch yeshiva.

According to news reports, the 16- and 18-year-old men confessed to the crime, which saw a car abruptly reverse in the direction of Tiechtel’s van the night of Nov. 1. The two occupants of the car, the rabbi told police, then shouted anti-Semitic insults and threw a flaming object at the van.

Berlin Jewish Center Hopeful After Police Nab Two Suspects in Nighttime Attack

By Joshua Runyan and Tamar Runyan

Berlin Mayor Klaus Wowereit, left, joins Rabbi Yehuda Tiechtel, co-director of Chabad-Lubavitch of Berlin, in lighting the Chanukah menorah in front of the Brandenburg Gate last year.

BERLIN, Germany — Berlin police arrested two teenagers suspected of attacking a van carrying Chabad-Lubavitch Rabbi Yehuda Tiechtel and several students of the local Lubavitch yeshiva.

According to news reports, the 16- and 18-year-old men confessed to the crime, which saw a car abruptly reverse in the direction of Tiechtel’s van the night of Nov. 1. The two occupants of the car, the rabbi told police, then shouted anti-Semitic insults and threw a flaming object at the van.

News of the attack made headlines throughout the country, and spurred denunciations from the Rabbinical Centre of Europe and the American Jewish Committee. Following the arrest, Tiechtel struck a hopeful note.

“We thankful that the German government responded so quickly,” said Tiechtel, who directs Chabad-Lubavitch of Berlin. “The Jewish community here is developing by leaps and bounds, and it is very encouraging that people take anti-Semitism seriously.”

Later this year, Chabad-Lubavitch of Berlin – which saw a host of politicians and German leaders attend the 2007 grand opening of the Szloma Albam House and Rohr Chabad Center – will unveil a brand new Jewish ritual bath, as well as a yeshiva for new immigrants.

Article continued (Chabad.org)