Dozens of Jewish anti-Israel protesters were arrested Monday after hundreds of rowdy demonstrators rushed the New York Stock Exchange and staged a sit-in outside the historic Manhattan building.
Scores of pro-Palestinian protesters wearing red shirts stormed toward the building on Broad Street in Lower Manhattan — then chained themselves to the doors just before the stock market’s opening bell at 9:30 a.m., footage shows.
A handful of demonstrators, who hail from the Jewish Voices for Peace group, could be seen removing their jackets as they set up shop outside the building — jackets they wore in a possible bid to conceal their anti-Israel attire and thwart any attempt to stop them ahead of time.
The group immediately started screaming “Free Palestine” and quickly brandished signs reading “Jews for Palestine’s freedom” as they blocked off the building and demanded the US government “fund FEMA, not genocide.”
At one point, they dressed the iconic bronze Fearless Girl statue in one of their shirts emblazoned with the phrase “Stop arming Israel.”
Roughly 200 protesters were nabbed by cops, the group’s political director, Beth Miller, told The Post.
The NYPD confirmed that arrests were made amid the chaos, but the exact number wasn’t immediately available.
Cops could be seen cuffing multiple protesters and hauling them away on Department of Correction buses.
“Today there were 500 Jews who came here, in front of the New York Stock Exchange, to shut down business as usual on Wall Street with a message to say the US government should stop sending weapons to the Israeli government and stop profiting from the genocide of Palestinians,” Miller told The Post.
“The reason we were here, specifically as Jews, is because the Biden administration and the Israeli government often say this genocide they are committing is in the name of Jewish safety and we reject that with every fiber of our being.”
She added: “We were taught in our Jewish tradition that every single life is a universe and that to destroy a single life is to destroy an entire universe.”
The NYSE declined to comment on the protest.
Additional reporting by Amanda Woods