logo
S.F. cafe endures worst vandalism to date after ICE protesters descend upon Mission

S.F. cafe endures worst vandalism to date after ICE protesters descend upon Mission

San Francisco cafe owner Manny Yekutiel was eating dinner at home Monday night when he got an urgent call from a person attending an event at Manny's, his cafe in the Mission District.
'Right now, I am watching someone breaking your windows,' the person told him. 'They are trying to get into space. Should I videotape them, or should I run away?'
Yekutiel told the person to protect themselves, and that he would be there in five minutes. After racing to the cafe, he surveyed the damage: a bashed window near the entrance and graffiti sprayed all over the restaurant's outside walls. After cleaning up the mess, he left and went to sleep.
But in the morning, he woke up to a nightmare.
According to security cameras, a faction of the large group of protesters who descended upon the Mission District to oppose the U.S. Immigration and Customs Enforcement and President Donald Trump's decision to deploy the California National Guard and U.S. Marines to Los Angeles — broke into the cafe just before 10 p.m. and graffitied all around its exterior.
But unlike tags that had targeted ICE and the police, like the ones that were sprayed all over the McDonald's at 24th and Mission streets, the messaging at the corner of 16th and Mission streets seemed to focus specifically on Yekutiel.
The vandals also smashed through a large window to enter the cafe, though it was unclear whether anything was taken.
Among graffiti that read 'Free Palestine' and 'Kill Cops,' there were other, more pointed words for Yekutiel, who is Jewish. The cafe owner, who hosts civic and political events at Manny's has been vocal about his 'complicated' feelings about Israel and wish for a cease-fire in Gaza.
'F— Manny,' one of the tags read. Others said 'Die Zio,' an apparent truncating of the word Zionist, and 'The only good settler is a dead 1.'
'It was like a crime scene,' he said, referring to the inside of the restaurant Tuesday morning. 'Glass everywhere, shattered on the floor. And then I came back here in the back in the dark and was just sobbing.'
In an interview with the Chronicle in the back of his cafe, where on Monday night the private event had continued on despite the break-in attempt, Yekutiel broke down in sobs.
He said he was grateful to Mayor Daniel Lurie, who visited him at the cafe before it opened Tuesday morning. The mayor held his hand and consoled him, Yekutiel said.
In a press briefing Tuesday morning, Lurie spoke generally of the vandalism by protesters, but did not specifically reference Manny's. The mayor's office later declined to comment on the vandalism of Manny's.
'Vandalizing local businesses with hateful language, damaging property is unacceptable,' Lurie said in his briefing. 'When that happens, law enforcement will take action.'
Lurie characterized Monday night's demonstration as 'significantly calmer' than Sunday's despite being 'notably larger.' During the chaotic standoffs between police and protesters that injured two officers Sunday night, more than 150 people were arrested. All but one were cited and released.
Yekutiel said he had not been contacted by Supervisor Jackie Fielder, who represents the Mission District. Fielder's office did not return requests for comment for the Chronicle.
What was all more baffling — and frightening — to Yekutiel was that he had advocated for and attended Monday's protest against ICE, he said.
Over the seven years Manny's has been open, the cafe has been targeted with anti-Israel graffiti numerous times, including last year on the eve of the anniversary of the Oct. 7, 2023 Hamas attack. Yekutiel, who hosts civic and political events at his cafe, has been vocal about his 'complicated' feelings about Israel. He has also expressed support for a cease-fire.
The vandalism on Monday night, though, was the most extreme the cafe has endured, he said.
'I wish I could sit down with these people and say, 'You got the wrong guy,'' he said. 'But just choosing to attack my business and my windows and say that I should die only affirms the claim, which is true in many ways, that part of this is just a hatred of Jews.'
For years, he said, he has empathized with the people who have vandalized his cafe. 'There's a person that you can undo, that you can defame and boycott and attack if you're feeling rage,' he said, explaining why he believed he was being targeted. 'Even though I'm not Israeli. Even though I don't represent Israel. Even though I haven't done anything that, I believe, deserves that rage.'
Now, it's just anti-Semitism, he said.
Outside the cafe Tuesday morning, two young men crossing the street paused to look at the corner. 'Look, they f— that shit up!' one of them said to the other, as the two laughed and walked on.
Inside the cafe, nearly every seat was occupied by people drinking coffee, working on their laptops or discussing the damages throughout the morning. Two San Francisco Police sergeants came by to interview Yekutiel and a local rabbi stopped by for a coffee. Just before 1 p.m., some of the patrons were jolted by the sound of someone from the street screaming expletives into the cafe.
The back of the cafe was cordoned off as workers worked on the window that had been broken. Sprinklings of glass glimmered on a velvet armchair. For a few minutes, an upbeat song began playing over the speakers, until Yekutiel asked the baristas to turn it down. They were just trying to lighten the mood, they said.
He said the mood didn't need to be light. It wasn't a happy moment, he said, and asked them to turn the music off.
Orange background

Try Our AI Features

Explore what Daily8 AI can do for you:

Comments

No comments yet...

Related Articles

‘A place to celebrate ourselves': A music festival in Riverside moves ahead despite ICE fears
‘A place to celebrate ourselves': A music festival in Riverside moves ahead despite ICE fears

Los Angeles Times

time28 minutes ago

  • Los Angeles Times

‘A place to celebrate ourselves': A music festival in Riverside moves ahead despite ICE fears

Despite the continuous presence of U.S. Immigration and Customs Enforcement in cities around California, organizers in Riverside have decided to forge ahead with the third edition of the Mucho Gusto Music Festival, an event held in the downtown area that's billed as 'a celebration of music without borders.' The announcement comes as other events catering to Latinx audiences across Southern California have been forced to implement extra security measures because of potential ICE raids, or have been postponed altogether. Levitt LA, which organizes an annual summer concert series at the Levitt Pavilion in MacArthur Park, announced earlier this month that it was prepared to change venues if needed. Festival Chapín de Los Angeles, a popular two-day celebration of Guatemalan culture held in the Westlake neighborhood, has been postponed from late August to mid October. Authorities have arrested more than 2,700 individuals since the raids began in June, according to Homeland Security. Many of the immigration enforcement operations have been carried out in predominantly Latinx neighborhoods and cities. According to the U.S. Census Bureau, 54% of Riverside's population identifies as Hispanic or Latinx. 'It's important right now that we put our money within our local economy to support each other,' said Eduardo Valencia, Mucho Gusto's artistic director and one of the founders of the festival. 'We [needed] a place to celebrate ourselves … to be in a space that really celebrates the fact that we are [a diaspora of] people, that we are people from other countries who immigrated [to the U.S.],' he added. This year's all-ages festival will be headlined by two bands that blend cumbia rhythms with psychedelic melodies, Tropa Magica and Combo Chimbita, as well as jazz band Brainstory. Cosme Cordova, owner of art gallery Division 9 and co-organizer of the festival, said that he believes the ICE raids are bringing people together. 'People are gathering and becoming stronger and more educated about the laws and the rules,' he said. Mucho Gusto organizers are hiring private security and will have two officers on site to ensure a safe space for the community. '2025 is the year of arts and culture in Riverside,' Mayor Patricia Lock Dawson told The Times. 'Riverside loves its festivals; they represent the heart of our community, bring people together, and celebrate the cultures that make our city unique. Our focus is, and will always be, on ensuring that all public events in Riverside, including Mucho Gusto, are safe, welcoming, and inclusive for everyone.' In a Facebook post from June 12, the chief of police, Larry Gonzalez, said the department will not enforce immigration laws and is dedicated to 'protect the members of [the Riverside] community.' 'The trust we've built with our residents and businesses matters deeply to us, and we remain firmly committed to your safety and well-being,' he added.

Judge blocks Trump administration from detaining Abrego Garcia upon his release from custody

time2 hours ago

Judge blocks Trump administration from detaining Abrego Garcia upon his release from custody

A federal judge has blocked the Trump administration, including U.S. Immigration and Customs Enforcement, from detaining Kilmar Abrego Garcia upon his release from criminal custody in Tennessee. Abrego Garcia has been awaiting his release on bail after pleading not guilty last month to human smuggling charges in Tennessee. U.S. District Judge Paula Xinis ruled on Wednesday that the U.S. government "shall restore Abrego Garcia to his ICE Order of Supervision out of the Baltimore Field Office." Judge Xinis also ordered the government to provide written notice to Abrego Garcia and his attorneys if they intend to remove him to a third country. This decision follows a separate ruling in Abrego Garcia's criminal case where U.S. District Judge Waverly Crenshaw denied the government's motion to revoke a magistrate judge's order for Abrego Garcia's release. Judge Crenshaw said on Wednesday that Abrego Garcia "shall be released upon the issuance of the Magistrate Judge's release order with conditions." Abrego Garcia, a Salvadoran native, was deported in March to El Salvador's CECOT mega-prison -- despite a 2019 court order barring his deportation to that country due to fear of persecution -- after the Trump administration claimed he was a member of the criminal gang MS-13, which he denies. He was brought back to the U.S. last month to face charges in Tennessee of allegedly transporting undocumented migrants within the U.S. while he was living in Maryland.

Why Likud booting Edelstein will come back to bite it?
Why Likud booting Edelstein will come back to bite it?

Yahoo

time2 hours ago

  • Yahoo

Why Likud booting Edelstein will come back to bite it?

While Edelstein has given no indication of his next political move and has remained loyal to the Likud, it is not inconceivable that he seeks a new political home. Regardless of where one stands on Israel's political map – Right, Left, or Center – recent polling gives little room for optimism that a clear mandate to govern will emerge from the next elections, which will be held somewhere between late January and late October 2026. The reason for this pessimism is that the polling numbers indicate that the parties currently comprising the coalition are projected to win between 49 and 53 seats, while the Jewish opposition parties are polling between 57 and 61 seats. In other words, both sides are expected to struggle to form a stable coalition. While in 2022, Naftali Bennett and Yair Lapid were willing to form a government with an Arab party, Mansour Abbas's Ra'am, the likelihood of that dynamic repeating itself with the country on a war footing, or just beyond it, which may be the case when the elections are held, is slim. This means that the country is staring down the barrel of the same kind of political stalemate and gridlock that plagued it between 2019 and 2022, when it underwent five elections in just three and a half years. That picture does not fundamentally change even when factoring in the possible emergence of a new party led by Gadi Eisenkot, or even if he joins Yesh Atid as its head or merges with Bennett's new party. The Eisenkot effect, for the most part, has been to rearrange the furniture within the opposition bloc. It has not shifted votes from the coalition bloc to the opposition. He is not moving a table and chair from one room to another; he is simply moving them around in the same room. The key to breaking this stalemate is moving votes across the blocs, for example, persuading moderate right-wing voters currently voting for the Likud to cast their ballots for Benny Gantz's, Lapid's, or Bennett's parties. The polls, however, are not showing this dynamic taking hold. The option to form a new government may lie with a new party And that means the vehicle to move votes from one bloc to the other might be a new party with a different message. If the Likud goes ahead on Wednesday and ousts Yuli Edelstein from his position as head of the Knesset Foreign Affairs and Defense Committee, punishing him for refusing to back a law that fails to mandate meaningful haredi (ultra-Orthodox) conscription within a reasonable time frame, then it might – with its own hands – be creating that very vehicle. Edelstein has issued no threats to leave the Likud for another party or to start a new one. Still, that possibility cannot be dismissed, especially if he is ousted from his post and performs poorly in the Likud primaries to be held before the next elections. And a poor showing in the next Likud primaries is not far-fetched, given that some within his party are accusing him of trying to bring down the right-wing government over the haredi draft issue. Edelstein joined the Likud in 2003 after the party he founded with Natan Sharansky – Yisrael B'Aliyah – merged with the Likud. He vied for a position on the Likud's list in 2006 and won the 14th slot. As the party only won 12 seats, he first entered the Knesset as a Likud MK replacement in 2007. His standing in the party grew steadily. In the 2009 primaries, he placed 12th, dropped to 18th in 2013 when the Likud ran together with Yisrael Beytenu, and then rose to third place in 2015. His peak came in the April 2019 primaries, when he captured the second slot on the party list, just behind Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu. That represented the height of his influence and reflected his popularity within the party. At the time, he was serving as Knesset speaker. His fortunes began to decline, however, when – amid Netanyahu's repeated failures to form a coalition after successive elections – he flirted with the idea of challenging him for the party leadership, an idea he eventually abandoned. But the damage was done, and in the 2022 primaries, he dropped to 18th place. When Netanyahu selected his cabinet after winning the Knesset elections that year, Edelstein was conspicuously left out, only to be appointed chairman of the Foreign Affairs and Defense Committee as almost a consolation prize. While Edelstein has given no indication of his next political move and has remained loyal to the Likud, it is not inconceivable that, if he is ousted, he could seek a new political home or build a new one. Doing so on the back of the haredi conscription issue may prove to be a winning strategy. Caving to haredi demands on conscription is not only unpopular among the general Jewish public but also among Likud voters. It is a hot-button issue, one that could drive a segment of Likud voters to follow Edelstein to a party that reflects their positions and values, first and foremost, support for mandatory military service for haredim. Polls suggest that the Likud has a solid base of about 18 seats that will remain loyal to Netanyahu no matter what. That figure is drawn from post-October 7 massacre polling. On October 6, 2023, a Maariv poll projected 28 seats for the Likud, reflective of what most of the polls were giving the party at the time as the judicial reform debate raged. The Likud won 32 seats in the 2022 election. In 10 polls conducted over the next two months immediately following October 7 – as the country seethed with fury at how such a catastrophe could have happened – the party averaged 18 seats, which can be considered its bedrock support. Currently, the Likud is polling around 27 seats, meaning that nine of those mandates are floating, i.e., voters currently within the Likud camp could jump ship over one issue or another. Considering the passion that the haredi conscription issue is triggering, this could be one of those issues. Edelstein, if he chose to form a party or join another, could offer those voters a new political home. In doing so, he could become that elusive vehicle that moves voters from one bloc to the other. Speculative as it may be, this scenario raises questions that the Likud might want to consider before removing Edelstein from his position, particularly the political ripple effects of sidelining someone over an issue that resonates deeply with much of the country, including a significant segment of its own voters. Solve the daily Crossword

DOWNLOAD THE APP

Get Started Now: Download the App

Ready to dive into a world of global content with local flavor? Download Daily8 app today from your preferred app store and start exploring.
app-storeplay-store