Reported bombs at separate Jewish sites caused alarm on Saturday and prompted NYPD as anti-Semitic incidents sparked by the war in Gaza continue to rise, police said.

First, police were called to Holocaust Memorial Park on West End Ave. in Sheepshead Bay, Brooklyn, just before 10 a.m. when someone walking through the park found a grenade among the markers dedicated to Jews killed during the Nazi regime.

The NYPD Bomb Squad was called and ultimately cleared the scene after the grenade was found to be inert, an NYPD spokesman said.

An NYPD counterterrorism officer stands in front of Central Synagogue after a bomb threat was received on Nov. 11, 2023, in Manhattan. (Theodore Parisienne for New York Daily News)

No one was injured and no arrests were made.

Less than an hour later, someone texted 911, claiming that he had left two backpacks filled with pipe bombs inside Central Synagogue on Lexington Ave. near E. 54th St. in Midtown.

Cops responded to the scene, but found nothing, cops said. The synagogue wasn’t evacuated.

The two incidents come as hate crimes against Jews in the city has nearly tripled during the month-long war in Israel.

Since Oct. 7, when a series of sneak attacks on Israeli communities near Gaza sparked the ongoing conflict, the NYPD has investigated 82 anti-Semitic incidents, 31 more than the previous year. That’s a jump of 164%, cops said.

NYPD officers respond to a bomb threat after a man called and stated he placed two backpacks filled with pipe bombs inside of the occupied Central Synagogue located on Lexington Ave. in Manhattan on Nov. 11, 2023.
NYPD officers responded to a bomb threat after a man called and stated he placed two backpacks filled with pipe bombs inside of the occupied Central Synagogue located on Lexington Ave. in Manhattan on Nov. 11, 2023. (Theodore Parisienne for New York Daily News)

There have also been eight hate crimes against Muslims. This time last year there were none, cops said.

Throughout October, 69 anti-Semitic incidents were reported in the city, compared to 22 in October 2022 — a 214% increase, officials said.

Blowback from the war in Israel is a daily concern for Jewish New Yorkers, Bob Moskovitz, executive coordinator of the Flatbush Shomrim Safety Patrol in Brooklyn, told the Daily News Wednesday.

“We’re feeling it 100%,” Moskovitz said of the uptick in hate crimes. “Our hotline, which the community utilizes to report any incident has probably increased in this last month and a half by 300%. The phone is simply not stopping.”

Thomas Tracy

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