Scooter Braun honored at Jewish Heritage Month event with TikTok star Montana Tucker

3 months ago 26
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Music mogul Scooter Braun was honored at a recent Jewish Heritage Month celebration in NYC — along with singer and TikTok star Montana Tucker, and the volunteer emergency service group Chaverim.

Braun was honored for bringing the exhibition “6:29am. The Moment Music Stood Still” — featuring items and recordings from the Oct. 7 Nova Music Festival massacre — to Manhattan.

Scooter Braun was honored for bringing an exhibit on the Nova Music Festival massacre to NYC. Mayor's Office

“This could have been Governors Ball, this could have been Coachella, this could have been any music festival in the world,” Braun said, before making a call to bring home the remaining Israeli hostages.

Hamas terrorists killed 370 people at the concert dedicated to peace, and kidnapped 44. In total, 1,200 were killed in Israel that day, with some 240 people taken hostage.

May Eric Adams gave a rousing speech at the same event, calling out hatred on campuses and beyond.

Adams also honored Montana Tucker. WireImage

“Right on our college campuses we are radicalizing our children not only to hate Jewish people, but to hate the country that they are educated in, in the first place,” he told the crowd. “Something is wrong with that. ”

He added: “The real tragedy of this is how many good people are remaining silent because they are afraid of being canceled… Well I say, cancel me any day. I am not going to sit back and allow this to happen to the country that I love.”

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There have been major protests on New York campuses including Columbia University, NYU and CUNY.

Adams urged guests, “We need to stop being afraid.”

Eric Adams spoke about protests at NYC college campuses during an event for Jewish Heritage month. Mayor's Office

“There were people who sat back, stood back and watched slavery happen in America and didn’t say anything,” he said in his speech. “There were people who stood back and watched what happened in Nazi Germany… Far too often, people who knew better stood back. So I want to know? Where are the people right now when we are watching this hatred playing out on the streets of our cities across the globe?”

Adams went on to say, “It doesn’t matter if you are Jewish, if you are Muslim, if you are Christian, if you are Sikh. It is time to embrace the humanity of who and what we are… We are all in this together and we can not turn our backs on each other.”

Adams told the crowd: “Hate has no place in our city.” ABC Braun pointed out that the massacre that happened at the music festival could happen anywhere. GC Images

Adams tried to reassure the crowd to “not allow yourself to be fooled because people yell loud and say nasty, hurtful things that they are representative of what this city has to offer.”

He repeated several times, “Hate has no place in our city.”

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