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Several US Jewish centres evacuated over bomb threats; Ivanka Trump calls for ‘religious tolerance’

Click to play video: 'White House responding to series of anti-Semitic bomb threats'
White House responding to series of anti-Semitic bomb threats
WATCH ABOVE: White House responding to series of anti-Semitic bomb threats. – Feb 21, 2017

MILWAUKEE, Feb 20 (Reuters) – Several Jewish community centres (JCC) across the United States were evacuated for a time on Monday after receiving bomb threats, the latest wave of threatened attacks against them this year, the national umbrella organization said.

Some 11 centres including those in the Houston, Chicago and Milwaukee areas received phoned-in bomb threats that were later determined to be hoaxes, said David Posner, a director at JCC Association of North America who advises centres on security.

READ MORE: Jewish centres across US report second wave of bomb threats

No arrests were made and no one was injured. All of the centres returned to normal operations, Posner said in a statement.

The FBI was investigating the incidents, Posner said. Officials at the FBI were not immediately available for comment.

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WATCH: FBI probing wave of fake bomb threats to U.S. Jewish centres in January

Click to play video: 'FBI probing wave of fake bomb threats to U.S. Jewish centres'
FBI probing wave of fake bomb threats to U.S. Jewish centres

Officials at the Harry and Rose Samson Family Jewish Community Center in Whitefish Bay, Wisconsin, north of Milwaukee, received a bomb threat at 10:15 a.m. local time, the second such incident at the centre over the last three weeks, it said on Twitter.

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“Taking very cautious measures, we are sheltering in our gym, as has been recommended,” the Milwaukee JCC said in a text message sent to parents of children who attend the preschool at the centre, according to an NBC affiliate in Milwaukee.

The centre reopened two hours later, the centre said on Twitter.

Monday’s incidents come after three waves of bomb threats in 2017. In all, 69 incidents at 54 JCCs in 27 states and one Canadian province have been reported, according to the JCC Association of North America.

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“We are concerned about the anti-Semitism behind these threats, and the repetition of threats intended to interfere with day-to-day life,” Posner said.

Jewish community centres typically offer after-school activities, fitness programs and various other services.

Over the weekend, the headstones at the graves of about 170 Jews were vandalized in the St. Louis area, the Washington Post reported.

On Twitter, President Donald Trump’s oldest daughter, a convert to Judaism, called for “religious tolerance” in the wake of the reported bomb threats.

“America is a nation built on the principle of religious tolerance,” she said. “We must protect our houses of worship and religious centers.”

Trump converted to Judaism before marrying her husband, Jared Kushner, who is an Orthodox Jew.

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