Police look into anti-Semitic bullying incident in Northern Ireland

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(JTA) — Police in Northern Ireland are investigating claims of anti-Semitic bullying of a boy with Asperger syndrome.

Matthew Lough, 14, told the BBC that he had been bullied at his County Antrim school since revealing during a class on the Holocaust that his great-grandmother was Jewish.

He said one boy was suspended after Lough was hit in the head and knocked to the ground. Police told the BBC on April 26 that they are investigating a March 14 assault.

Others, Lough and his mother told the BBC, have attached swastikas to his school bags and have taunted him with anti-Semitic epithets.

His mother, Sharon Lough, credited the school, Carrickfergus College, with taking swift action, but was concerned at the persistence of the anti-Semitism.

"He has been very unsettled at night-time, having nightmares," she told the broadcaster. "I would never, ever tell my children not to mention their heritage, because they are so proud of it. I would never deny my Jewish heritage, never."

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