
NEW YORK — A cafe in Brooklyn said Sunday it has barred US Rep. Dan Goldman as it does not serve “genocide enablers,” after the Jewish lawmaker stopped at the coffee shop.
Poetica Coffee, in the neighborhood of Williamsburg, posted a photo of Goldman on social media, writing: “We see that you stopped by our shop today for a coffee. Do you see how it doesn’t taste like genocide juice?”
“We don’t serve racists, fascists, homophobes, genocide enablers,” the post said. “Too bad we didn’t recognize you right away, or we would have turned you away.”
The shop said it refunded Goldman’s $9.82 purchase.
“We don’t need your money (it’s probably coming from AIPAC anyways),” the post said, referring to the American Israel Public Affairs Committee, a major pro-Israel lobbying group. “Don’t ever come to Poetica.”
Get The Times of Israel's Daily Edition
by email and never miss our top stories
By signing up, you agree to the terms
In a statement, Goldman said he was “sorry to see this post” and explained that he had stopped at the coffee shop because his young daughter needed to use a restroom.
“The barista could not have been nicer to my 7-year-old daughter and me — allowing her to use the bathroom even though we had not purchased anything,” he said. “I made sure to buy a coffee in return for her kindness. I hope you at least make sure she gets the tip that she deserved.”
“Attention New Yorkers — if you support the world’s only Jewish nation’s existence, Poetica Coffee will not serve you,” wrote the StopAntiSemitism activism group in a post to X. “Sounds a bit illegal to us.”
Goldman is a Jewish centrist who supports Israel’s existence, but has also been harshly critical of the Israeli government and the war in Gaza, which was triggered by the October 7, 2023, Hamas-led invasion of southern Israel. Critics have accused Israel of genocide in its military campaign against Hamas in Gaza, an accusation that Jerusalem vehemently denies.
Last year, Goldman said the war was a “humanitarian catastrophe” and called the Netanyahu coalition an “extremist government” that “unjustly hurts Palestinians.”
Attention New Yorkers – if you support the world's only Jewish nation's existence, Poetica Coffee will not serve you.
Sounds a bit illegal to us. https://t.co/itzvPjbXyU
— StopAntisemitism (@StopAntisemites) June 22, 2026
Goldman is facing a primary challenge from former New York City comptroller Brad Lander in Tuesday’s election.
Lander is also Jewish, and defines himself as a “liberal Zionist,” but is running to Goldman’s left, when it comes to Israel.
Goldman has been endorsed by AIPAC and J Street, a left-wing Israel lobby group, according to a New York Times report last week. A spokeswoman for Goldman said he has not taken any donations from AIPAC in the current election period, but does take donations from individuals via the AIPAC website.
Poetica is a chain with six locations around the city.
The chain’s website said that “whoever walks through the door is treated with unconditional dignity.”
“Not as a customer. Not as a transaction. As someone who arrived and deserves to be welcomed,” the website says.
The incident came as New York City Mayor Zohran Mamdani, an anti-Zionist, defended calling AIPAC “monsters” in comments that were widely decried as trafficking in antisemitic tropes.
“We’re talking about a status quo where children are being killed on a daily basis,” Mamdani said Monday during a press event, mentioning the killing of Al Jazeera cameraman Ahmed Washah on Saturday.
The Israel Defense Forces said Washah was a Hamas operative. Purported journalists in Gaza have repeatedly been found to have been members of terrorist groups.
“When I am speaking about AIPAC, I’m speaking about an organization that has been supportive of the status quo, that has fought any attempt to actually deliver safety to people, not just in Palestine, but frankly, through much of the region,” Mamdani said. “It is a status quo for immorality. It is one that I will not accept.”
“It is important that when we ask ourselves how such death and destruction is happening overseas, we also name those who allow it to take place,” he added.
During a rally on Thursday, Mamdani said that “the monsters that we are up against, they take many different forms,” and then singled out AIPAC.
He described the pro-Israel lobby as an organization “for whom the only thing more frightening than democracy being allowed to run its course is an end to genocide and [Prime Minister Benjamin] Netanyahu’s wars.”
Mamdani continued by alleging that AIPAC moves “millions in dark money to accomplish a single goal, to preserve their power so that they can turn us against one another instead of our leaders turning towards the moral change we all know to be necessary.”
Jewish leaders and Jewish organizations said the comment crossed a line.
The head of the American Jewish Committee, Ted Deutch, said in a statement addressed to Mamdani: “When you call people monsters, you’re not debating ideas, you’re dehumanizing the people you disagree with.”
View original source — Times of Israel ↗

