Numerous Jewish community centers on the east coast received anonymous bomb threats via phone Monday, forcing evacuations and police responses.
Some of the calls were prerecorded while others were live, and likely came from the same telephone number.
NBC reported threats were made to facilities as far apart as New Jersey, Florida, Maryland, Tennessee and South Carolina. In a statement, the Anti-Defamation League said threats were also received in Delaware.
Facilities across the county were evacuated, though authorities did not discover any explosive devices.
Jewish schools in London also received bomb threats, though it was not clear whether the incidents are connected. Read more
Meh, I’ll show support when their community speaks up as a whole, concerning tje wellbeing of Black People.
WHY DO PEOPLE ALWAYS FUCKING DO THIS
First of all, reacting to Neo-Nazis attacking another minority group by saying “Yeah, but what have these people done for me? Why should I care about them?” is not only morally shitty on basic human level, but also incredibly dangerous, as such reactions effectively serve to empower white supremacists. Silence and indifference to right-wing violence against a minority group equals tacit support for their actions. You cannot care about bigotry and white nationalism “some of the time” – either you care about it in all forms all the time, or you tacitly support it.
Now, I will not for one second deny that every single community outside of the black community has issues with anti-blackness. There is no disputing that fact, and the Jewish community is no exception to that rule. But, that being said, when compared to other groups throughout our history, Jews in America have had a disproportionately strong turnout when it comes to supporting civil rights efforts. For example:
In 1909, Henry Moscowitz joined W.E.B. DuBois and other civil rights leaders to found the NAACP.
Kivie Kaplan, a vice-chairman of the Union of American Hebrew Congregations (now the Union for Reform Judaism), served as the national president of the NAACP from 1966 to 1975.
Arnie Aronson worked with A. Philip Randolph and Roy Wilkins to found the Southern Leadership Conference.
From 1910 to 1940, more than 2,000 primary and secondary schools and twenty black colleges (including Howard, Dillard and Fisk universities) were established in whole or in part by contributions from Jewish philanthropist Julius Rosenwald.
Jewish activist and songwriter Abel Meeropol wrote “Strange Fruit,” Billie Holiday’s famous anti-racism song about the horrors of lyching.
Jews made up half of the young people who participated in the Mississippi Freedom Summer in 1964, including Michael Schwerner and Andrew Goodman, two Jewish Civil Rights activists, who were murdered alongside their peer James Chaney, in a famous case that came to be known as the “Mississippi Burning” lynching.
Leaders of the Reform Movement were arrested with Rev. Dr. Martin Luther King, Jr. in St. Augustine, Florida, in 1964 after a challenge to racial segregation in public accommodations.
Rabbi Abraham Joshua Heschel marched arm-in-arm with Dr. King in his 1965 March on Selma.
The Civil Rights Act of 1964 and the Voting Rights Act of 1965 were drafted in the conference room of Religious Action Center of Reform Judaism, under the aegis of the Leadership Conference, which for decades was located in the RAC’s building.
More recently, there have specifically been Jewish marches with/and or in support of BLM, such as these:
Groups like Jews for Racial and Economic Justice and T’ruah: The Rabbinic Call for Human Rights have been outspoken in support for BLM.
There have been nation-wide campaigns to include BLM in our holiday celebrations, such as these:
Personally, my synagogue made a call to action in support of BLM on our two holiest days of year, and read out the name of every black person murdered by police in the past year before we recited an annual prayer regarding how we hope to be sealed in the Book of Life for the coming year, and we also had a program on ending mass incarceration as part of your Yom Kippur services.
Again, I am in no way saying that anti-blackness is not an issue within the Jewish community, because it certainly can be, and these acts do not absolve that in any way, but as a mixed-race person who has spent her entire life attending both Jewish and South Asian cultural events, I can say, unequivocallly, that racial justice has been far more prominent in my Jewish events and activities than my Desi ones by lightyears, yet I’ve never seen anybody say they’ll only care about the racism experienced by South Asians when they “speak up” as a community.
People always have this weird idea that American Jews are really conservative and “don’t do enough for social justice” even though we are basically the founders of American leftism. Weare the second most liberal voting block in the United States after African-Americans and 76% of us voted against Trump.
Again, we are not perfect, and like every other non-black group, we need to hold ourselves accountable and work even harder to eradicate anti-blackness in our ranks, (especially for the sake of black Jews), but to act like the American Jewish community is some conservative monolith that doesn’t ever take any action is not only extremely factually incorrect, but also dangerous. When you believe these lies about Jewish people and single us out for being worse than other minorities, it only emboldens the white supremacists who hate us and makes them stronger, and that’s dangerous for us all.
Stop letting racism by proxy thrive and start learning about how we can all do better at supporting one another to stop white supremacy.
UC Berkeley apologises after students publish blood libel cartoon depicting Alan Dershowitz
#EverydayAntisemitism
The Chancellor of UC Berkeley has apologised after student newspaper the Daily Californian published an antisemitic cartoon depicting pro-Israel activist and celebrated lawyer Alan Dershowitz.
Dershowitz, a liberal supporting the establishment of a Palestinian state alongside Israel, spoke at the College, answering questions from a large audience.
The cartoon depicts Dershowitz grinning, with his head showing through a hole in a wall with an Israeli flag and images of happy children. The words “the liberal case for Israel”, the title of Dershowitz’s talk, are written on the wall. Behind the wall, he is depicted as trampling on a Palestinian man and holding up an Israeli soldier depicted as carrying out what is essentially an execution of an unarmed boy who lies in a pool of blood.
According to the Definition of Antisemitism, “Using the symbols and images associated with classic antisemitism (e.g. claims of Jews killing Jesus or blood libel) to characterise Israel or Israelis” is antisemitic. The image unequivocally invokes blood libel in the implication that Israel, and perhaps Dershowitz personally, is responsible for cold-blooded killing, without any balance being provided. The image also presents Dershowitz as duplicitous and dishonest, as he attempts to influence political thinking, ideas which are often applied to Jews as a manifestation of antisemitism.
Reportedly, posters for the event were also vandalized with Swastikas. According to the Definition of Antisemitism, “Drawing comparisons of contemporary Israeli policy to that of the Nazis” is Antisemitic.
The publication’s editors apologised, saying that they “have seen with sharp clarity the pain and anger caused… The criticism we have received reaffirms for us a need for a more critical editing eye, and a stronger understanding of the violent history and contemporary manifestations of antisemitism”.
Beyond blood libel, he’s depicted as a bloated, inhuman creature hiding behind a facade, scheming behind-the-scenes and deliberately lying, which all plays into the image of Jews being duplicitous and manipulating the world for their own ends.
This is why I can’t trust goyim who say they’re “not anti-Semitic, just anti-Zionist.“Because they always pull shit like this.
As far as I’m concerned, all anti-Zionism that deserves the name – i.e., opposition to the existence of the Jewish state, not just to the occupation of the West Bank and the Gaza Strip – is antisemitic unless it’s part of a blanket opposition to the existence of states in general.
“Dem Senator Schumer hated the Iran deal made by President Obama, but now that I am involved, he is OK with it. Tell that to Israel, Chuck!” Trump wrote on Twitter. Essentially, Trump is daring Jewish Senator Chuck Schumer to justify his opposition to revoking the Iran nuclear deal to those other Jews over there in Israel. As if Schumer needs their approval before he can really sign off on a matter that is vital to America’s national security.
It would have been bad enough if the senator in question wasn’t Jewish. If Trump had sent Connecticut Senator Chris Murphy to “Tell that to Israel” it would have been harmful as well. Depicting Israel as a kind of higher tribune that should pass judgment on U.S. policy is not the way that any sane Israeli government would want to be portrayed. But singling out Schumer as the only senator opposed to Trump who needs to clear things with Israel conjures the dual loyalty demon, which many view as anti-Semitic. Ironically, Schumer was the target of similar insinuations in August 2015, but from the other end of the political spectrum. Because of his opposition to Obama’s nuclear deal with Iran, Schumer was accused of being a “warmonger” who serves Israel’s interests. The allegation drew widespread condemnation then, but its main propagator, one should recall, was a cartoon on a leftist website, not the president of the United States. From Stephen Pollard to Walt and Mearsheimer, this is an arena that American Jews have always tried to avoid.
The fact that Trump is throwing down the Israel card in what should be an internal American debate is also a function of the high-profile boost that he has received from Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu after last week’s speech on the Iran deal and threats to nix it. On Sunday talk shows, Netanyahu sang Trump’s praises in words that would make Sean Hannity blush. Never one to fail to swoon at flattery, perhaps Trump now views Netanyahu as his lawyer or his spokesperson the Iran deal. You want to oppose my policies and uphold the worst deal in history? Go talk to Netanyahu. Let’s see what you come back with.
Of course, the Schumer-to-Israel ploy is not the only offensive element in Trump’s tweet. It offers more proof, if any was needed, that nuance is lost on him. He sidesteps the radical difference between opposing a deal before it is signed and opposing its cancelation, with all the ensuing political and military ramifications, after the deal is done. For Trump everything is about him. If you’re not for him, you’re against him. If Schumer has a different perspective, it’s because he’s a hypocrite who hates Trump, not because he may hold a reasonable position. Maybe Netanyahu will knock some sense into him.
You could argue, as many will, that even if there is even a hint of anti-Semitism, it was unintended. Of course, it’s harder to make that claim convincing given Trump’s very long record of incidents that could only barely be exonerated of being anti-Semitic. From describing Jews as Americans who buy their presidents to disseminating anti-Semitic imagery against Hillary Clinton to describing neo-Nazis as fine people, Trump has proven that he is prone to stereotyping Jews and to embracing, or at least failing to reject, neo-Nazis and other people who are forever harping on the “dual loyalty” of American Jews.
He did it without thinking, others may say, but that could probably and alarmingly be said about most of what Trump does. On a week in which Netanyahu and other laud Trump’s friendship, one might be tempted to ask: With friends like these, who needs anti-Semites?
“the dual loyalty demon, which many view as anti-Semitic”? It fucking is antisemitic. There is no question about that. Alfred fucking Dreyfus was suspected of having no loyalty to France because his first loyalty was supposedly to the nation of Israel in exile, i.e. his fellow Jews, before there was even a state of Israel. Hell, the imperium in imperio charge has been around since the fucking Middle Ages.