New York – US Jews Grapple With Election-year Eruption Of Anti-Semitism

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    A sign is displayed at the Florida Capitol by protesters against U.S. president-elect Donald Trump in Tallahassee, Florida, U.S., November 16, 2016. REUTERS/Phil SearsNew York – American Jews gathered Thursday to wrestle with how they should confront an election-year surge in anti-Semitism, a level of bias not seen in the U.S. for decades.

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    At a national meeting of the Anti-Defamation League, the Jewish civil rights group, about 1,000 people listened to talks expressing shock at the hatred expressed during the presidential campaign and questioned what they thought was a high-level of acceptance by other Americans.

    “I’m struggling right now in this American moment,” said Yehuda Kurtzer, president of the Shalom Hartman Institute of North America, an education and research organization, in his talk at the event. “I wonder whether I have been — and I think the answer is probably yes — a little bit naive.”

    During this past year, anti-Semitic imagery proliferated on social media, Jewish journalists were targeted and longstanding anti-Jewish conspiracy theories got a fresh airing. Much of the bias originated with the alt-right, or alternative right, a loose group espousing a provocative and reactionary strain of conservatism. It’s often associated with far right efforts to preserve “white identity,” oppose multiculturalism and defend “Western values.”

    In addition to the online intimidation, reports of anti-Semitic vandalism and other attacks have risen. Last week, the day after the election, a Philadelphia storefront was sprayed with a swastika and the words “Seig Heil 2106,” which means “Hail Victory,” a common Nazi chant, and the word “Trump,” with a swastika replacing the “T.”

    These developments have stunned U.S. Jewish leaders, who in recent years had been more focused on anti-Semitism in Europe and on addressing complaints of anti-Jewish bias on college campuses amid the debate over the boycott, divestment and sanctions movement against Israeli policies toward the Palestinians.

    In a sign of the depth of American Jewish anxiety about anti-Semitism, ADL officials said donations to their organization increased 50-fold in the days immediately after the election and a large majority of the money came from first-time donors. Every one of their regional offices reported an uptick in calls from people wanting to donate or volunteer, the ADL said.

    “We must not be silent, we must raise our voices, we must act, and to act we must understand what we are up against,” said Jonathan Greenblatt, chief executive officer of ADL, opening the meeting in Manhattan.

    As the presidential race intensified, Jews started seeing their names bracketed with a series of parentheses in harassing tweets, signaling that the person had been identified as a Jew. The image became known as the Jewish cowbell and its source was traced to neo-Nazis and white nationalists.

    The ADL investigated the harassment and found more than 800 journalists had suffered anti-Semitic attacks on Twitter during the election, mostly from anonymous Twitter accounts, although some belonged to white supremacists. In a common example of the reporters’ experiences, Jane Eisner, editor-in-chief of the Forward, an influential Jewish newspaper that extensively covered the election, said she received an email the morning after the second presidential debate with an image of a Nazi solder pointing a gun at her head, which was Photoshopped onto a concentration camp uniform.

    Donald Trump’s campaign came under scrutiny since much of the harassment came from accounts tied to his supporters.

    Trump drew direct criticism last July when he tweeted an image of Hillary Clinton’s face with a six-pointed star, a pile of hundred dollar bills and the words “most corrupt candidate ever.” The star was in the shape of the Jewish Star of David and was widely condemned as anti-Semitic. Trump’s campaign said it was a sheriff’s badge.

    Last month, Trump gave a speech in West Palm Beach, Florida, in which he accused Clinton of holding secret meetings with bankers in a conspiracy to undermine U.S. sovereignty. The ADL said that whether intentional or not, Trump had reflected a classic anti-Semitic theme of Jewish control of banks.

    The president-elect’s daughter Ivanka, and her husband, Jared Kushner, who is now one of his top advisers, are Orthodox Jews. Kushner has defended Trump against allegations of bias.

    The issue erupted anew when Trump announced far-right publishing executive Stephen Bannon as his top White House Strategist. Bannon led the Breitbart website, considered by many to be the alt-right’s platform that has been widely condemned as racist, sexist and anti-Semitic. Trump campaign manager Kellyanne Conway called the accusations against Bannon “very unfair.”

    Some Jewish groups have defended Bannon, including the hawkish Zionist Organization of America. Bernie Marcus, a founder of The Home Depot Inc. and board member of the Republican Jewish Coalition, said in a statement that Bannon was “a passionate Zionist and supporter of Israel.” Marcus called the condemnations of Bannon an attempt to undermine the incoming administration. Seventy-one percent of Jews voted for Hillary Clinton, according to exit polls. Greenblatt worked in the Obama administration.

    Still, Jonathan Sarna, a Brandeis University professor and historian of American Judaism, said it would be wrong to attribute the criticisms of Trump appointments or his supporters to partisanship. “I don’t know anybody who is looking at this in a serious way who says nothing has changed,” in regard to the level of anti-Semitism, Sarna said.

    “American Jews assumed that anti-Semitism had largely been overcome,” he said. “And then all of a sudden, unexpectedly, anti-Semitism of a virulent kind came roaring back.”


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    16 Comments
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    elyeh
    Noble Member
    elyeh
    7 years ago

    Alan Dershowitz states “my former research assistant, Joel Pollak, an orthodox Jew who wears a kippah and takes off all the Jewish holidays… Joel assures me that he never heard a single anti-Semitic utterance or saw an anti-Semitic action in the four years they worked together. The same is true of numerous other Jewish individuals who work with him, some of whom thoroughly disapprove of Bannon’s politics and the way he ran Breitbart, but none of whom have reported any events of anti-Semitism.

    The second alleged item of evidence is the following headline that appeared on Breitbart: “Bill Kristol: Republican Spoiler, Renegade Jew.”[1] I am advised, however, that this article and the headline were written not by Bannon but rather by David Horowitz, a right-wing Jew who was upset with Kristol for his refusal to support Trump. Horowitz deemed that a betrayal of the Jewish people. While I fundamentally disagree with that appraisal and also of the article, I find it hard to characterize Bannon as an anti-Semite because Breitbart ran it. Breitbart has also personally attacked me,[2] but that doesn’t change my views.”

    https://www.gatestoneinstitute.org/9355/bannon-appointment

    7 years ago

    Rabbi Meir Kahane (z’l), essentially stated over 45 years ago, that the ADL, along with the AJC, were useless in combating anti-semitism. Secondly, Jared Kushner and Ivanka Trump are not Orthodox Jews. They are modern observant Jews, but certainly not Orthodox in the traditional sense.

    ayoyo
    ayoyo
    7 years ago

    American jews wake up before it’s too late Germany tn the 1930’s had a small jewish population and many % 60 of the jews had married out now we have gone beyond that. Germany was the most modern up to date country in europe .

    misslydia128
    misslydia128
    7 years ago

    Perhaps I’m naive, but I get more nervous these days from far left Dems than the far right, in this country. The far left BDS-ers are a grave danger to Jews In Israel and here, as well.

    Buchwalter
    Buchwalter
    7 years ago

    Mit ein tuches ken mish nisht tanzen of alle chasenes and that is what Mr. Trump tries to do. Goethe wrote the scorcerer’s apprentice maybe Mr. Trump should read it. Antisemitism is not a new phenomenon to the US. Henry Ford and Father Coughlin were anti-Semitism and check on Colonel Lindbergh

    pushkin
    pushkin
    7 years ago

    Stupid article. The anti-Semitism is coming from left not from Trump. The left tries to paint that picture. And VIN just paists these articles as though it’s the truth.

    yonasonw
    Member
    yonasonw
    7 years ago

    Richard Spencer of the “alt-rt” says that Breitbart and Bannon are his voice; he says his movement seeks the awakening of white identity in this country, and advocates living in segregated areas. He refuses (I heard the entire interview) to condemn swastikas or the “Make America White Again” slogan. Bannon himself has said he believes that American identity is intrinsically tied to European ethnicity, virtually a definition of White Supremacy. The KKK, militias and white supremacist organizations celebrate the appointment of Bannon as one of there own.

    If Trump, Bannon and the white supremacist community cuddle like lovers, and you still insist on extending them a generous benefit of the doubt…I must believe that underlying partisan bias is at play, not a fair reading of fact.

    I do for a moment imagine that any of you would be so forgiving were the issue Obama appointing Jeremiah White to a White House staff position. I wouldn’t be either…but as one in the center, I also give no pass to Trump and his white supremacist cohorts

    And I’m “left” only when compare to right wingers…I’m “right” in comparison to the leftists. “Halevi beninei”…(The Rambam)

    Buchwalter
    Buchwalter
    7 years ago

    Unless you lived under anti-Semitism you cannot understand the eruption of such