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Fighting Hate: The Real Way to Challenge Antisemitism
Thursday, January 30, 2025
The coalitions we need to build to fight antisemitism must bring together people of differing political ideologies, including those who hold profoundly different positions on other issues—but who are nevertheless allies in countering antisemitism—as indispensable in the push to preserve American democracy and celebrate America's diversity. We are most effective when we stand together.
Education is central to fighting antisemitism. Education for all about the history of antisemitism and the devastating impact it has had on Jews over the centuries. Education on what antisemitism is—and what it isn't. Research shows that education helps reduce prejudice and bias. It is not an inoculation against hate as recent expressions of hate on our college campuses have dramatically illustrated but higher levels of education consistently correlate with lower levels of prejudice against minorities and out-groups.
There are those who, because of protests against Israel on university campuses, are already urging the Trump administration to crack down on higher education. While there are incidents of vile antisemitism on university campuses, we must stress that imposing definitions or litmus tests on academic institutions is not only counterproductive, but dangerous. This is true well before students get to university. In an age where some school districts are banning books on the Holocaust like The Diary of Anne Frank and Maus, we need to be doubling down on the importance of education. How ironic then that Trump has pledged to cut the Department of Education.
American Jews must work to cultivate solidarity. We should work to create a society where public officials and other leaders speak out when Nazis march, or when swastikas are flown, or when politicians say that they can't allow Jews to represent their communities. We should push our leaders—in government, in business, and in civil society—to speak out against antisemitism.
Fighting antisemitism demands thoughtful attention and nuanced understanding, not just broad proclamations that conflate it with criticism of Israel. In our polarized times, building coalitions and solidarity in the face of divisiveness and fear may seem different and novel. But if this isn't the time to take antisemitism seriously, when is?
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