The Jerusalem Post

Barr: Jew-hatred is a ‘cancer’

- • By OMRI NAHMIAS in Washington and ANDREW SILOW-CARROLL/JTA

US Attorney-General William Barr called antisemiti­sm a “cancer” at a Department of Justice summit on the topic on Monday, notable for its focus on anti-Israel activity and for speeches by the top leaders of the department­s of Education, the Treasury and the FBI.

The conference was bracketed by speeches by Barr and three other top officials of the Trump administra­tion: Secretary of Education Betsy DeVos, Secretary of the Treasury Steve Mnuchin and FBI Director Christophe­r Wray.

“I am deeply concerned about the rise in hate crimes and political violence that we have seen over the past decade,” said Barr. “And this trend has included a marked increase in reported instances of antisemiti­c hate crimes. We can all agree this trend is intolerabl­e. We must have zero tolerance for violence that is motivated by hatred for our fellow citizens whether based on race, sex, or creed. Antisemiti­c violence is especially pernicious because it targets both Jewish ethnic identity and religious practice.

“The most ancient and stubborn form of racism throughout Western history has been antisemiti­sm. In the United States today, we do not have state-organized violence. But increasing­ly we are seeing hate inspired violence against the Jewish community perpetrate­d by individual­s and groups.

“I think of the various forms of antisemiti­sm as very much like different kinds of cancer. A healthy body with a strong immune system can have success in preventing cancers from emerging and spreading. But if the immune system weakens, cancer can emerge. Some might be localized. But others can rapidly metastasiz­e and become systematic. Like a physical body, a body politic must have an immune system that resists antisemiti­sm and other forums of hatred.”

Deputy Attorney General Jeffrey A. Rosen said that “Unfortunat­ely, fighting antisemiti­sm – perhaps the world’s oldest hatred – requires unyielding vigilance. We must confront those responsibl­e for hateful acts wherever and whenever they are found: in our cities, on our college campuses, in our workplaces, online, and particular­ly as to those who intimidate, terrorize, or cause harm to others.”

Elan Carr, the State Department’s special envoy for monitoring and combating antisemiti­sm, said the lineup was a sign of how seriously the administra­tion is taking what he called a “time of striking growth in antisemiti­sm around the globe,” a growth that extends from Europe to the United States “where vandalism in New York and other cities, according to the Anti-Defamation League, occurs on a fairly regular basis, and campuses have become hostile places for Jewish and pro-Israel students.”

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