Despite mounting threats, American Jews stay calm
NEW YORK: On Coney Island Avenue in Brooklyn, a mixed community where Jews and Muslims interact with ease, sits a Jewish center for the elderly. Last week, the center was the victim of a bomb threat-one of more than 150 targeting American Jewish institutions since the start of the year. Swastikas have appeared on walls: cemeteries have been desecrated. But the recent spike in threats has not shaken the community. Many Jews in the United States-which has been largely spared from anti-Semitic attacks over the past 50 years-say they feel safe.
Stuart Gourdji, a 25-year-old who runs Yachad Gifts, a shop specializing in Kosher gift baskets, had to evacuate when the bomb threat to the community center was received. “It was scary,” he admitted. He says he has lost count of the reports of threats he has seen on television, but he and his employees are not worried, and Gourdji would never think of removing his yarmulke in public for safety reasons.
“You have one stupid person probably ringleading this thing,” he said. “He will end up being arrested-it will pass.” But not everyone is as calm as Gourdji. “I have seen an enormous amount of anxiety,” especially among the parents of children who attend schools that have been targeted, explains retired rabbi Jack Moline. The 64-year-old Washington resident says he has never seen such a wave of antiSemitic threats in his life.
“The clear purpose of those acts is to unsettle Jewish life in this country,” he said. Like Gourdji, Moline says the threats experienced in the United States pale in comparison to those experienced in Europe and especially in France, where there have been deadly attacks-notably on a Jewish school in Toulouse in 2012 or the siege of a Kosher supermarket in Paris in 2015. Both also agree that the threats should serve as a wake-up call to the nearly six million Jews in America. “Anti-Semitism exists,” Gourdji said.
‘Thing of the past’
Many had believed that anti-Semitism was a thing of the past because of the “tremendous improvements” made since the end of World War II, said Kenneth Jacobson, the deputy national director of the AntiDefamation League (ADL).
The group, one of the oldest battling antiSemitism and discrimination, has been the target of several recent threats. In the period between the world wars, anti-Semitism was not uncommon-and such views were vocally expressed by auto industry baron Henry Ford in his newspaper The Dearborn Independent.
Aviation pioneer Charles Lindbergh and controversial priest Charles Coughlin also delivered anti-Semitic screeds to millions to Americans. There also were unofficial quotas at universities and for housing, and even restrictions on Jews getting certain jobs, Jacobson explained.
“All of that is a thing of the past,” he said. “In the 2,000 years of the Jewish diaspora, there has never been a Jewish community that has felt as comfortable and equal citizens as American Jews have felt for the last 50-60 years, and we still believe that to be true.” Since 1964, the ADL has regularly gauged the level of anti-Semitic sentiment in the country. Once as high as 29 percent, that figure has dropped to 12 or 13 percent in recent years-a major improvement, though “that still means 30 to 35 million Americans” feel that way, he noted.
For Jacobson, the other major victory for the Jewish community in recent years has been the stigmatization of racist and antiSemitic speech. “When public figures would engage in hate speech of any kind, they would have their reputation ruined, they would sometimes lose their jobs,” he said. — AFP