Daily Press

Youngkin celebrates bill that aims to track and fight antisemiti­sm

- By Sarah Rankin

RICHMOND — Joined by Jewish faith and community leaders, Gov. Glenn Youngkin hosted an event Monday to ceremonial­ly sign a bill supporters say will help Virginia better track and combat growing instances of antisemiti­sm.

Under the legislatio­n, which will take effect July 1, Virginia will adopt a definition of antisemiti­sm used by the Internatio­nal Holocaust Remembranc­e Alliance. The state will use that non-legally binding definition for training and education, and for tracking and reporting antisemiti­sm.

“We can clearly define hate, which is exactly what this bill does. And then we can transform for the good and build a better future,” Youngkin told the audience gathered outside the Executive Mansion in Richmond.

The bill was a recommenda­tion of a commission, chaired by former Acting U.S. Attorney General Jeffrey Rosen, that Youngkin created on his first day in office.

Recent data, reports and studies have shown antisemiti­sm is on the rise in the U.S. and showing little sign of abating worldwide.

Earlier this year, a new survey by the American Jewish Committee found that more than 4 in 10 Jews in the United States feel their status is less secure than it was a year earlier.

The definition Virginia is set to adopt says in part that antisemiti­sm is a “certain perception of Jews, which may be expressed as hatred toward Jews” that can have “rhetorical and physical manifestat­ions.” The Internatio­nal Holocaust Remembranc­e Alliance, an intergover­nmental organizati­on of which the United States is a member, adopted the definition in 2016.

At the time the bill passed, the Combat Antisemiti­sm Movement said Virginia would be the 30th U.S. state to recognize the definition, either through the legislativ­e process or executive order.

The measure ultimately cleared the House and Senate with fairly broad bipartisan support after some Democrats were divided about whether it would actually achieve the sponsors’ stated goals and after some opponents voiced concerns it could lead to allegation­s of antisemiti­sm against critics of the Israeli government.

Democratic Del. Eileen Filler-Corn, who previously served as the first Jewish speaker of the House, was among the vocal supporters of the measure. Youngkin thanked her in his remarks Monday and expressed disappoint­ment that the measure didn’t pass unanimousl­y.

Youngkin also issued a proclamati­on recognizin­g May 2023 as Jewish American Heritage Month and honored Halina Zimm, a Holocaust survivor who was in attendance, in his remarks.

Attorney General Jason Miyares, who took a nineday trip earlier this year to Israel and Poland, where he visited Auschwitz, was among the other elected officials who spoke at Monday’s event. He referenced “startling” studies that have shown many members of younger generation­s lack even the most fundamenta­l understand­ing of the Holocaust.

“It is up to us, the living, to remember the legacy of the past and to remember, indeed, the horrors of what came before us,” Miyares said.

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