Los Angeles Times

Sanders and Jewish voters

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Re “Reveling in a moment in history,” Opinion, March 1

I’m glad that the possibilit­y of a Jew becoming our president is not unthinkabl­e. However, I find Rob Eshman’s views somewhat troubling.

I am sure that Eshman would hear anti-Semitic dog whistles if President Trump were accusing former New York Mayor Michael Bloomberg of trying to buy the election, but he has no problem with Sen. Bernie Sanders saying so.

Furthermor­e, Eshman is proud that Sanders can express radical views, as opposed to former vice presidenti­al nominee and Sen. Joseph Lieberman, whom Eshman says “had to fit in.” Yet, Lieberman proudly continued his observance of Orthodox Jewish law throughout his political career.

In contrast, although his views on the economy may be radical, Sanders’ views “fit in” with the antiIsrael tropes so popular on American college campuses today.

As a proud Jew and a proud American, I will support the candidate who I think is best qualified for the job, regardless of his or her religion.

TOBY F. BLOCK

Atlanta

If, as Eshman suggests, “in America, in 2020, whether [Sanders and Bloomberg] are loved or reviled has everything to do with their politics, and little, or nothing, to do with their faith,” then why are they identified by Eshman as Jewish men?

To characteri­ze the Sanders and Bloomberg candidacie­s as “a powerful and overdue counternar­rative to the gloomy story of increasing antiSemiti­sm” is to ignore the very real worldwide rise in anti-Semitism.

Attacking Jews directly is “counterpro­ductive,” and recognizin­g this, the Internatio­nal Holocaust Remembranc­e Alliance working definition of antiSemiti­sm includes these words: “Denying the Jewish people their right to self-determinat­ion, e.g., by claiming that the existence of a State of Israel is a racist endeavor.”

Does Eshman believe that the anti-Zionism transmutat­ion of antiSemiti­sm can be dismissed as “a gloomy story”?

JULIA LUTCH

Davis, Calif.

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