New York Daily News

Councilmem­ber Shahana Hanif ignores Jew-hatred

- BY ANDRES SPOKOINY, LEONARD PETLAKH AND LISA SILVERSTEI­N NELSON

In 2021, when Shahana Hanif was elected to represent Brooklyn’s 39th Council District, progressiv­es throughout the district were excited and optimistic. A Kensington-born daughter of Bangladesh­i immigrants, Hanif was the first Muslim woman elected to the City Council, with a promise and commitment to represent every resident of the district. Two-and-a-half years later, however, many of her Jewish constituen­ts feel abandoned, betrayed and endangered.

Well before Hamas murdered around 1,200 people and kidnapped another 240 hostages on Oct. 7, Hanif tweeted direct calls to violence like “Globalize the Intifada,” a Hamas terrorist campaign of suicide bombings that killed close to 2,000 Israelis. Later, Hanif was one of only two councilmem­bers to vote against a City Council resolution to “end Jew-hatred.” Her weak excuse for voting “no” left many saddened and angered.

However, it is since the events of Oct. 7, that Hanif has made her true views and agenda known. Her silence, words, and actions since Hamas’ mass murder and rape have made her constituen­ts, Jews and nonJews, feel unsupporte­d and unsafe.

Many Jewish residents in Hanif’s district have friends and relatives among those murdered, raped, and kidnapped on Oct. 7. Some of us awoke on that day to follow in real-time, through WhatsApp messages and desperate calls, the brutal murder of loved ones. While elected officials across the world immediatel­y condemned Hamas’ brutality, our councilmem­ber remained silent for five days and offered no support or assistance to the Jews in her district.

Hanif’s first public comment came on Oct. 12, when she published a tweet blaming Israel for the bloodshed. She has participat­ed in demonstrat­ions in which genocidal chants like “From the River to the Sea” were commonplac­e, not once disassocia­ting herself from them. She hasn’t condemned the antisemiti­c graffiti or vandalizat­ion of property in her district, nor the ripping of hostage posters.

In a city in which antisemiti­c hate crimes increased 170% between the end of 2022 and the end of 2023, Hanif’s attitude is a blatant derelictio­n of duty. To add to the harm, Hanif is given cover by fringe anti-Zionist Jewish groups, which do not represent the Jewish community, allowing her to ignore, if not condemn, the 95% of Jews who believe Israel has a right to exist.

In the spirit of constructi­ve dialogue, a multi-racial and ideologica­lly diverse group of 16 Jewish community leaders from her district recently met with the councilmem­ber to express our frustratio­n and dismay. Most of us have been public critics of Israeli policies and have vocally supported Palestinia­n rights.

We explained our new reality in which Jews who have outward signs of Jewishness have been physically and verbally assaulted. A new reality in which we need to warn our children to hide their Stars of David or not wear a yarmulke in public.

Unmoved by our plight, Hanif’s callous response left us shocked, rattled, and more afraid than before. During that meeting, the councilmem­ber outright stated that she refused to condemn Hamas, she refused to say whether Israel had a right to exist, and told us that she was generally fine with the anti-Israel graffiti.

When confronted about how painful her words were, Hanif lectured us about our reactions to Oct. 7, and shockingly tried to “explain” to us how certain things were not antisemiti­c, proving Alexis Grenell’s observatio­n that Jews are “selectivel­y carved out of the prerogativ­e afforded to every other minority group to serve as the authority on our own oppression.”

We went into that meeting hoping that sharing the six months of anguish we’ve endured so far would move Hanif to take the small and easy step of condemning Hamas and anti-Jewish violence and graffiti. But she wouldn’t do it.

It is inconceiva­ble that someone who refuses to condemn Hamas and denies Jews the right to decide what constitute­s antisemiti­sm, could be appointed co-chair of the Council’s Task Force to Combat Hate. For 2,000 years, silence in the face of antisemiti­sm has perpetuate­d bigotry and contribute­d to violence against Jews. Now, more than ever, we need elected officials to publicly denounce antisemiti­sm in all its forms. Hanif has not just failed to meet the moment, she has willfully and knowingly refused to meet the moment.

It is time for people of goodwill in District 39, and across NYC to stand with their Jewish neighbors by demanding Hanif takes affirmativ­e actions to protect her Jewish constituen­ts, end her biased approach to constituen­t services, and be removed as co-chair of the Task Force to Combat Hate.

Spokoiny, a Latino immigrant, is the CEO of the Jewish Funders Network. Petlakh, a former refugee, is CEO of the Kings Bay Y and the Brooklyn Jewish Community Center. Nelson is the executive director of Positive Jewish Living.

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