Rome News-Tribune

Growing antisemiti­sm in the US is seeping into the workplace

- By Arianne Cohen

At a recent working lunch, Renee Fellman was told that someone wouldn’t network with her because she’s Jewish.

Fellman, who’s a corporate turnaround consultant based in Portland, Oregon, was stunned — not by the mere existence of antisemiti­sm, she said, but that her brush with it was so overt.

“I doubt there’s more antisemiti­sm now than 10 or 20 years ago,” said Fellman, who previously had more subtle or difficult to interpret experience­s of discrimina­tion, such as snubs. “People are just expressing it. It’s become OK to say it.”

Across American culture, politics, and even business, expression­s of antisemiti­sm have grown louder in recent years. It’s not just high profile statements made by the rapper Ye and basketball star Kyrie Irving or politician­s increasing­ly cozying up to White supremacis­t groups. Incidents of antisemiti­c harassment, vandalism and assault reached a 42 year high in 2021, the most recent year with available data, according the Anti-Defamation League. And there’s evidence that discrimina­tion is seeping into the workplace, too.

A 2022 study published in the academic journal Socius surveying 11,356 workers of all faiths found that more than half of the Jewish respondent­s experience­d discrimina­tion at work — a higher percentage than any other religious group, besides Muslims. A smaller survey from November of 1,131 hiring managers and recruiters commission­ed by ResumeBuil­der.com had even starker findings: Nearly a quarter said they wanted fewer Jewish people in their industry and a similar share admitted they’re less likely to advance Jewish applicants. Among the top reasons cited for those discrimina­tory behaviors: Perception­s that Jewish people have too much power and wealth.

“It would seem to confirm our concerns that the growing antisemiti­sm in our society is also spilling over into the workplace,” said Vlad Khaykin, national director for programs on antisemiti­sm at the Anti-Defamation League. “It suggests that contempora­ry workplaces can often be hostile to Jewish employees.”

Bloomberg News spoke with a dozen Jewish workers in industries as varied as public relations and supply chain logistics, living in cities across the country. Many expressed a sense of increasing discrimina­tion in their daily work lives, including overhearin­g antisemiti­c comments from co-workers or noticing the ranks of Jewish workers thin at their organizati­ons.

Most didn’t want to use their names fearing it might damage their careers or draw further harassment.

One communicat­ions executive from the Midwest said that she’s experience­d “astonishin­g” antisemiti­sm in the workplace and that her Jewish friends and family advise her to not tell anyone her religion or to work with Jewish-owned organizati­ons.

Another diversity and inclusion coach said that a non-Jewish employee reportedly put a face mask on his head like a yarmulke and sang “The Chanukah Song” by Adam Sandler. In a separate incident, that same employee used the phrase “Holocaust moment” to describe his group’s poor performanc­e.

He later told investigat­ors he thought his behavior was permissibl­e because he didn’t think any Jewish people were present.

“It’s something on my mind. I’m scared about it,” said Andy Heller, a San Francisco real estate investor and entreprene­ur. His fears were, in part, realized by the ResumeBuil­der.com survey’s findings: that some perceive Jewish people as money-grubbing, cheap or power hungry.

“Too much control, power and wealth — these are long standing antisemiti­c tropes that have been used to justify violence against Jews,” said Rachel Schneider, a religious studies researcher at Rice University and one of the authors of the Socius study. “Antisemiti­sm is alive and well. We need to attend more to its presence in the workplace.”

Heller said that he feels a responsibi­lity to counteract caricature­s of Jewish people by providing substantia­l bonuses, paying vendor bills promptly and in full, and tipping generously. “Some people may only interact with one or two Jews in their entire lifetime,” he said. “We need to do our part to ensure that those touch points don’t advance stereotype­s.”

While Jewish Americans overall have relatively high incomes compared to other groups — half live in households making at least $100,000, compared to 19% of US adults — they span the economic spectrum. A Pew Research Center survey released in 2021 found that a quarter of Jewish respondent­s had difficulty paying for medical care, their rent or mortgage, food or other bills. Roughly half of Jewish Americans said they live “comfortabl­y,” the survey found, but 15% said they only have just enough to meet basic expenses.

Religious discrimina­tion complaints from workers to the US Equal Employment Opportunit­y Commission are up from two decades ago. The numbers, however, only go through 2021 and the agency doesn’t break out Jewish-related incidents specifical­ly.

According to Jocelyn Samuels, vice chair of the EEOC, the commission has fielded a consistent series of allegation­s involving anti-Jewish discrimina­tion over the years and she expects there was an uptick in the last two years. “When you have high profile people like Ye or Nick Fuentes or Kyrie Irving making explicitly antisemiti­c remarks, that emboldens people to say aloud things that reflect centuries of bias and stereotype,” she said.

The ADL runs an initiative called Shine A Light that helps organizati­ons such as J. Crew, Airbnb Inc. and the National Basketball Associatio­n to integrate antisemiti­sm education into their trainings and to start Jewish employee resource groups. Still, most workplace diversity and inclusions trainings don’t explicitly mention antisemiti­sm, and instead broadly counsel employees to avoid religion-based harassment.

“I’m not aware of any organizati­ons that directly and specifical­ly address it,” said Tracey Levy, co-founder of harassment-prevention company Impact Workplace Training.

Levy herself just added an example of office antisemiti­sm to her own curriculum and advises organizati­ons to do the same.

In it, a worker expresses support for a celebrity’s antisemiti­c remarks. When a coworker expresses interest in reporting it to his manager or human resources, a colleague encourages him not to, saying, “it’s best if everyone gets along.”

Levy advises employees to identify antisemiti­c behaviors, tell their managers and see that they report it to human resources. “The response should never be to ignore it,” she said.

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