The Atlanta Journal-Constitution

Delta accused of anti-Jewish, anti-Israel bias

Flight attendants’ lawsuit urges carrier to reform practices.

- By Kelly Yamanouchi kyamanouch­i@ajc.com

A lawsuit filed this week by flight attendants alleges Delta Air Lines discrimina­tes against Jewish, Israeli or Hebrew-speaking employees and passengers traveling to Israel.

Brian Mildenberg, a Philadelph­ia attorney representi­ng the plaintiffs, urged Delta “to review and reform all relevant practices on their flights to Ben Gurion airport in Tel Aviv and to remedy all complaints immediatel­y.”

Atlanta-based Delta released a statement saying it “strongly denies the allegation­s of discrimina­tion described in this suit and will defend itself vigorously against them.”

The lawsuit was filed in U.S. District Court in the Eastern District of New York by current and former Delta flight attendants Cynthia Fukelman, Tsipora Kuba, Young Sook Sanchez and Anthony Panza. It alleges Delta’s field service managers “would intimidate these flight attendants by insulting them,” and that, at meetings, actions took place that were “suggestive of discrimina­tory and prejudicia­l treatment.”

The plaintiffs regularly worked Delta’s flight from New York to Tel Aviv, Israel. Panza lives in Pompano Beach, Fla., while the others live in New York.

The complaint says Fukelman was fired in March 2017 by Delta for “allegedly missing a flight due to a medical condition,” but alleges the firing was “an act of discrimina­tion.”

The suit said Delta management “operate under an express assumption that ethnic Jews and Israelis, as employees and passengers, cannot be trusted, are aggressive and inappropri­ate, and engage in what are deemed

to be ‘strange’ behaviors by conducting prayers on the flight and requiring special dietary accommodat­ions (kosher meals).”

The lawsuit also alleges that, “solely on the basis of their Jewish and Israel eth- nicity and ancestry,” Delta “engaged in anti-Semitic employee investigat­ions and disciplina­ry actions” against employees who have shared their travel benefits with ethnically Jewish, Hebrew and/ or Israeli people. And the suit, which seeks damages and an injunction to “force Delta to stop this insidious racial discrimina- tory and anti- Semitic misconduct,” says Delta punished flight attendants by denying them promotions, subjecting them to harassment and abuse or restrictin­g their employment rights. Delta in its written statement in response said it “values diversity in all aspects of its business and has zero tolerance for discrimina­tion.”

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