The Atlanta Journal-Constitution

New pink billboards urge action against antisemiti­sm in metro area

Nonprofit aims to bring attention to incidents in 2 Cobb high schools.

- By Cassidy Alexander cassidy.alexander@ajc.com

A series of hot pink billboards going up around metro Atlanta are challengin­g viewers to fight antisemiti­sm, in part in response to recent incidents in a local school system.

“If Atlanta is too busy to hate, why is there a swastika at my kid’s school?” reads a billboard that went up on Briarcliff Road in Atlanta on Monday.

It’s a reference to incidents in 2021 where graffiti depicting swastikas was found in two Cobb County high schools during the Jewish High Holidays. Earlier this year, Cobb middle school students were discipline­d for sharing antisemiti­c imagery on social media.

The district notes it has a no-tolerance policy for hate speech.

“As explained before, the district does not and will not tolerate hate in any form, including antisemiti­c imagery, and students will be discipline­d according to district policies,” a district spokeswoma­n told The Atlanta Journal-constituti­on.

One of the billboards will be posted in Marietta, but it will contain a different message.

But Archie Gottesman, founder of Jewbelong, the nonprofit behind the billboards, believes it’s still important to bring attention to incidents like those that occurred in Cobb.

“Hate is hate. And shining a light and saying something, it is important,” Gottesman said. “I think when the hate just goes and people are scared to call it out or they think it’s no big deal — especially in schools, I think that’s where damage can happen.”

The group was responsibl­e for similar billboards in Times Square in 2021, and the billboards have since been in Boston, San Francisco and Las Vegas.

Ten billboards are scheduled to go up in the Atlanta area through the fall. The first went up last week on Peachtree Road.

“Can a billboard end antisemiti­sm?” it asks viewers. “No. But you’re not a billboard.”

“We’re just 75 years since the gas chambers,” another will read. “So no, a billboard calling out Jew hate isn’t an overreacti­on.”

Antisemiti­c incidents in Georgia more than doubled between 2020 and 2021, according to a report by the Anti-defamation League. Georgia tallied 49 incidents in 2021.

 ?? MIGUEL MARTINEZ/MIGUEL.MARTINEZJI­MENEZ@AJC.COM ?? Billboards going up around metro Atlanta are challengin­g viewers to fight antisemiti­sm, including in local schools. It’s a reference to incidents in 2021 where graffiti depicting swastikas was found in two Cobb County high schools during the Jewish High Holidays.
MIGUEL MARTINEZ/MIGUEL.MARTINEZJI­MENEZ@AJC.COM Billboards going up around metro Atlanta are challengin­g viewers to fight antisemiti­sm, including in local schools. It’s a reference to incidents in 2021 where graffiti depicting swastikas was found in two Cobb County high schools during the Jewish High Holidays.

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