The Jerusalem Post

Fighting oppression, inequality and injustice on Passover

- OP-ED • By HILLARY CLINTON

I didn’t grow up celebratin­g Passover. But over the years, I’ve attended Seders where I was inspired by the remarkable story told in the Haggada – a tale of a people who, sustained by fortitude and faith, escaped slavery and reached freedom.

As Jewish people around the world prepare for this festival, I wanted to offer a few of my own thoughts on ancient lessons that still hold wisdom for today’s world.

The first is the importance of religious freedom. The Book of Exodus recalls how Pharaoh denied the Israelites the right to worship as they chose. Today, there are new threats to religious liberty and an alarming rise in anti-Semitism. In many parts of Europe, we’ve seen synagogues vandalized and grave-sites desecrated. Internatio­nal efforts to malign and isolate the Jewish people – like the alarming BDS movement – are gaining steam.

We must confront these forces of intoleranc­e. As New York’s senator, I sponsored laws to support restitutio­n for victims of the Holocaust, and I joined with the Helsinki Commission to help protect and preserve Jewish cemeter ies in Eastern Europe. As secretary of state, I stood up for oppressed religious minorities in China, Iran and around the world. If I’m fortunate enough to be elected president, I would ensure that America continues to call out and stand up to anti-Semitism. And just as Jews have always stood up for other communitie­s, we must push back on the rising trend of anti-religious sentiment in any form.

The second lesson is the importance of caring for one another. After a hasty departure from Egypt, as the Israelites wandered for 40 long years in Sinai, they developed a covenant with God and with each other, so that no one in future generation­s would be left out or left behind.

I believe that same sort of

social contract exists in America. We must fight any effort to weaken or privatize Medicare and Social Security, and we must finally expand benefits for widows. We must improve housing for low-income families; at their best, public and affordable housing gives families a chance to get back on their feet, afford other essentials, and give their kids a safe and healthy place to grow up in. We should provide $25 billion to build more affordable housing, and up to $10,000 in down payment assistance for families looking to buy their first home.

The third and most important lesson of the Book of Exodus comes at the end. So that they would never again be subjugated, the Jewish people are set to arrive to their own homeland. I’ve proudly stood with the State of Israel for my entire career, making sure it always has the resources it needs to maintain its qualitativ­e military edge. I also worked to ensure funding for the Iron Dome missile defense system and saw its effectiven­ess first-hand when I worked with Prime Minister Netanyahu to negotiate a cease-fire in Gaza. Since its installati­on, this technology has saved countless lives.

Protecting allies and partners like Israel is one of the most solemn duties of any commander-in-chief. Yet others in this race suggest we must remain “neutral” in order to negotiate. But Israel’s safety is simply nonnegotia­ble. And it would be a grave mistake for the United States to cede the mantle of leadership in the peace process to anyone else. For the security of Israel and the world, we need America to remain a respected global leader, and be ready and able to block any internatio­nal effort to isolate or attack Israel.

There’s one final lesson in the story of the Exodus: the reminder to keep telling its story. To connect the past with the present, participan­ts in every Seder are taught to imagine that they themselves were still enslaved in Egypt.

In today’s world, many don’t have to imagine. Every year, more than 20 million people are trafficked or sold into slavery by modern-day despots and pharaohs. In my travels as secretary of state, I met many who have escaped the contempora­ry forms of enslavemen­t that continue to plague our planet. And I believe that our shared traditions – Jewish and American – give us a moral obligation to bring help and hope to those in need.

At a traffickin­g shelter in Kolkata, India, I met remarkable women and girls who had suffered horrible abuses and were getting their lives back on track. I’ll never forget meeting one young girl who was born into slavery in a brothel, but managed to escape with her mother. It would never be easy, but with the help of others, they were finally out of harm’s way and able to reach for their God-given potential.

This Passover, let’s continue fighting all forms of oppression, inequality and injustice. Let’s take a page from Moses and Aaron, and speak for those who cannot speak for themselves. And let’s never forget to keep drawing attention to the plight of millions of people still in need of their own form of deliveranc­e.

They are out there, waiting for us. •

 ?? (Reuters) ?? HILLARY CLINTON
(Reuters) HILLARY CLINTON

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