Chattanooga Times Free Press

Antisemiti­sm bill is revived after new vote

- BY JEFF AMY

A new Senate committee has given new life to a bill that would formally define antisemiti­sm in Georgia law.

The Senate Children and Families Committee voted 6-2 on Thursday to insert language that had previously been in a different bill into House Bill 144. The effort had faltered Monday after the previous bill was amended in a way that sponsors opposed, after running disputes over whether it would be used to censor criticism of Israel.

The bill would adopt a definition by the Internatio­nal Holocaust Remembranc­e Alliance, which defines antisemiti­sm as a “perception of Jews, which may be expressed as hatred toward Jews” and can have both “rhetorical and physical manifestat­ions.”

Supporters say a legal definition is necessary because officials don’t always recognize antisemiti­sm. Beth Gaan and her son, Aaron Gaan, testified that Fulton County schools failed to act for 18 months as students taunted Aaron Gaan and his brother with swastikas and “Kill the Jew” posters.

“Why? Because there was no definition,” Beth Gaan said. “The school was afraid to act, and the police could not act. And if there was a definition of antisemiti­sm, there would not have been a question of ... how to act.”

Supporters say it would be used to prove that someone is motivated by anti-Jewish feeling if they commit a crime or an illegal act of discrimina­tion. That could help prove a hate crime under a 2020 Georgia state law that allows additional penalties for crimes motivated by race, color, religion, national origin, sex, sexual orientatio­n, gender or disability.

But opponents say they fear the definition will be used to police speech on college campuses and elsewhere, pointing to a 2019 dispute at Georgia Tech over whether student group programmin­g claiming Israel is a racist and apartheid state. The bill directs state agencies to consider antisemiti­sm as evidence of discrimina­tory intent for noncrimina­l law and policy prohibitin­g discrimina­tion.

“This bill is not about combating antisemiti­sm,” said Fatima Chaudhry, the president of the Georgia Tech Muslim Students Associatio­n. “It is a bill that will be used to silence those advocating for Palestinia­ns and against human rights violations in Israel, infringing upon freedom of speech.”

This bill includes “targeting of the state of Israel,” as one manifestat­ion of antisemiti­sm, although the alliance says on its website that “criticism of Israel similar to that leveled against any other country cannot be regarded as antisemiti­c.”

The House voted 136-22 to approve the previous measure, House Bill 30, just a few weeks after some residents in suburban Atlanta found anti-Jewish flyers left in their driveways inside plastic bags. Among them was Democratic Rep. Esther Panitch of Sandy Springs, one of the bill’s sponsors and Georgia’s only Jewish legislator.

A survey conducted last fall by the American Jewish Committee found that four in five American Jews said antisemiti­sm in the U.S. has grown in the past five years.

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from United States