Sweetwater Reporter

Some U.S. Jews Upset with Trump Rhetoric

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(continued from Page 3) Sarna said that while it may seem odd to focus so much attention on subsection­s of a minority population, “elections in America are very close, and every vote counts.”

Conservati­ve commentato­r Ben Shapiro said Tuesday on his podcast that Trump “was making a point that, frankly, I have made myself, which is that Jews who are voting Democrat do not understand the Democratic Party.” Shapiro, who practices Orthodox Judaism, contended the party “overlooks antisemiti­sm” within its ranks.

Rabbi Jill Jacobs, the CEO of T’ruah, a rabbinic human rights organizati­on, said Trump has no business dictating who’s a good Jew.

“By insinuatin­g that good Jews will vote for the party that is best for Israel, Trump is evoking the age-old antisemiti­c trope of dual loyalty — an accusation that Jews are more loyal to their religion than to their country, and therefore can’t be trusted,” she said. “Historical­ly, this accusation has fueled some of the worst antisemiti­c violence.”

In his own time in office, Trump’s policy “of supporting Prime Minister Netanyahu and the settler agenda only endangered

Palestinia­ns and Israelis and made peace more difficult to achieve,” Jacobs said. Pittsburgh-based journalist Beth Kissileff — whose husband, a rabbi in the Conservati­ve denominati­on of Judaism, in 2018 survived the nation’s deadliest antisemiti­c attack — said it was highly offensive for Trump to be a “self-appointed arbiter” of what it means to be Jewish.

“Chuck Schumer had every right to say what he said,” Kissileff added. “Just because we’re Jews, it doesn’t mean we agree with everything the (Israeli) government is doing. We have compassion for innocent

Palestinia­n lives.”

Brooks, of the Republican Jewish Coalition, defended the former president against antisemiti­sm charges, pointing to his presidenti­al record as an example of proof.

Trump pursued policies that were popular among American Christian Zionists and Israeli religious-nationalis­ts, including moving the U.S. embassy to Jerusalem and supporting Jewish settlement­s in occupied territorie­s. His daughter Ivanka is a convert to Orthodox Judaism, and her husband and their children are Jewish. The couple worked as high-profile surrogates to the Jewish community during Trump’s administra­tion. Trump’s core supporters include white evangelica­ls, many of whom believe the modern state of Israel fulfills biblical prophecy. Prominent evangelica­ls who support Zionism have also been criticized for inflammato­ry statements about Jewish people.

Sixty-nine percent of Jewish voters in 2020 supported Biden, while 30% supported Trump, according to AP VoteCast, a survey of the electorate conducted in partnershi­p with NORC at the University of Chicago. That made Jewish voters one of the religious groups where support for Biden was strongest. Also, 73% of Jewish voters in 2020 said that Trump was too tolerant of extremist groups.

Rabbi Bradley Shavit Artson said Trump’s comments are “in a complex middle zone” — not explicitly antisemiti­c, but reliant on such tropes. American Jews base their votes on a complex mix of issues and values, “among them inclusion, diversity, climate change, civil rights,” said Artson, a leader within Conservati­ve Judaism. “While they love Israel diversely, many of us also care about the wellbeing and self-determinat­ion of Palestinia­ns.”

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