The Atlanta Journal-Constitution

Protection is part of hate crimes law on track for final votes.

- By Mark Niesse mark.niesse@ajc.com

Georgia senators rescued a bill Thursday that would include antisemiti­sm as part of the state’s hate crimes law, passing the measure through a different committee with a new bill number after it previously stalled.

The Senate Children and Families Committee approved House Bill 144 on a 6-2 vote, putting it on track for final votes in the House and Senate before this year’s legislativ­e session ends Wednesday.

Lt. Gov. Burt Jones and Republican Senate leaders orchestrat­ed the bill’s comeback after other senators tabled it earlier this week following disputes about how to define antisemiti­sm.

Senators prioritize­d the bill because Jones believed it was “an issue of public importance,” said state Sen. Kay Kirkpatric­k, a Republican from Marietta and the committee’s chairwoman.

“Threats and attacks against Jewish children and families in all of our districts can’t be tolerated in Georgia,” Kirkpatric­k said.

The bill would define antisemiti­sm so that it would be included under Georgia’s hate crimes law, which allows harsher criminal penalties against those who target victims on the basis of race, gender, sexual orientatio­n, sex, national origin, religion or physical or mental disability.

HB 144 is similar to the previous antisemiti­sm legislatio­n, House Bill 30, which would adopt into state law the definition from the Internatio­nal Holocaust Remembranc­e Alliance. The new bill makes reference to an executive order then-president Donald Trump issued in 2019 that incorporat­ed the alliance’s definition.

Opponents of the legislatio­n, especially university students sympatheti­c to Palestinia­ns, said using the alliance’s definition of antisemiti­sm in state law could be used to curtail freedom of speech against Israel on campuses.

“The claim is made that the purpose of the bill is to protect the Jewish people from hate crimes, but it will only increase hostility and violence toward those who advocate for Palestinia­ns,” said Fatima Chaudhry, president of Georgia Tech’s Muslim Student Associatio­n. “If you were to equate criticism of a state to the racist persecutio­n of a people, that is a dangerous boundary that you are crossing.”

But supporters of the bill said

antisemiti­c actions would be considered as evidence of intent under the state’s hate crimes law, and speech against Israel or Jewish people wouldn’t be limited.

The definition that would be adopted into state law calls antisemiti­sm “a certain perception of Jews, which may be expressed as hatred toward Jews” that is directed at individual­s, institutio­ns or religious facilities.

The Internatio­nal Holocaust Remembranc­e Alliance’s website says antisemiti­sm can include targeting of the state of Israel as a Jewish collectivi­ty, but “criticism of Israel similar to that leveled against any other country cannot be regarded as antisemiti­c.”

Lawmakers can rewrite bills

at a moment’s notice, and especially do so in the last days of the annual legislativ­e session as a way to advance proposals that had previously been blocked.

Before senators amended HB 144 to cover protection­s against antisemiti­sm, the bill would have strengthen­ed the rights of people under the guardiansh­ip of an adult.

Jewish advocates for the bill say it has taken on greater importance after antisemiti­c flyers were thrown onto their driveways in Dunwoody and Sandy Springs last month. Jewish people have faced violence across the country, including shootings in Los Angeles last month and at the Tree of Life synagogue in Pittsburgh in 2018, when 11 people were killed.

Antisemiti­c incidents increased 36% across the country and 63% in Georgia last year, according to an annual report released Thursday by the Anti-defamation League.

Beth Gann testified that her 13-year-old son was victimized at a Fulton County school several years ago by other students who drew swastikas and wrote “kill the Jews” in a bathroom. School administra­tors told her the swastika was actually a peace symbol, she said.

“The school was afraid to act. The police could not act. And if there was a definition of antisemiti­sm, there would not have been a question of what this was and how to act,” Gann said.

The committee vote to approve the bill was supported by five Republican­s and one Democrat, while two Democrats opposed

legislatio­n.

The bill could come to a vote in the full state Senate next week. The state House approved the earlier version of the legislatio­n on a 136-22 vote.

 ?? ARVIN TEMKAR/ARVIN.TEMKAR@AJC.COM ?? Beth Gann holds a photo of swastika as she speaks in favor of HB 144. She said her son faced harassment at school, but the school said it could not act.
ARVIN TEMKAR/ARVIN.TEMKAR@AJC.COM Beth Gann holds a photo of swastika as she speaks in favor of HB 144. She said her son faced harassment at school, but the school said it could not act.

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