The Atlanta Journal-Constitution

Atlantans, speak up for Israeli hostages

We have stood with you. Please stand with us and help us bring those in captivity home for Passover.

- By Peter S. Berg and Adam Starr

Right here in Atlanta, 67 years ago, a rabbi spoke out against racial segregatio­n, standing with the Black community and speaking up for the civil rights movement. Rabbi Jacob M. Rothschild stood shoulder-to-shoulder with the Rev. Martin Luther King Jr. and helped craft what became known as the Ministers’ Manifesto, a document endorsed by 80 white ministers denouncing racial segregatio­n. Rothschild’s actions did not come without consequenc­es. The following year, on an autumn evening, 50 sticks of dynamite blasted through Rothschild’s synagogue, the Temple. It was an act of domestic terrorism and a terrifying moment for the Jewish community.

Our city’s response was noteworthy. Atlanta’s leaders acted quickly, with Mayor William Hartsfield appearing on television, speaking in front of what remained of a Temple wall, expressing solidarity and vowing to fully investigat­e the crime and prosecute the perpetrato­rs.

That swift reaction is missing today as the Jewish community faces the largest and most horrific attack on its people since the Holocaust. It has been more than six months since Hamas massacred about 1,200 people in Israel. Hamas kidnapped about 253 Israelis and foreigners, 133 of whom are still being held. For almost 200 days, these individual­s have been held hostage with no contact with family or humanitari­an organizati­ons.

For more than six months, these hostages have suffered unspeakabl­e horrors — elderly women dragged from their houses overnight, innocent people raped, hidden undergroun­d and starved. Their families, living a waking nightmare, mark Jewish holidays — Simchat Torah, then Hanukkah, then Purim — uncertain whether they’ll ever see their loved ones again. We now are preparing for Passover and are heartbroke­n for these families whose Seder tables will have empty chairs.

Holding human beings in brutal captivity is an affront to human decency. This is unquestion­ably a violation of human rights. And yet, when the Jewish community needs the support of our neighbors, the silence is deafening.

As rabbis in the Reform Jewish community and Orthodox Jewish community, we lead different denominati­ons of Judaism, but we are all part of the Jewish family, united in our call. In January, we traveled to Israel with a diverse group of 22 Jewish profession­als from Atlanta. We heard from the grandparen­ts of Bar Kupershtei­n, a 21-year-old Nova Festival staff member and paramedic, who cared for the wounded until he was taken hostage. His grandfathe­r is a Holocaust survivor and called Oct. 7 the “second Holocaust.” He does not know if his grandson will come home.

We returned to Atlanta with a sense of mission for the immediate release of every single hostage. Antisemiti­sm is at a degree we haven’t seen before. Jewish centers have been vandalized, college campuses are facing toxic levels of Jew-hatred, and synagogues have had to hire staggering amounts of security just to carry on regular worship and programmin­g.

But we are not hiding. Our ancestors taught that synagogues must have windows to remind us that our prayers should not be isolated from the world outside. Being a Jew means we care for our own, but we also are responsibl­e for caring for all of humanity. Our prayers must translate into action beyond the synagogue walls.

Since Rothschild’s dedication to the civil rights movement, our congregati­ons have taken action against injustice and human suffering. After the 2020 murder of George Floyd, Congregati­on Ohr HaTorah held a public rally, and the Temple has led a national movement to end mass incarcerat­ion.

Now, as our community suffers, who is standing up for us?

Our message could not be more critical as we approach Passover, a holiday that recalls the freedom of our people who were redeemed from slavery and persecutio­n. The message of Moses to Pharaoh, “Let my people go,” resonates deeply with us when we think of the hostages being held in Gaza.

When it would have been safer to stay silent, Rothschild stood up because he saw bigotry and hatred as atrocities. He knew faith leaders had a moral obligation to stand up against injustice.

There’s a sense the hostage situation is complex and political, that people don’t want to make waves by speaking out. But this is basic human morality and decency. As humans, we know it’s wrong to hold innocent people against their will and as bargaining chips. Our hearts go out to the innocent individual­s suffering in Gaza whom Hamas is using as human shields.

It is time for the people of Atlanta to unequivoca­lly condemn kidnapping and call for the unconditio­nal release of the hostages. We need the support of our colleagues, faith leaders, political leaders — our city.

Right now, we feel very alone. As Martin Luther King Jr. said, “In the end, we will remember not the words of our enemies, but the silence of our friends.”

We have stood with you. Please stand with us and help us bring the hostages home for Passover.

 ?? MIGUEL MARTINEZ/AJC 2023 ?? As the Jewish community faces the largest and most horrific attack on its people since the Holocaust, today’s contributo­rs write, Atlantans need to show their support amid reports of increased antisemiti­sm and call for the unconditio­nal release of the hostages in Gaza.
MIGUEL MARTINEZ/AJC 2023 As the Jewish community faces the largest and most horrific attack on its people since the Holocaust, today’s contributo­rs write, Atlantans need to show their support amid reports of increased antisemiti­sm and call for the unconditio­nal release of the hostages in Gaza.
 ?? ?? Adam Starr
Adam Starr
 ?? ?? Peter S. Berg
Peter S. Berg

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