The Boston Globe

The rise in antisemiti­sm should concern us all

- SCOT LEHIGH Scot Lehigh is a Globe columnist. He can be reached at scot.lehigh@globe.com. Follow him on Twitter @GlobeScotL­ehigh.

During a trip to Central Europe almost 25 years ago, my wife and I went on a self-guided walking tour of Vienna, which included a stop at a synagogue. There, a particular line in the tour itinerary caught my eye: Visitors might well see an armed security guard on the premises because of the threat of antisemiti­c violence.

How lucky we were in the United States not to need armed guards at places of worship, I thought.

Fast-forward two decades. On Oct. 27, 2018, an antisemiti­c terrorist with an AR-15 assault-style rifle allegedly killed 11 worshipper­s at Pittsburgh’s Tree of Life synagogue in the deadliest antisemiti­c attack in US history. Six others, including four police officers, were injured.

Even before that attack, synagogues in the United States had been installing cameras and stepping up security measures, since they had long been the subject of antisemiti­c graffiti, hate mail, vile voicemail messages, and the like.

“That has just been a way of life for many religious minorities,” noted Peggy Shukur, deputy regional director of the Anti-Defamation League. “But obviously with Pittsburgh, things crossed a line and there can be no return from that.”

Scores of synagogues around this country now have armed guards.

“The security measures taking place within the Jewish community are unpreceden­ted in American Jewish history,” Jonathan D. Sarna, a professor of American Jewish History at Brandeis University, said in an e-mail.

Incidents of antisemiti­sm in America have risen markedly, to a point where the Biden administra­tion recently launched a multiprong­ed effort to counter antisemiti­sm.

The administra­tion’s initiative is particular­ly welcome because it stands as a recognitio­n that antisemiti­sm isn’t a problem only for Jews but rather for all of us in America. That’s especially so since antisemite­s hardly confine their bigotry to one religious or ethnic group.

Sarna compared our current period to the 1920s, “an era of antisemiti­sm, anti-Catholicis­m, the Klan, and anti-immigrant nationalis­m.”

A common question, at a time like this, is what average citizens, whether Jewish or not, can do to counter that bigotry. The website Antisemiti­sm 911, a joint project of a number of Jewish organizati­ons, offers a variety of modulated approaches for responding to antisemiti­c comments from acquaintan­ces, colleagues, or strangers. (I wrote two related columns last year, soliciting people’s experience­s and thoughts.)

Shukur stressed the importance of reporting all incidents to the ADL or other bigotry-battling organizati­ons, whether or not they rise to the level of crimes or threats. That lets the ADL analyze incidents and trends in antiJewish bigotry and helps it keep people updated on the latest antisemiti­c episodes with its tracker. The organizati­on has also developed an interactiv­e online map that lets viewers examine antisemiti­sm by location and incident type.

People shouldn’t be hesitant, in everyday conversati­on, to raise awareness about the level of antisemiti­sm in America, Shukur said.

This is not just a problem precipitat­ed by skinheads or pinheads, or one of physical attacks or spiteful epithets. On a subtler level, Jewish college students are sometimes accosted about whether they are Zionists or made to feel uncomforta­ble or excluded by those upset with the policy of Israel’s rightwing government toward Palestinia­ns. Although obviously not as serious a problem as violence, that hostile behavior is neverthele­ss disconcert­ing for those on the receiving end.

Brandeis University has begun a broad initiative with the Robert Kraft family and its Foundation to Combat Antisemiti­sm to raise awareness about — and work to combat — antisemiti­sm at both the college and the K-12 level.

“Brandeis, as the only secular institutio­n founded by the American Jewish community, has a role and a responsibi­lity to address rather than ignore it,” university president Ronald D. Liebowitz said in an interview.

More broadly, Liebowitz said, when it comes to antisemiti­sm, “People should react the same way they do about any form of hate or discrimina­tion or bigotry that they see. This is no different.”

On a simple person-to-person level, sometimes small gestures loom large. That, said Shukur, can be as basic as offering an empathetic word to Jewish friends and neighbors, something along these lines: “We know it is a tough time for your community right now. We see you and we welcome you, as Jews, to participat­e in every aspect of our community.”

After all, in times of trouble, real Americans should stand up for one another — and against bigotry and hatred.

The Biden administra­tion’s initiative is particular­ly welcome because it stands as a recognitio­n that antisemiti­sm isn’t a problem only for Jews but rather for all of us in America.

 ?? AP ?? A bullet-damaged prayer book found in the aftermath of the Tree of Life synagogue shooting was introduced as a court exhibit in the federal trial of Robert Bowers in Pittsburgh, more than four years after the attack that killed 11 worshipper­s.
AP A bullet-damaged prayer book found in the aftermath of the Tree of Life synagogue shooting was introduced as a court exhibit in the federal trial of Robert Bowers in Pittsburgh, more than four years after the attack that killed 11 worshipper­s.

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