The Denver Post

War pushes companies to extend diversity programs to faith groups

- By Emma Goldberg

When Nabeela Elsayed was speaking at a corporate conference several years ago and explained that she would miss the group dinner because she was fasting for Ramadan, she recalls, her manager responded, “Just don’t fast.” Elsayed, an executive coach who was previously chief operating officer for Walmart Canada, said she had heard many such slights when stepping away during the workday to pray.

For years, she told business leaders that their diversity, equity and inclusion programmin­g should teach workers about antiMuslim hate, antisemiti­sm and other threats to religious groups but rarely got meaningful responses. In recent weeks — since the start of the Israel- Hamas war — Elsayed has noticed a surge of interest from them on the issue.

Executives are facing mounting calls from their workers to talk about faith in diversity programs. They’re scrambling to ensure the safety of Jewish and Muslim employees while also trying to foster a sense of belonging across religious groups. As a result, they’re confrontin­g long- standing challenges in talking about religion as a part of workplace diversity — at a time when corporate commitment­s to diversity programmin­g more broadly seem on shaky ground.

“In the 16 years I’ve been here, I have not seen before the kind of outreach we’ve received from companies trying to respond to their employees’ needs,” said the Rev. Mark Fowler, the head of Tanenbaum, a nonprofit that focuses on interrelig­ious understand­ing.

Across the corporate world, investment in diversity, equity and inclusion ballooned after the killing of George Floyd in 2020 and subsequent protests. Openings for DEI positions increased 174% between June and August 2020, according to data from Glassdoor, a jobs listing site.

The growth was short- lived. Layoffs and attrition since 2020 have hit DEI roles at higher rates than other roles, according to a study of more than 600

companies by Revelio Labs released this year. Chief diversity officers were the only C- suite positions that experience­d hiring declines last year, according to a report from Linkedin.

Even when enthusiasm for DEI work was swelling, companies were skittish about engaging faith groups in their diversity programmin­g. The principle that church and state should be separate — as well as civil rights laws that prohibit discrimina­tion on the basis of religion — encouraged some business leaders to separate church from the office as well. Many have left workers to facilitate conversati­ons among themselves through employee resource groups, typically informal communitie­s that gather for holiday celebratio­ns or brown bag lunches.

“The U. S. has always had issues dealing with faith in any setting, whether we’re talking about education or workplaces,” said Stephanie Creary, an assistant professor of management at the Wharton School of the University of Pennsylvan­ia. She noted that companies had even struggled with whether to label certain office areas “prayer rooms,” “meditation rooms” or “wellness spaces,” because they wondered: Should prayer be explicitly welcomed into the office?

Because executives tend to avoid addressing faithrelat­ed issues directly, they haven’t developed expertise about what terms to use and what not to, or about the specific needs that faith groups have.

“When it comes to antisemiti­c and antiMuslim language, we have less experience of what’s OK and what’s not OK to say,” Creary said. But now that some business leaders are weighing in with statements on threats to religious groups, she hopes a revival in DEI programmin­g more broadly can follow.

“We are seeing many, many Jewish leaders who perhaps weren’t as engaged in race- related issues really wanting to understand how the issues affecting the Jewish community can become incorporat­ed into DEI practices,” she said. “There’s an opportunit­y there.”

Take Ivan Kaufman, the CEO of Arbor Realty Trust. Kaufman, who is Jewish, never used to consider it a priority to speak out about antisemiti­sm in the workplace, he said, but in recent weeks, his own worries about antiJewish hate have grown. He heard from friends who had taken down their mezuzot at home so as not to be openly identified as Jewish, or who wondered aloud whether they were safe going to synagogue.

“I can’t tell you how many calls I get — ‘ Are you going to go to shul?’ ” he said.

That angst has cemented Kaufman’s belief that his company should be vocally condemning antisemiti­sm, including by signing on to the Anti- Defamation League’s “Workplace Pledge to Fight Antisemiti­sm,” which the Jewish advocacy group started in the summer and circulated widely in the wake of the Hamas attacks Oct. 7.

“Antisemiti­sm is something I really haven’t spoken about that much because it’s been in the shadows,” Kaufman said. “Clearly now we speak out about it.”

For many Muslim leaders, too, the wave of hate in recent weeks has prompted personal responses.

“As a person of Muslim faith, there’s always experience­s you go through. A lot of us after Sept. 11 went through experience­s where we explained to everybody that not all 2 billion Muslims are bad,” said Armughan Ahmad, the CEO of Appen, an artificial intelligen­ce company with roughly 1,000 employees. “How do you explain that discrimina­tion in the workplace?”

In recent weeks, though, conversati­ons about faith groups — particular­ly about the threat of antisemiti­sm and Islamophob­ia — have come up more and more for Ahmad and his DEI team. Appen put out a statement about the IsraelHama­s war, reminded staff about mental health support programs and signed the “Pledge to Listen” from the Coalition of Innovation Leaders Against Racism, which Ahmad co- founded in 2020.

At Massachuse­tts General Hospital in recent weeks, several dozen Jewish and Israeli health care workers and staff members shared their emotional responses to the war and antisemiti­sm in a series of listening sessions. Dr. Mark Poznansky, a physician, and Elyse Park, a psychologi­st, planned the sessions as part of a Jewish employee resource group formed this year. They said they had been worrying about the well- being of their own Jewish families and felt isolated from some colleagues and friends, who they felt had not reached out to check in.

“It starts with the silence,” said Park, who directs the research program in health promotion and resiliency interventi­on at the hospital. “It starts with the not checking in, the lack of understand­ing and the connectivi­ty about how this impacts us greatly.”

Their sense of isolation made the two doctors wonder: Why hadn’t their workplace’s extensive DEI programmin­g focused on faith groups?

“There was really no place, and it needed to be created,” Park said.

The Anti- Defamation League pledge has more than 200 signatorie­s, newly including J. Crew, Creative Artists Agency, Google, Apollo Global Management and the PGA Tour. The pledge asks companies to address antisemiti­sm in their DEI programmin­g, speak out against hate on social media, provide religious accommodat­ions and support Jewish employees by creating affinity groups.

Diversity programmin­g often focuses on groups that are underrepre­sented in the corporate world, said Adam Neufeld, the Anti- Defamation League’s chief impact officer, and that hasn’t been a problem recently for Jews in many industries.

“There’s a general lack of understand­ing of antisemiti­sm because it operates so differentl­y from other kinds of bias,” Neufeld said, adding that the ADL also saw a spike of interest in its workplace programmin­g after Kanye West’s antisemiti­c posts on X, formerly known as Twitter, in October 2022.

The Council on AmericanIs­lamic Relations has fielded more than 2,000 of reports of anti- Muslim hate, including in workplaces, since early October. The swell of Islamophob­ic incidents has reminded some, including Elsayed, of what Muslims experience­d at work after the Sept. 11 attacks, a wave of hate that she felt business leaders largely ignored.

“What we’re seeing demonstrat­es we haven’t made as much progress as I thought,” she said. “It’s difficult to hold tension in workplaces, but we should have enough compassion to listen to people’s experience­s and say, ‘ How can I help?’ ”

Elsayed, though, feels that many business leaders have been quieter about anti- Muslim incidents than about anti- Jewish hate. This month, she asked 11 CEOS whether their organizati­ons had spoken out about recent waves of hate and found that “in most cases, they either haven’t responded at all, or they responded specifical­ly around antisemiti­sm.”

Goldman Sachs announced in October that it would expand its employee resource group focused on “religion and culture,” which is open to people of diverse religious background­s. The group was previously open only to employees in Europe, the Middle East and Africa; now it will include employees in U. S. offices because of new interest.

“We think that bias or hate against anyone is unacceptab­le, whether it’s antisemiti­sm, whether it’s hate against people in the Black community, in the Muslim community, in the Asian community. Any form of hate and bias is unacceptab­le,” David Solomon, the bank’s CEO, said in an interview with Fox Business. ( Solomon has been outspoken about the IsraelHama­s war.)

Some business leaders are weighing whether to create specific employee groups for every religion or an umbrella organizati­on focused on interrelig­ious issues, Creary said. Many are struggling to determine what sort of language might be offensive to one faith group even if it’s affirming to another.

“There’s concern about having dialogue facilitate­d by people who are skilled,” Creary said. “Because so many of these issues go back millennium­s.”

And as pledges from executives proliferat­e — whether it’s people signing on to the ADL’S letter; participat­ing in the Council on American- Islamic Relations’ webinar on “Work, HR and Palestine”; or, like Solomon, expanding existing resource groups — some DEI leaders worry: How long will it last?

They note lingering frustratio­n over a lack of corporate accountabi­lity to racial justice commitment­s made after the killing of Floyd. “Right now, we have Black employees saying companies have dropped the ball on making progress on all the commitment­s they made in 2020,” Creary said.

“This might be that moment for Jewish and Muslim colleagues,” she continued. “Organizati­ons invest all these resources in rising to the occasion to create inclusive workplaces, but three years from now, it might trickle out.”

 ?? IAN WILLMS — THE NEW YORK TIMES ?? Nabeela Elsayed, an executive coach, at her home in Mississaug­a, Canada, on Dec. 5. Workers are asking employers to respond to rising Islamophob­ia and antisemiti­sm. But office discussion­s about religion are complicate­d.
IAN WILLMS — THE NEW YORK TIMES Nabeela Elsayed, an executive coach, at her home in Mississaug­a, Canada, on Dec. 5. Workers are asking employers to respond to rising Islamophob­ia and antisemiti­sm. But office discussion­s about religion are complicate­d.
 ?? JOHN TAGGART — NEW YORK TIMES FILE ?? The New York headquarte­rs of Goldman Sachs in Manhattan, N. Y., on March 20. The company said it would expand its employee resource group focused on “religion and culture.”
JOHN TAGGART — NEW YORK TIMES FILE The New York headquarte­rs of Goldman Sachs in Manhattan, N. Y., on March 20. The company said it would expand its employee resource group focused on “religion and culture.”

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