Major Jewish groups mobilise against hate while unsure about its causes

January 6, 2020 by Sean Savage - JNS.org
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The recent violent attacks against Jews in Monsey, N.Y., and Jersey City, N.J., have garnered national headlines and have brought further awareness to the sharp rise in antisemitism in the United States, and especially, the New York metropolitan region.

New York State Attorney General Letitia James with Jewish leaders, including Evan Bernstein, New York regional director of the Anti-Defamation League, to discuss hate and how to protect the community. Source: Evan Bernstein via Twitter.

Unlike the other major deadly attacks upon Jewish communities in the past two years—namely, the lone-gunman shootings inside synagogues in Pittsburgh, Pa., and Poway, Calif.—carried out by avowed white supremacists, the situation in New York, home to the largest numbers of Jewish residents in the country, are largely being carried out by members of minority communities, leading to a different set of questions for Jewish leaders to grapple with.

“A lot of people want to throw all the antisemitism in our country into white supremacy, but this is not white supremacy—what has been happening over the past three-and-a-half weeks, and what’s been happening in Brooklyn now for the better part of two years,” Evan Bernstein, the New York/New Jersey Regional Director of the Anti-Defamation League, told JNS.

“It is important to differentiate between the two, and it’s important to talk about these incidents and understand it is not a white supremacist issue. There is an issue with white supremacy in this country, but what’s going on in this region, that is not the case.”

Indeed, the latest attacks in Monsey and Jersey City, as well as the ongoing spate of verbal and physical assaults on openly Orthodox and Chassidic Jewish community members in New York City, have been carried out by minority groups.

Sean Savage /JNS

However, criticism has been levied against leaders such as New York City Mayor Bill de Blasio, who said that antisemitism is strictly a “right-wing movement.”

“I think the ideological movement that is antisemitic is the right-wing movement,” de Blasio said at a Brooklyn press conference Tuesday about the increase of hate crimes in New York City, the New York Post reported.

“I think that is a real mistake,” said Bernstein, adding that there needs to be more done out of the mayor’s office to prevent antisemitic attacks. “There needs to be a long-term solution coming from the mayor’s office, from Governor [Andrew] Cuomo, from city council members and congressional leaders. We have been very reactive here, but what we need is to be proactive.”

Bernstein said New York has seen a great deal of “normalization of antisemitism,” and until recently, there has been little attention paid to the issue in the press and by the public.

Groups such as the Zionist Organization of America have called on public officials to investigate and take further action against all hate groups inciting violence against Jews, including the National of Islam, radical Muslim groups, white supremacists, the Black Hebrew Israelites and others.

“It’s long past time to acknowledge that racist, African-American anti-Semites are perpetrating the majority of the violence against Jews in New York City, New Jersey, Monsey and elsewhere,” ZOA national president Mort Klein said in a statement. “This does not impugn the vast majority of law-abiding African-Americans. We can’t address the real problem when we hear comments such as New York City Mayor de Blasio’s claims that antisemitism is exclusively or ‘very much’ a ‘right-wing movement.’ ”

Similarly, Rabbi Marvin Hier and Abraham Cooper, dean and founder, and associate dean of the Simon Wiesenthal Center, urged black leaders to speak out against the spate of recent crimes.

“Enough is enough! Jews should not have to fear for their lives in America to go to their houses of worship. The FBI must step up and take the lead in all recent violent hate crimes targeting religious Jews,” they said in a statement.

‘Lack of understanding about the wellspring of hate’

Eric Fingerhut, president and CEO of the Jewish Federations of North America (JFNA), told JNS that the “prevalence of antisemitism in America, which has historically been at a low level until recently, has come from various parts of society. It has never been isolated to one part of society. It is present in the white nationalist/extremist setting, and has also been prevalent on the far-left, and prevalent in certain ethnic and other communities,” he explained.

The JFNA, which took part in a solidarity march and rally on Jan. 5 along with other New York City-based groups such as the ADL, American Jewish Committee and Jewish Community Relations Council, has been advocating for increased funding for the Nonprofit Security Grant Program, as well as enhancing the Secure Community Network to increase security for Jewish institutions and communities across America. As part of the federal appropriations legislation passed last month, Congress increased funding for the NSGP to $90 million—a 50 per cent increase over the $60 million funding in 2019.

“There all sorts of networks of hate out there, and we have to be generally prepared across our communities. We are seeing a different type of perpetrator in these last couple of incidents than we saw in in the previous few. This strikes me that we have this hate across the system, something crosses into violence and we have this epidemic.”

David Bernstein, president and CEO of the Jewish Council for Public Affairs, told JNS that it is important not to blame the entire African-American community for the spate of attacks.

“I think it’s important not to pin this on the black community more generally. The fact is this is happening in a very specific area of the country, and not everywhere where they are blacks and Jews living” together in such proximity.

“We need to learn much more about what is happening within segments of the black community that might be giving rise to this violence,” he said. “At this point, there is a lack of understanding about the wellspring of this hate, and we need to learn much more.”

Indeed, according to Bernstein, much speculation exists about what is driving the violence, though not much data supports these assumptions.

“We don’t have enough information from law enforcement and from district attorneys in the five boroughs and other legal leaders,” he said.

“The speculation right now believes it is around gentrification, around outstanding issues going back to [1991] Crown Heights Riots and other issues rising up. Then you have traditional antisemitic views that are still believed in a lot of these minority communities,” said Bernstein, who added that most of the attacks have been carried out by juveniles as well. “When you add in these other factors, then you start to see this violence come out. There is a base of antisemitism that is already there—that’s been established unfortunately for generations—and now it is elevating itself because these other issues are pulling it out.”

While there has been criticism that not enough black leaders have spoken out against the latest violence, Bernstein said he has been contacted by a “large swath” of leaders from black politicians like Senator Cory Booker (D-N.J.), Brooklyn Borough President Eric Adams and Rep. Hakeem Jeffries (D-N.Y.) to black clergy and others.

“I do think there needs to be a better understanding of the Orthodox population in the black community. In a lot of my conversations, they don’t understand what Chassidism is; they don’t understand the cultural norms; they don’t understand a lot of these things. I think that perpetuates a lot of the hate.”

“That’s where I think we need to do a better job communicating and building better bridges, which will hopefully allow more people to speak out when there’s these acts of hate. But certainly, you cannot blame the victim.”

Comments

One Response to “Major Jewish groups mobilise against hate while unsure about its causes”
  1. Michael Burd says:

    It has come to the point where Jewish communal organizations particularly in Australia must come to terms with reality they can no longer carry on their charade and like sheep blame antisemitism on the far right. My sources tell me this has been an unwritten agreement between communal organizations to keep this emphases on the Far right so as not to place multiculturalism under the microscope and also to keep receiving funding form the federal government to tow the PC party line.
    Even our security services have two lines of explanation for the biggest physical danger to Jews one for the community at large and the real threat , obviously extremist Muslims in particular Salafi Muslims . Only recently our own security service ASIO came out with the same conclusion extremist Muslims pose the greater threat to our security , both agree the far Right is a threat but not in the same league.

    Our community leadership need to understand the term ‘’ INTERSECTIONALITY ‘ this is where various specialty groups form one larger extremist voice where they overlap, and the list is growing all the time.

    The one commonality between them all is Israel which has now morphed into Jew Hating in general

    Currently we have groups that include the Socialists, Antifa, Green groups, Muslims , Arabs, hard Left including anti -Zionist Jews , Feminist’s ,Refugee activists , Gay/LGBT activists and now particularly in USA black anti Semites,

    This whole concept will be hard for the Jewish community to come to grips with because these are all groups that they would normally support d advocate for . It is far easier to blame the far right because they know nobody will object , criticize them and certainly won’t affect any government handouts .

    Of course, our communal organizations and left leaning AJN will still try to white -wash this phenomenon and come up with examples of far right anti-Semitism whilst dismissing the real anti-Semitic problem as a phase or insignificant and probably shoot the messenger as usual ,and remain in denial it’s a lot easier this way .

    Some food for thought
    On of the most effective anti-Semitic tools in the last 10 years has been the BDS instigated by the Left – Islam alliance not far right.
    Our young Jewish students on campus are under siege by the socialist-Left / Islam alliance not the far right:
    The anti-Israel demonstrations in our cities are organized by the Left -Socialist -Islam alliance not the far right.
    The hard left /Islam alliance are behind the world wide demonization campaign against Israel and the Jews not the far right.
    99% of terrorists convicted in our prison system and currently under surveillance are Muslims [ there may be one far right terrorist in prison that I am aware of ]
    Lastly the reason the Jewish community spends tens of Millions of dollars each year on security including bomb proof walls and armed guards is certainly not because of the threat from Far-right suicide bombers.

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