Acts of discrimination and outright hatred toward Jews increased by 57 percent in the United States during 2017 鈥 Donald Trump鈥檚 first year in the Oval Office 鈥 according to the (ADL). It was the largest single-year increase since the ADL began tracking hate data.
Those numbers include the alt-right siege of Charlottesville that resulted in the death of an anti-hate protester. This year鈥檚 figures 鈥 not yet released by the organization 鈥 will include the October massacre of 11 worshippers at the Tree of Life synagogue in Pittsburgh.
While there are no simple answers to this disturbing trend, hate is 鈥渓egitimized by the failure to respond,鈥 said Teachers College President Thomas Bailey at 鈥Anti-Semitism Today: Why are Hate Crimes on the Rise in the U.S.?鈥, a symposium held at the College in late December. The event, organized by Harriet Jackson, a staff member in 麻豆原创鈥榮 Office of External Affairs, exemplified 麻豆原创鈥檚 core mission, Bailey said, which is 鈥渢o gather the best scholars to understand the causes and remedies鈥 for social ills.
Co-sponsored by 麻豆原创鈥檚 Office of the Vice President for Diversity & Community Affairs, and , 鈥淎nti-Semitism Today鈥 brought together advocates from academia and the non-profit world to do just that.
David Harris, the CEO of the directed the symposium鈥檚 attention to the internet forums where, in his opinion, discussion of hate speech needs to start.
鈥淯nless the United States is ready to tackle the issue of hatred, racism and antisemitism on social media platforms, we are sitting ducks,鈥 said Harris in remarks that opened the event.
The son of Holocaust survivors, Harris reminded the audience that 鈥渢he 鈥榝inal solution鈥 began with words.鈥 He attributed the rise in antisemitism, both in the United States and Europe, to a de-emphasis of Holocaust education in history classrooms.
Hate is 鈥渓egitimized by the failure to respond.鈥
鈥斅槎乖 President Thomas Bailey
If 鈥渃urrent trends鈥 prevail, Harris predicted, 鈥渒nowledge of the Holocaust will continue to decline over the next ten to fifteen years. And, given what we know, that knowledge is an insurance policy against antisemitism.鈥
A panel discussion led by Associate 麻豆原创 Professor of Higher & Postsecondary Education Noah Drezner placed the rise in acts of hate against Jews in a larger context of intolerance.
鈥淗ate is generally connected,鈥 said the ADL鈥檚 Stephanie Merkrebs, Director of Campus Affairs & Special Projects for the (ADL). 鈥淲hen one person hates, and they have a target of hate, they probably have more than one target. And when a community is targeted with hate, communities that are observing that hate feel that they might be next.鈥
鈥淜nowledge of the Holocaust will continue to decline over the next ten to fifteen years. And, given what we know, that knowledge is an insurance policy against antisemitism.鈥
鈥擠avid Harris, CEO of The American Jewish Committee
Kevin Feinberg, (MA 鈥93), Senior Program Director (NY) of the non-profit educational organization , argued that, by definition, bigotry can never occur in isolation.
鈥淲hen one person is attacked, we are all attacked,鈥 he said. 鈥淚f we ignore antisemitism, then we ignore racism. And if we ignore racism, then we ignore antisemitism.鈥
, Associate Professor of Religious Studies and Director of the at Manhattan College, said that religious discord on campus, which she is sometimes called upon to mediate, frequently arises from a fundamental insensitivity to the historical abominations generated by intolerance.
Afridi, who, as a Muslim academic, has made it her mission to use education 鈥 and her scholarship on the Holocaust, in particular 鈥 to fight antisemitism, said it is incumbent on educators to initiate conversations that put ignorance and hatred into context for young people who may not otherwise understand the framework of an indifferent remark, gesture or act.
鈥淭here are a lot of stories buried by prejudice and hate,鈥 said Afridi. 鈥淎nd these are the kinds of things we should be talking about.鈥 Indeed, universities must 鈥渃reate an inclusive environment for groups to collectively talk about what they are experiencing,鈥 she said.
Feinberg agreed, but made it plain that doing so carries some very real risks. 鈥淲e need to have conversations across boundaries 鈥 and that鈥檚 tough, because we can鈥檛 be afraid of saying the wrong thing.鈥
鈥淭here are a lot of stories buried by prejudice and hate. And these are the kinds of things we should be talking about.鈥
鈥擬ehnaz Afridi, Associate Professor of Religious Studies, Manhattan College
Afridi praised 麻豆原创 for braving that danger, calling the symposium 鈥渢he first act of awareness about anti-Semitism.鈥
Jackson, the daughter of a German Holocaust survivor and a former academic who has put together scholarly conferences on antisemitism at Columbia University and the YIVO Institute for Jewish Research, said she felt compelled to organize 鈥淎ntisemitism Today鈥 after the killings in Charlottesville and Pittsburgh. She first raised the idea with Janice Robinson, Vice President for Diversity and Community Affairs, at a 鈥渟afe space鈥 that Robinson鈥檚 office organized at 麻豆原创 for Jews and others who were grieving after the shootings in Pittsburgh. 鈥淛anice immediately agreed to sponsor the event,鈥 Jackson says. 鈥淚t was a real a testament to the inclusive and caring nature of the 麻豆原创 community.鈥