Pages

Monday, August 12, 2024

They don't even see the irony: Hate of Jews kills “Confronting Hate Together” museum exhibit in Seattle



In May, a planned exhibit at the Wing Luke Museum called “Confronting Hate Together” about how Seattles Jewish, Black and Asian communities confront hate was canceled because of anti-Jewish hate.
Progressive staffers walked off their jobs rather than open the exhibit, claiming that the section on antisemitism mentioned modern antisemitism that is associated with hate towards Israel. 

Since then, the Washington State Jewish Historical Society worked hard with the new antisemites to clarify the Jewish part of the exhibit and make it palatable to the so-called progressive crowd. Of course, since their entire reason for existing is to hate while claiming to be against hate, the efforts were to no avail.

Hate of Jews  closed the "Confronting Hate Together" exhibit.

The press release of the Washington State Jewish Historical Society and Seattle JCRC describes what happened, and it shows that the Jews of Seattle have every reason to be afraid for their wellbeing - unless they pass an anti-Isrsel purity test to the satisfaction of their tormenters:

It is with great disappointment, pain, and sadness we share that, due to circumstances out of our control, the Confronting Hate Together (CHT) Exhibit will not be presented jointly to the community in a public venue by the Black Heritage Society (BHS), Washington State Jewish Historical Society (WSJHS) and the Wing Luke Museum (WLM). 

Throughout this process, the WSJHS has been open and responsive to feedback from partners, sensitive to the international climate and challenges, and we have leaned into honesty and transparency. We worked tirelessly for months to prepare for the CHT exhibit. Furthermore, since the initial launch on May 21st, we made adjustments and modifications to help people better understand the exhibit by clarifying language regarding the exhibition's intent to focus on confronting hate locally by three historically redlined communities. 

Immense harm has been caused to the Jewish community by not being able to show the exhibit. The anti-Jewish ideas and attitudes that fueled the WLM employee walkout (whether conscious or not) have yet to be adequately acknowledged. And, at the same time, the greater Seattle community will be deprived of an important cross-cultural educational opportunity. 

Antisemitism today is at its highest levels in over 40 years, and more allyship is needed to help meet the moment. We need partners who are stakeholders in the safety and well-being of the Jewish people and who stand with us even when it gets hard. Ironically, in an exhibit that was supposed to be about coming together to confront hate, hate has won. And, our community feels more alone as a result.

 The Jewish community needs to hear from Seattle - from our elected leaders, from business leaders, and people of good conscience - that Seattle is still a welcoming and safe home for Jews and that antisemitism has no place here. The silence is harmful to all. 

Next month, the WSJHS, and the Jewish Community Relations Council (JCRC) of the Jewish Federation of Greater Seattle will host a special event to show the CHT exhibit to the Jewish community alongside our friends and allies. Stay tuned for more information on this showcase. In the meantime, we encourage you to check out the digital exhibit for CHT, which can be accessed on the Home page of our website. We look forward to continuing healing, education, understanding, and advocacy among our community and neighbors. 

Here is the section of the exhibit that was considered "controversial." It shows how feeding the crocodile never works. 


This is not even showing support for Israel or Zionism. On the contrary, instead of even hinting how central Israel is to the Jewish mindset, the WSJHS took pains to separate the Jews of Seattle from Israel's "right-wing government." Apparently they even tried to water this down further to "clarifying language regarding the exhibition's intent." 

None of it worked, because the rules for Jews are different, even (and sometimes especially) from other minority groups. 

The JCRC and WSJHS need to take a page from a editorial in the Spokane Press from October 1926, where they quoted the new Jewish Treasurer of Wisconsin.



(h/t JW)






Buy the EoZ book, PROTOCOLS: Exposing Modern Antisemitism  today at Amazon!

Or order from your favorite bookseller, using ISBN 9798985708424. 

Read all about it here!