Revisiting Kristallnacht with rising global antisemitism
The number of antisemitic incidents occurring worldwide is staggering and growing. With all the organizations across the globe working on the issue, all of the resources directed toward eradicating the scourge, all of the government initiatives put in place with great fanfare, and the increasing number of educational programs designed and redesigned to combat hatred of Jews, the attacks just keep mounting and there is little sense that at least for the foreseeable future things are going to get better for Jews around the world.‘We are no longer victims’: New York event ‘rages’ against Jew-hatred
There is some comfort in knowing that the fight against antisemitism is ongoing despite the recent violent and disheartening setbacks, that there are innovative initiatives utilizing new technologies, and many young influencers on social media are gamely attempting to break through the existing echo chambers.
But I can’t seem to find the words to comfort my 94-year-old Holocaust survivor mother as another Kristallnacht anniversary approaches. An avid consumer of news, still with all her faculties intact, including the memories of being separated from her parents, sent to live in a convent and then boarding school under an assumed name, never to see her father again as he was murdered in the gas chambers of Auschwitz – she is disheartened in a way I have never experienced.
The US presidential election campaign has worsened her frame of mind. The Holocaust imagery invoked by the candidates and their proxies has been particularly jarring.
I try to explain that the summoning of Nazis and Hitler in this particularly ugly, contentious, and polarizing election arises from concerns about authoritarianism, nationalism, and the erosion of democratic norms; that politicians and commentators use these references to draw parallels between historical events and contemporary political movements or behaviors that they perceive as dangerous. And that using those terms and the history of the Holocaust is a strategy used to warn against the rise of extremism or to criticize opponents by framing them in a negative historical context.
But those explanations do nothing to calm her. She is certain that America and the world are entering a dangerous era that she has never witnessed since she immigrated to New York and fell in love with a country in which she felt safe and protected. No more. The constant antisemitism and especially the ever-increasing calls to destroy Israel she is witnessing is creating real angst.
Amid a sharp increase in Jew-hatred after the Hamas terrorist attacks in southern Israel on Oct. 7, 2023, many elected officials and university presidents stood silent. That’s why Shurat HaDin-Israel Law Center gathered Jewish groups to “find ways to start fighting back,” Nitsana Darshan-Leitner, the Israeli nonprofit’s president, told JNS.Ex-Israeli government official says antisemitism in Canada 'out of control'
Shurat HaDin aimed “to retake the streets, to retake the campuses, to retake the social media, to combat antisemitism in a way that we haven’t,” Darshan-Leitner said. “We are no longer victims. We are fighting.”
The nonprofit organized an Oct. 31 “Rage Against the Hate” conference, which drew about 300 people, at the Yale Club in New York City.
The actor and comedian Michael Rapaport, who has emerged as one of the Jewish state’s most staunch supporters on social media, was one of the event speakers. He told attendees to “fight with your heart, fight with your prayers, fight with your genius, brilliant Jewish Zionist minds.”
“Fight ferociously, and do not take a step back,” he said. “We’ve done the guilty act long enough. There’s no more shame. There’s no more stuttering. There’s no stammering. There’s no trying to assimilate. Those days are over. We must stick together and we must stand by Israel.”
Rapaport told JNS that “artists who speak up about everything, and say nothing about something that’s so blatantly horrific and clear—the silence is beyond deafening.”
He added that he remains hopeful, despite all the antisemitism he sees. “I know in my heart and in my gut that we’re going to be OK,” he told JNS.
Douglas Murray, a British journalist and author who has reported extensively in Israel and Gaza and who is also one of the Jewish state’s strongest supporters, spoke in a session with Darshan-Leitner. Murray told attendees that however “old-fashioned” the idea is, he still thinks that journalists ought to be devoted to the truth.
“A cynic would say it’s a full-time job, but it has always interested me that the bigger the lie that’s being spread, the more I think you have a duty to undo the lie,” he said.
As he attempted to speak with students at the University of Calgary last week, masked anti-Israel activists pounded on the doors shouting “Allahu akbar!”‘October H8te’ documentary aims to understand US college alignment with Hamas
That was the scene that greeted former Israeli government spokesperson Eylon Levy on Halloween during a cross-country speaking tour that he said exposed him to the true nature of Canada’s pressure cooker of largely tolerated antisemitism and hatred against Jews.
“That crosses the line from any sort of political protest into a full-on Jihadi war cry,” Levy told the Toronto Sun of his experience in Calgary.
“Jewish students feel, I would say, a little bit betrayed because they feel that they are standing up not only for themselves and to make a safe environment for Jewish students, but for everyone else.”
Few forget the months of anti-Israel rallies on university campuses across Canada earlier this year as activists and university students established pro-Palestinian no-go zones — protest encampments largely tolerated by university administration that some said allegedly fomented harassment and discrimination against Jewish students, while barring entry to Jews and those who didn’t agree with the protesters’ views.
“Jewish students are feeling extremely intimidated and scared — I spoke with one father who said his son was considering whether he even wants to apply to the U of T this year or reconsider altogether,” Levy said.
“An atmosphere in which the entire campus yard is taken over by pro-Hamas protests is not a safe environment for Jewish students.” opening envelope
Levy’s speaking tour is facilitated by StandWithUs Canada, a non-profit dedicated to fighting antisemitism and misinformation in schools and communities.
Last year’s Hamas terror attacks in Israel sparked an explosion of antisemitism in Canada with pro-Palestinian rallies taking over city streets and university campuses and even marches through some of Toronto’s Jewish neighbourhoods.
Filmmaker Wendy Sachs was visiting her daughter, a student at the University of Wisconsin-Madison, last October 7 when the Hamas terrorist attack was taking place in Israel, unfolding a nightmarish scene of murder, atrocities, abduction and destruction.
By October 8, said Sachs, there was a concurrent explosion of antisemitism on college campuses in the US, a development that she explores in “October H8te,” a 100-minute film that premiered one year later, on October 31 in Tel Aviv’s Cinematheque.
The film takes viewers through the timeline of the pro-Palestinian, anti-Israel and antisemitic protests that mushroomed on American campuses starting October 8, through the December 5 congressional hearing and testimonies from the presidents of Harvard, MIT and the University of Pennsylvania, and into the springtime sieges at Columbia University in New York City and other campuses.
Throughout “October H8te,” Sachs attempted to understand how this situation came to be, and why the campus social justice movements ended up aligned with Hamas, a terrorist organization.
She looked at the funding, strategy and messaging created by Hamas, and its apparent proxy on campuses, the Students for Justice in Palestine group.
On the long side for a documentary, “October H8te” attempts to answer perhaps too many questions, tackling the unfolding scenes of antisemitism while also examining how Hamas gained a foothold on college campuses.
The film looks closely at SJP but not at the role of Qatar, the tiny Middle East state that has reportedly contributed $4.7 billion to dozens of academic institutions across the United States between 2001 and 2021, according to Times of Israel reports.
Sachs said that the Qatar element was difficult to pin down in order to determine if it’s playing a role in sowing anti-Zionism on US campuses.
“It’s all a little bit gray,” said Sachs.
Sachs herself was surprised by the organization of SJP, which she had formerly thought of as just one of many student groups on college campuses.
“What’s fascinating right now to people is that this has been developing for decades,” said Sachs. “Hamas in the US was playing the long game and was figuring out 30 years ago how to make their message more palatable. The sophistication really surprised me.”
“October H8te” also looks at how antisemitism turned into anti-Zionism, the global silence around the sexual assault and rapes Hamas terrorists perpetrated against Israeli women on October 7, and includes an interview with Sheryl Sandberg, who produced “Screams Before Silence,” about the sexual atrocities of October 7.
