‘The Jewish Question’ Revisited by School Officials

‘The Jewish Question’: Discriminating Against Jews in Schools

BACKGROUND – TALKING POINTS – ACTIONS – STORIES

Ethnic Studies Curriculum: ‘The Jewish Question’

How to address the “Jewish Question,” a phrase used by the Nazis during the Holocaust, is now being debated in a California school district. Evidence uncovered during the discovery phase of a lawsuit against California’s Santa Ana Unified School District reveals the extent of the district’s anti-Jewish prejudice and intent. The district is embroiled in continuing controversy over its misappropriation of California’s ethnic studies curriculum mandate. Anti-Jewish activists have waged a multi-year effort to include biased and factually inaccurate material, branding Israel as a settler colonialist oppressor and the Jews as privileged elites.

The lawsuit brought by leading Jewish organizations, including the ADL, AJC and The Brandeis Center for Human Rights Under Law revealed a blatant disregard for Jewish identity and history that an ethnic studies curriculum should include. The District Board and staff violated open meeting laws by considering scheduling meetings on Jewish holidays to prevent Jews from attending meetings – a common tactic used by anti-Israel groups on university campuses. The school board deliberately kept proposed ethnic studies courses “under the radar.”

When members of the district’s Ethnic Studies Steering Committee learned about the Jewish community’s concerns, they noted the need to “address the Jewish Question” in an official agenda. The “Jewish Question” originated among some of Europe’s cultural leaders in the 1800s to manage what many of them saw as a “problem” of Jewish identity among many Jews living in their countries. Hitler’s Final Solution to that “question” was the Holocaust.

Committee members also stated: “Jews are not a disadvantaged ethnic group in the U.S. because they were never slaves. We don’t need to give both sides. We only support the oppressed, and Jews are the oppressors.” American Jews have repeatedly faced open discrimination throughout the nation’s history – from Jewish students being restricted from attending American universities and barred from numerous hotels. Jews are now the most targeted minority group in America, according to FBI hate crime data.

But one district in an LA suburb of California is hardly alone among the nation’s school administrations perpetuating overt anti-Israel and antisemitic activities. The ADL filed a complaint with the U.S. Dept. of Education in July stating that antisemitism runs rampant in Philadelphia schools. The civil rights complaint alleges that over the nine months since Oct. 7, the Philadelphia school district had knowingly allowed its K-12 schools to become “viciously hostile” environments for Jewish students, while failing to address numerous incidents of antisemitic harassment, bullying and discrimination.

Student Intifada: ‘Take out Prof. Davidai’

“Welcome to the People’s University for Palestine,” was the headline of a recent column in the Columbia Univ. student newspaper. Written by an anti-Israel coalition, it made blatantly false statements about Israel, calls for an academic boycott of and financial divestment from Israel, and repeatedly refers to “Israel” in quotes and as the “Zionist entity,” a phrase used only by Iran, terrorist groups and declared enemies of Israel. This comes on the heels of a Brandeis Univ. study finding that one-third of non-Jewish students are hostile to Jews or Israel.

Days earlier at Columbia, an American pro-Hamas imam – who publicly supports the 10/7 attack –spoke at a campus event hosted by the Muslim Student Association and promoted by Students for Justice in Palestine. He targeted a professor who is a staunch supporter of Israel: “If you are able to take out Prof. Shai Davidai and make an example, that might shut up 100 more professors,” suggesting students find a way to force the termination of the professor.

Anti-Israel groups, including Young Democratic Socialists of America, have declared that they will unite for the Student Intifada to disrupt university campus life. The Univ. of Pennsylvania Faculty for Justice in Palestine recently hosted anti-Israel speakers who praised Leila Khaled – a Palestinian terrorist who took part in a 1969 airplane hijacking. The National Students for Justice in Palestine umbrella group announced that student leadership at The New School in NYC voted to halt funding to all student groups until the university divests its investments in Israel or even companies based or operating there.

Universities Take Action: ‘No Zionist litmus test’

Some universities are taking active steps to prevent violence and curb hatred against Jewish students. The University of California system of 10 schools banned face coverings and encampments, George Washington Univ. suspended or placed on probation 10 student groups and New York Univ. issued new hate speech guidelines referencing the “use of code words, like Zionist for Jews.”

NYU’s Student Conduct code: “Examples of speech and conduct that would violate the nondiscrimination and anti-harassment policy: excluding Zionists from an open event, calling for the death of Zionists, applying a ‘no Zionist’ litmus test for participation in any NYU activity, using or disseminating tropes, stereotypes, and conspiracies about Zionists (e.g., ‘Zionists control the media’), or invoking Holocaust imagery or symbols to harass or discriminate.”

Brooklyn Bookstore Cancels Jewish Discussion: ‘No Zionists allowed’

An anti-Zionist author who was preparing to discuss his new book with a progressive rabbi at a Brooklyn bookstore, was informed that an employee cancelled the event because “they would not permit a Zionist [the rabbi] on the premises.” The owner initially lied about the reason for the cancellation before issuing an apology and vowing to fire the worker.

Rabbi Andy Bachman: “I’m still thinking about what it means that a talk between two Jews can get canceled because one of them – yours truly! – is a Zionist. There is a hideous and fundamentally immoral othering of Jews who don’t subscribe to the cult-like demand that any Zionism be disavowed in order to exist in the company of the self-proclaimed exemplars of justice, commonality and peace. Some just want us gone.”

The threatened eruption of widespread antisemitic protests and even violence by Hamas supporters at the Democratic National Convention did not materialize, however a small group of anti-Israel activists disrupted an event addressing antisemitism by Agudath Israel of America – held in a secret location to prevent such an intrusion. The masked protestors chanted: “Brick by brick, wall by wall, Zionism has got to fall.” ADL CEO Jonathan Greenblatt: “These anti-Zionist protestors just confirmed that anti-Jewish hate in America is a growing, inescapable problem, which was exactly the point of the event.”

Attacks Against Jews and Christians in Europe: ‘An attempt to kill Jews and Christians’

A masked man wrapped in a Palestinian flag firebombed a synagogue in France on Shabbat. His attempt resulted only in damage to the doors of the building, but he also set cars parked outside ablaze, injuring a police officer when one vehicle exploded. French authorities charged the perpetrator with “attempted arson” for a “criminal act.” The Representative Council of Jewish Institutions in France declared: “The blasts were an attempt to kill Jews. The use of a gas canister in a car at a time when worshippers are expected to arrive at the synagogue is not simply a criminal act. This shows an intention to kill.”

In Germany, a Syrian man killed three adults at a town festival. The Islamic State in Iraq and Syria (ISIS) claimed responsibility for the attack, which targeted Christians, with the intent “to avenge Muslims in Palestine and everywhere.” The German Office of the Federal Prosecutor concluded: “His radical Islamic conviction was to kill the largest possible number of those he considers unbelievers.”

The New Communist Party of Italy was widely condemned after publishing a blacklist of 150 Italian Jews and organizations labeled as “Zionist agents” to be “condemned and fought” for supporting Israel. British imams blamed recent far-right riots against Muslims on “Zionists,” ludicrously labeling a prominent far-right leader a Zionist. The Jewish National Fund of Canada lost its charitable status after a review of “biased accusations written by anti-Israel, antisemitic forces.”

A surveillance camera at France’s Beth Yaacov Synagogue captured this image of the terrorist who firebombed the synagogue and cars. He has the Palestinian flag wrapped around his waist and appeared to be carrying bottles filled with chemicals used in the attack on August 24.

1. We need to speak out against the anti-Jewish hatred in our daily lives

Hate has insidiously woven itself into the fabric of our daily lives, especially in schools where young minds are shaped. From biased curricula to normalized anti-Zionist rhetoric that often crosses into antisemitism, this hate is becoming part of the educational environment from kindergartens to universities. It is not enough to quietly disapprove. We must call it out whenever and wherever it appears: a teacher presenting a skewed version of history, a student making inappropriate Holocaust jokes or school policies that limit Jewish participation. Speaking out also serves as an opportunity to educate others because silence only allows this bigotry to grow.

2. Zionism is an essential part of Jewish identity

For the majority of American Jews, Zionism is a manifestation of their cultural or religious identity – reflecting the deep historical connection of the Jewish people to the Land of Israel. While anti-Zionist Jews claim that Zionism is separate from their Jewish identity, there are countless examples contrary to this opinion. Zion is synonymous with Jerusalem and the Land of Israel and is mentioned 157 times in the Tanakh (Hebrew Bible). Jews longed to return to their ancestral homeland for 2,000 years. This includes singing, “Next year in Jerusalem,” at the end of the annual Passover Seder and praying facing Jerusalem. Israel, Jerusalem and Zionism are integral components of Jewish identity.

3. Anti-Zionism = antisemitism

Anti-Zionism often disguises itself as a political view, but it frequently crosses the line into outright antisemitism. The U.S. House passed a resolution equating anti-Zionism with antisemitism last year. There are many similarities between the two related forms of hatred, including attacks against synagogues, blood libels – Israelis harvested Palestinian organs and Jews killed Chirstian children to use their blood to bake matzah – October 7 and Holocaust denials, Zionist and Jewish conspiracy theories and the resulting violence against Jews. Anti-Zionists – often under the facade of pro-Palestinian activism – deny Jewish people the right to self-determination, falsely vilify Israel and spread disinformation about the Jewish state.

4. The ‘Globalize the Intifada’ campaign has deadly consequences

This new campaign, supposedly in support of the Palestinians, targets Jews and non-Jews around the world. The call for a violent uprising is not a mere political slogan – it is a global movement seeking to justify violence by using inciting rhetoric and creating an environment that normalizes crimes. The failed attempt to burn Jews alive inside a French synagogue and the deadly knife rampage against Christians in Germany prove that when anti-Israel activists vow to “Globalize the Intifada” violence is sure to follow. The Second Intifada against Israel included fiery bombings of buses, restaurants and malls.

A. Utilize The Focus Project to educate about the dangers of anti-Zionism

Take active steps to educate your family, friends and colleagues and raise awareness about how anti-Zionism often serves as a cover for antisemitism. Explain the difference between legitimate criticism of Israeli policies and the denial of Jewish self-determination. Provide historical context and examples where anti-Zionist rhetoric has led to anti-Jewish violence. Education is a powerful tool to counter misinformation and hate. Engage in open and respectful discussions, emphasize the nuances of the situation and encourage critical thinking.

B. The best response to harassment is to show more pride in Judaism

In an environment increasingly hostile to visible expressions of Jewish identity, it is vital to find safe ways to assert and celebrate your heritage – or support your Jewish friends. Whether it is wearing a Star of David necklace, displaying a mezuzah on your door or participating in Jewish events, these acts can be powerful symbols of resilience. However, safety must be a priority, so assess the environment and choose ways to express your identity that align with your own comfort level. By standing tall, you contribute to a broader community effort to combat anti-Jewish hatred and promote Jewish identity.

The Foundation to Combat Antisemitism presents key phrases posted online related to antisemitism & Israel:

Data of online and social media activity courtesy of the Foundation to Combat Antisemitism, which publishes a weekly newsletter related to its campaign #StandUpToJewishHate, a new partner of The Focus Project.

Israel Pre-Empts Massive Hezbollah Strike Against Israeli Cities

Iran-backed Hezbollah terrorists were poised to strike Israeli civilians at 5 AM on Aug. 25, according to American and Israeli intelligence. The Israeli Air Force launched a coordinated, pre-emptive strike against Hezbollah rocket launchers before the terror group could launch thousands of deadly rockets, missiles and drones aimed towards Israel’s sleeping population and multiple military installations.

Hezbollah – which has relentlessly targeted Israel with more than 7,000 rockets since 10/8 – once again responded. Israel’s vaunted Iron Dome prevented serious damage, although one Israeli sailor was killed. Hezbollah’s leader claimed that the terror group’s attack was a success and he stated that he reserved the right to strike again. He also warned that Iranian and Houthi attacks would still ensue and claimed that his group’s attacks were meant to support the Hamas-Israel ceasefire negotiation.

U.S. Air Force General Charles Q. Brown, chairman of the Joint Chiefs of Staff, visited Jordan, Egypt and Israel, during ceasefire talks and speculation over an impending direct Iranian attack against Israel. Hamas continues to reject ceasefire agreements.

Iranian proxy terror organizations remain active across the Middle East. An Israeli drone seriously injured a Hamas commander in Lebanon, showing the close coordination among different terrorist groups. Yemen-based Houthi terrorists set a Greek-flagged tanker ablaze in the Red Sea. Environmental groups are noticeably silent about the 150,000 tons of oil leaking into the water.

Stories Impacting American Jews

Stories Impacting the U.S. and Israel

Stories From Around the World

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This content is developed by The Focus Project in partnership with Mercaz USA. The Focus Project distributes weekly news and talking points on timely issues concerning Israel and the Jewish people, including antisemitism, anti-Zionism and the delegitimization of Israel. It represents a consensus view across a spectrum of major American Jewish organizations. Mercaz USA recognizes and respects the diversity of views on these issues among its readers and the community at large.

The Focus Project develops and distributes news, background, history and weekly talking points on timely issues to inform individuals and organizations about issues affecting the American Jewish community and Israel, and help readers speak with more consistency and clarity. The editions also provide potential responses for addressing incidents of antisemitism and anti-Zionism. With input from a spectrum of major American Jewish organizations, we focus on that which unites us, rising above political and individual agendas.
Recognizing that hatred of Jews comes in many forms and directions, we strive to address all sources as they arise, and educate our growing audience on topics ranging from inter-religious relations to relevant international developments. From week to week, we may focus on issues arising from the political left, university campuses, from the political right and from institutions, government, and corporations. We don’t try to address all issues in each edition. We hope you will find this information useful in your writing and/or speaking. We are always open to your feedback: info@focus-project.org.