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Behind the Aegis

(53,919 posts)
Mon May 1, 2017, 04:37 AM May 2017

(Jewish Group) Trump-era anti-Semitism changed my family we started going to synagogue

THIS IS THE JEWISH GROUP!!

My grandmother took a bunch of photo albums and boxes down from a closet and told me about how her mother’s family name was shortened — Americanized — after they passed through Ellis Island. I sifted through the photos, examining each one and listening to the stories my grandmother remembered about the people staring back at me in shades of black and grey, chins and noses pronounced, hair dark.

--snip---

Suddenly, the relative safety and privilege that I grew up with as a white American Jew has cracked wide open, revealing the rotten underbelly that’s always been here, the one I have chosen not to see. Anti-Semitic hate crimes are at their highest levels in years. Jewish Community Centers around the country are getting bomb threats at an alarming rate. Steve Bannon, an anti-Semite, is in the White House. Swastikas appear like hideous confetti, decorating walls and buildings all over the country. Jewish cemeteries have been vandalized. This hatred is not new; it has been here all along. But its brashness is something new. It is meaner, darker, more ominous. It is more urgent. It is knocking on my door, begging to come in.

And while President Trump may have reminded us about his Jewish family members, and assured us at a recent press conference that we’re “going to see a lot of love” under his administration, so far, I don’t see it. And using his family to prove he isn’t anti-Semitic is about as effective as using one’s black friend to prove they’re not racist. It’s empty, hollow, a silencing tactic. Of course, there are other communities that have much more to be afraid of under Trump’s reign, marginalized people whose fears are more urgent and are already playing out in devastating ways via ICE raids, deportations, and imminent threats of violence. People of color in America who have been afraid their entire lives, for whom this kind of fear is not new. A fear that my grandparents and their parents felt, that my own children may, too. A fear that has turned walking into synagogue with my family into an act of bravery.

---snip---

We come from the oppressed and, mostly, we have become privileged through the assimilation of many Jews into whiteness. But with assimilation and privilege can come complacency, which is something that many white Jews like myself and the people I grew up with can fall into all too easily. It is through complacency that we forget even the recent past, the Holocaust of only two generations ago. It is through complacency that we can become perpetrators of the oppression we were once victims of via a vote for Trump or a belief in marginalized people’s ability to “bootstrap” their way to success.

---snip---

Our existence is resistance in and of itself, but it’s time to do more. Today I teach my children to assert our faith and become part of a Jewish community when once again the world tells us that we don’t deserve to exist. But we do deserve to exist, and we will fight for that right, just like we always have.

entire article

There exists a battle within our community but also exists outside of it in alleged and supposed "allies."
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(Jewish Group) Trump-era anti-Semitism changed my family we started going to synagogue (Original Post) Behind the Aegis May 2017 OP
I often wondered .. How did Hitler manage to come to power and convince millions to commit Le Gaucher May 2017 #1
 

Le Gaucher

(1,547 posts)
1. I often wondered .. How did Hitler manage to come to power and convince millions to commit
Mon May 1, 2017, 07:15 AM
May 2017

Horrendous crimes.


I think the answer lies in the fact that there is a savage beast in each of us..And Trump at least partially is tapping into it the way probably Hitler did.

My most stomach churning moment was during the campaign when a black protester was being escorted out Trump said ( iam paraphrasing) " In the good old days .. These people would have been treated real rough" ..and the crowd went into raptures with howls of approval. They knew exactly what he meant.

That moment should have been a pivotal moment of the campaign when America should have turned against the bastard.. Except that it did not turn out that way. Surprise!!

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