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Linda Sarsour Blasts Black-Jewish Caucus

Women’s March co-leader Linda Sarsour has come out swinging against the newly formed Congressional Black-Jewish Caucus, citing the involvement of a Jewish GOP congressman. Ms. Sarsour, a Palestinian-American progressive activist, called the caucus a “joke” over the role of co-founder Rep. Lee Zeldin, New York Republican, whom she blasted as a “notorious anti-Arab, anti-Palestinian, anti-Muslim bigot.”

Rep. Zeldin expected to reintroduce Anti-Semitism Awareness Act in Congress

If enacted, it would require the U.S. Department of Education to adopt the U.S. State Department’s definition of anti-Semitism in evaluating incidents on college campuses and at other educational institutions.


Pending Governor's Signature, Oregon Will Join 10 States Requiring Holocaust Education

Public schools in Oregon will be required to teach students about the Holocaust and the concept of genocide, born from a meeting between two unlikely partners.

John Hagee: Anti-Semitism has been Dangerously Rebranded

This new rebranded form of anti-Semitism is exceptionally dangerous. Like a mutating virus, the bigots have learned and adapted. They know they must tap into acceptable streams of thought, on both the right and left, in order to infect their political hosts.

Arkansas Attorney General Defends Anti-BDS Law in Ongoing Appeal

An Arkansas law prohibiting the state from contracting with entities that boycott Israel does not violate the First Amendment.

DeSantis, Florida's Governor, Signs Anti-Semitism Bill

Florida now has some sharper teeth to address anti-Semitism in public schools. Governor Ron DeSantis signed the anti-Semitism bill, Wednesday, during his trade mission trip in Israel. The new law was effective immediately. 

‘An Anti-Semitism Crisis’: NYPD Records Staggering 83% Rise In Hate Crimes

NYPD statistics reveal that hate crimes have increased by a whopping 83% — and the City Council's speaker minced no words in lamenting the epidemic presently afflicting the city with the nation's largest Jewish population as "an anti-Semitism crisis."

Hate crimes fuel push for state security funds

The number of hate crimes -- including crimes motivated by race, religion, ethnicity and more -- reported to the state increased by almost 10 percent to a 10-year high in 2017.

With anti-Semitic New York City saw an 82% year-to-year jump in anti-Semitic hate crimes in the first four months of this year.

Rabbi David Niederman, executive director of the United Jewish Organization of Williamsburg, center left, joins City Council Speaker Corey Johnson, center right, in Brooklyn on Monday. Photo Credit: Corey Sipkin

Rabbi David Niederman, executive director of the United Jewish Organization of Williamsburg, center left, joins City Council Speaker Corey Johnson, center right, in Brooklyn on Monday. Photo Credit: Corey Sipkin

With a spike in reports of anti-Semitic hate crimes in New York City, Council Speaker Corey Johnson is calling on the mayor to fully fund a new prevention initiative.  

Johnson joined rabbis, other elected officials and anti-hate groups in Williamsburg on Monday to address the 82% jump year-to-year in anti-Semitic hate crimes in the first four months of 2019. More recent attacks include one incident on May 7 in which an Orthodox Jewish man was sucker punched in the back of his head. 

"No one should feel unsafe over their faith," Johnson said. 

He said police and community leaders have worked hard to bring some perpetrators to justice but stressed there is more work to be done when it comes to preventing hate crimes and the anti-Semitic rhetoric that he said is on the rise around the country.

He urged the mayor to provide full funding in his budget for the Office of Prevention of Hate Crimes, which was approved by the Council in the winter.

The mayor has allocated $336,000 from his executive budget for the office, but Johnson's office said the initiative will require an additional $139,000 this fiscal year to bring the total up to $475,000. Next fiscal year, Johnson's office said, the cost will grow to $713,000. 

The intention is for the office to have a coordinator, appointed by the mayor, who will work with various agencies on strategies to combat hate crimes. There is currently no clear coordination between the NYPD and the Department of Education for responding to hate crime incidents, according to Johnson.

"This office would do that," he explained.

Johnson said another role for the new office is to come up with initiatives to teach tolerance to New Yorkers of all ages. Rabbi Joseph Potasnik, the executive vice president of the New York Board of Rabbis, said that would go a long way. 

"We talk about the three Rs: reading writing and arithmetic. We need to add another R: respect," he said. "We need to teach our young people respect."

While the mayor did not sign the bill to create the Office of Prevention of Hate Crimes when it was passed by the Council in January (it automatically matured into law the next month), he said he supports it.  

“In New York City, we celebrate our differences and reject any attempt to hate and divide. That’s why we funded The Office of Hate Crime Prevention to prevent these heinous crimes before they occur. Hate will never be tolerated in this city,” he said in a statement. 

Johnson and religious leaders said Monday that there appeared to be a rise in anti-Semitism related to the ongoing measles outbreak in the Orthodox Jewish communities in Brooklyn. The speaker reiterated that the Jewish community advocates vaccination and that only a small group of uninformed people are responsible for spreading dangerous misinformation.

Civil Rights Complaint Alleges NYU's Negligence Allows Anti-Semitism to Grow on Campus

The College Fix reported NYU Senior Adela Cojab filed a complaint with the Department of Education's Office for Civil Rights last month, accusing the university of failing to take action against SJP and its members for their "anti-Semitic vandalism, verbal attacks, and outright violence."

Is Qatar Bankrolling U.S. Colleges For BDS Support?

A conservative watch group, Judicial Watch, has joined Zachor Legal Institute in its attempt to discover where Texas A&M receives its funding on Monday.