Sharona1970
Sharona1970 t1_itqdycv wrote
This has not been my experience. I have found that antisemitism is often applauded in spaces where racism against black or brown people would never be tolerated. And this antisemitism comes from people on the left and the right of the political spectrum equally, just in different forms. It also comes from people all over the world, from all types of socioeconomic backgrounds, with all sorts of gender expressions and gender identities, from all sorts of religions and ethnicities, and from atheists and from people with all different levels of educational achievement. So much so that Ayaan Hirsi Ali, a noted ex Muslim, who never even met a Jew before she emigrated to the Netherlands, apologized to Jews for her former antisemitism. When it’s considered a good thing to be white, we are not considered white. When it’s a good thing to be black or brown, we are considered white. We are blamed for being rich and blamed for being poor, blamed for being capitalist and blamed for being socialist or communist. We are blamed for our own victimhood. A few years back a Jewish man was murdered in New Jersey. His neighbors expressed anger at the Jewish community for “bringing that here”. Here on Reditt there was a video of a Jewish guy being punched in the face, the act was applauded by hundreds of people, likely people who would never say the same about a black man being punched.
Sharona1970 t1_iu8mrdj wrote
Reply to To Kill a Mockingbird by turkeyjizz
Interesting. Any sixth grader in my culture would grasp the impact and the message of this story quite easily. I come from an Orthodox Jewish background where children are taught about the Holocaust in great detail and it is discussed often probably starting in fourth or fifth grade. Many kids in the community who are that age have great grandparents who were Holocaust survivors. We all have a deep understanding of how horrible people can be to their fellow human beings. What we do not have is any sort of collective guilt over the terrible treatment of black people in this country’s history.