Jews in the US are so often conflated with both whiteness and power, that when we cry Anti-Semitism, it rings hollow to most. While there are some very powerful Jews (who don’t in fact run the global conspiracy), Jews worked very hard for decades to take on the mantle of whiteness in this country. Never fully succeeding, but almost. Just enough. Enough that we can’t be viewed as vulnerable. Enough that a discussion of our oppression is a distasteful centering of a privileged experience, because we don’t believe that Jews experience poverty. Or structural disenfranchisement. The reality is that Jews are between 1-2% of the US population, and that at least 20% of Jews live in poverty, and that number is growing every year.
Monthly Archives: December 2019
TO OUR READERS CELEBRATING CHRISTMAS
Each of Us is a Small Light, Together We are a Bright Illumination—by Ayala Emmet
My Hanukkah celebration began with my email filled with Happy Hanukkah wishes from family, friends and people of different faith communities. For those of us celebrating tonight we remember that Hanukkah, the Festival of Light is a celebration of freedom.
Hanukkah represents a fundamental human right to freedom and has historic and contemporary significance. The right to freedom stretches from the festival historic origins in the Maccabean Revolt in the second century B.C.E., all through the ages, in our world and in the United States in 2019.
Speaker Pelosi Stunned the Fixers: Impeaching Trump by Ayala Emmett
This is the story of a man who took no responsibility for his mistakes or misdeeds or breaking the law. In a life strung together by bankruptcy, cheating, lying, and illegal practices he was surrounded by people who fixed things to allow him to come out unscathed. The man could rely on those who were willing, for a price, to make sure that he would never have to take responsibility for bankruptcies, sexual assaults, racist practices, breaking contracts and engaging in a range of shady dealings.
Do Palestinians and liberal Diaspora Jews each have the one thing the other needs the most? by Rebecca Sealfon
“If I forget thee, O Jerusalem, may my right hand forget its skill!” –Psalm 137:5
There’s just something about Judaism. We’re fully Abrahamic, but don’t ideologically enforce doctrines as specific as Jesus’ divinity or even Muhammad’s prophethood. We’ve survived for thousands of years carrying traditions from each place we’ve been. We’re in so many other countries, but not quite of those countries. We’re an introspective culture with an ancient, powerful tradition of thoughtful dissent. Perhaps this is what gave us the mindset to beat at the heart of the Islamic Golden Age, the European Enlightenment, and now the American technological revolution.