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December 6, 2022

Coalition Sends Letter to Elon Musk Urging Twitter to Adopt International Antisemitism Definition

A global coalition of 180+ civil rights organizations has published an open letter calling on Twitter CEO Elon Musk to adopt an internationally agreed upon definition of antisemitism that could be used to flag and remove content promoting hate from the platform.

The letter asks Musk to incorporate into Twitter’s content guidelines the International Holocaust Remembrance Alliance’s working definition of antisemitism, which is widely used as an international standard for identifying antisemitic language, acts and violence.

The definition covers various types of antisemitism, including justifying the killing of Jews in the name of radical ideology, Holocaust denial, and denying the Jewish people right to self-determination in Israel. It has been adopted by more than 40 countries, including the United States, and is used by hundreds of educational institutions, government entities and international organizations.

Upon acquiring Twitter, Musk announced the formation of a Content Moderation Council to advise the company on issues related to content monitoring and account reinstatement. What this spells for antisemitic content is not entirely clear: Musk has said that Twitter will only take down tweets that violate U.S. law, a policy that, according to the open letter’s signees, may be less effective in curbing the spread of hateful content than adopting the IHRA’s antisemitism definition.

“To maximize the probability that the future is good, the world needs an online platform where everyone can participate,” the letter read. “Unfortunately, this is not the case, as Jewish users are subject to unrelenting harassment on Twitter.”

Tal-Or Cohen’s company CyberWell uncovered more than 1,000 examples of tweets that violate the IHRA’s working definition of antisemitism. Many of these tweets, which include language denying or downplaying the Holocaust and aspersions about Jewish people in entertainment, were enclosed within the letter to Musk.

“Data must be the cornerstone of our fight against online antisemitism,” said Cohen. “In the face of skyrocketing digital Jew-hatred, social media platforms should take meaningful actions and integrate the IHRA definition into their community standards.”

Musk’s acquisition of Twitter in a landmark, $44 billion transaction in October has sent shockwaves across the global social media ecosystem and raised questions about whether Musk, a self-proclaimed “free speech absolutist,” will take action against hateful speech, disinformation and bot accounts. Mass layoffs and resignations at Twitter have dominated the past month, eliminating more than half of the platform’s workforce and casting further doubt on whether it will be able to effectively counter misinformation and hate.

Still, some of the letter’s signees say, this moment could be an opportunity to address the problems that have allowed antisemitism to spread on the site.

“Sadly, the Jewish people are not strangers to hate. It is likely that people will die if hate speech found on Twitter is allowed to flourish,” said Archie Gottesman, Co-Founder of JewBelong, a nonprofit that fights antisemitism. “We urge Mr. Musk and Twitter to do the right thing and adopt IHRA Working definition of antisemitism. You will literally save lives.”

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When Antisemites Sue the Jews

The Al Jazeera media network has filed suit against Israel over the accidental shooting of its reporter, Shireen Abu Akleh, last May. The history of extremists suing prominent Jews suggests that Al Jazeera may regret what its lawsuit will reveal.

The suit that Al Jazeera has filed in the International Criminal Court could shine an embarrassing spotlight on the network itself. Those who do not regularly follow Al Jazeera might be surprised to learn that it is “a major exporter of hateful content against the Jewish people, Israel, and the United States,” according to the Anti-Defamation League.

The ADL points out that Al Jazeera “has sought to cast doubt upon the Nazi genocide of the Jewish people” (referring to it as “the alleged Holocaust”); “routinely glorifies violence against Israeli Jews”; and has ranted against what it calls “the control of the Jews over the pornography industry.” Al Jazeera also has a record of “providing a platform to all manner of virulent anti-Israel and even anti-Semitic extremists” in its commentary sections, the ADL notes.

Another question is whether Al Jazeera should be compelled to register with the U.S. Justice Department as a foreign agent, just as the Russian television channel RT was required to register as an agent of the Russian government. Al Jazeera was founded by the government of Qatar, receives funding from the government, and maintains “extensive ties to the Qatari regime,” according to the ADL. Both Al Jazeera and the Qatari corporation for public broadcasting are overseen by the same government official, and the U.S. ambassador in Doha “determined a number of years ago that Qatar’s government uses Al Jazeera as a tool of Qatari statecraft,” the ADL reports.

Hearings before the ICC about the Abu Akleh case would enable the defense to ask uncomfortable questions about both the content of Al Jazeera’s reporting and the details of its relationship with Qatar.

Al Jazeera’s lawsuit against Israel is somewhat reminiscent of the legal actions initiated by the antisemitic agitator Benjamin Freedman against American Jewish organizations in the 1940s.

Freedman, a New York businessman who was born Jewish but embraced Catholicism, placed large advertisements in the American press in 1946 accusing Jews of trying to “drag [the U.S.] into a war to create a nationalist sovereign Jew state in Palestine.” The ads were signed by the “League for Peace with Justice in Palestine,” accompanied by the names of Freedman, as a “representative” of “Persons of the Jewish Faith,” R. M. Schoendorf, representing “Persons of the Christian Faith,” and Habib I. Katibah, on behalf of “Persons of Arab Ancestry.”

The American Jewish Committee charged that the purported interfaith coalition was a sham. “R. M. Schoendorf” was actually Freedman’s wife, Rose, and Katibah was—as the AJC described him—a veteran “Arab propagandist” who did not represent any constituency. Freedman promptly filed suit, demanding $5-million in damages.

An AJC leader welcomed the suit as “an opportunity to demonstrate in court the nature and character” of Freedman and his alleged organization. The suit was dismissed before it went far enough to delve into those details, but two years later, the litigious Mr. Freedman re-opened that pandora’s box.

In 1948, Freedman’s attorney and close associate, Hallam Richardson, sued the Non-Sectarian Anti-Nazi League because one of its pamphlets stated that the two men had “long been known in the halls of pro-Fascist propagandists.” The hearings before the Manhattan Magistrates Court proved disastrous for Freedman’s side.

The defense produced a cable sent by Freedman to Haj Amin el-Husseini, the Palestinian Arab mufti and Nazi collaborator, praising el-Husseini’s “vision, courage, strength, and struggle [on] behalf [of] justice” and vowing “fullest cooperation” with the mufti’s war against the Jews. The defense also revealed a document in which Freedman reported to an associate that he had recently “negotiated [the] immediate establishment” of a “sub-machine gun factory” in Pakistan. On the witness stand, Freedman refused to explain how the machine guns were to be used.

Freedman made for a colorful witness, not least because he kept shooting himself in the foot. In one outburst, he denounced the journalists covering the trial as “lice.” He also used the insulting term “Jew state,” for which the court repeatedly admonished him.

Nor did it help that Freedman’s colleague and attorney, Hallam Richardson, had worked with one of the era’s most notorious antisemites, Joe McWilliams of the “Christian Mobilizers” movement. “When [Richardson] talks about representing McWilliams, of course he has the right to represent him,” the judge remarked. “But when he becomes an associate of McWilliams, the notorious hate-monger, he has very little to complain about.”

Not surprisingly, the judge dismissed the suit, finding that Freedman was “a crack-pot” and that the Non-Sectarian League’s criticism of him and Richardson was “proven to be true.”

If Al Jazeera’s directors are not familiar with Benjamin Freedman, this might be the time to read up on him. While they apparently believe their lawsuit will expose something unfavorable about Israel, it is more likely that it will end up revealing facts about Al Jazeera that they might prefer not be made public.


Dr. Medoff is founding director of The David S. Wyman Institute for Holocaust Studies and author of more than 20 books about Jewish history and the Holocaust. His latest is America and the Holocaust: A Documentary History, published by the Jewish Publication Society & University of Nebraska Press.

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Important AMCHA Study on Jewish Identity Goes Beyond Harvard

The “assault on Jewish identity” on college campuses, which AMCHA documented in a new study released this week, is noteworthy for its breadth and scope. The media headlines, however, have focused on one college, Harvard, because more incidents were reported on that campus.

As important as Harvard is, though, it’s equally important to draw attention to everything else in the study, which includes “the nature, scope and trajectory of the threats to Jewish identity on over 100 college and university campuses most popular with Jewish students.”

Among some of the major findings:

    1. Incidents involving the suppression, denigration or challenges to the definition of Jewish identity were found on nearly 60% of the campuses most popular with Jewish students, with several schools playing host to 10 or more such incidents in the 2021-2022 academic year.
    2. Incidents involving attacks on Jewish identity increased 100% to 200% in the academic year following the Israel-Hamas war, with the number of affected schools also increasing dramatically.
    3. Faculty and academic departments played a significant role in attacks on Jewish student identity: schools with academic BDS-supporting faculty were three to seven times more likely to have such attacks, and more than one-third of anti-Zionist challenges to well-established definitions of Zionism, Judaism and antisemitism took place in programs sponsored by academic departments.
    4. Jewish anti-Zionist individuals and organizations such as Jewish Voice for Peace (JVP) played a significant role in attacks on Jewish identity, with the presence of a JVP or similar Jewish anti-Zionist group more than doubling the likelihood that a campus will play host to incidents involving the redefinition or denigration of Jewish identity.

Beyond the individual campuses, the most crucial finding in the study is the “insidious phenomenon that has taken root on college campuses of late: a pervasive and relentless assault on Jewish identity that is likely to have dire consequences for the Jewish community in the years to come.”

I wrote about this phenomenon recently when the Journal reported on the nine student law groups at UC Berkeley that changed their bylaws to eliminate any Zionist speakers. This was a “different type of antisemitism,” I wrote, “and it caught much of the community off guard.”

The point was not simply to attack Jews but to erase their identity. “This is not just offensive,” I added, “it’s humiliating. What made it even more humiliating is that no other group got this treatment — not Nazis, not homophobes, not transphobes, not Islamophobes, not racists.”

The AMCHA study has done the Jewish community a major service by showing the full dimension of this phenomenon, providing multiple examples and summarizing the implications as follows:

“In the short term, the pervasive and well-coordinated attacks on Jewish identity will undoubtedly result in increasing numbers of Jewish students feeling the need to hide their Jewish identity on campus, or to detach from Jewish life partially or completely.

“In the long term, the sheer scope of the assault on Jewish student identity – which is negatively affecting the level of communal identification and participation of an entire generation of young Jewish adults – presages a major crisis for American Jewry.”

What exacerbates the crisis is that the nature of the assault makes it harder to combat. Redefining Jewishness and its relationship to Israel, the study notes, “directly challenges the recognition of anti-Zionist harassment as a violation of anti-discrimination law.”

In other words, as the study elaborates: “Efforts focusing on using anti-discrimination law such as Title VI of the 1964 Civil Rights Act to ensure that Jewish students are recognized and treated exactly as any other ‘protected class’ group when it comes to addressing anti-Zionist motivated harassment face considerable challenges because of the nature of the current assault on Jewish identity.”

As if those challenges weren’t enough, the study adds that “the pervasive denigration of Zionist Jews with antisemitic tropes of Jewish power and privilege threatens the assumption that Jews constitute an identity group worthy of ‘protected class’ status.”

Nevertheless, the study calls for the community to rise to the challenge and find “effective strategies” to tackle this insidious problem, noting that:

“Alternative approaches based on an understanding that all students, including Jewish students, have a constitutional right to be equally and adequately protected from behavior that limits their self-expression and ability to fully participate in campus life, irrespective of their identity or the motivation of the perpetrator, must be pursued.”

Perhaps most importantly, the study reminds us of the power of Judaism and Jewish community to strengthen Jewish identity:

“The Jewish community must invest in strengthening Jewish life on campus and enabling Jewish students of all backgrounds and levels of prior Jewish engagement to be part of a vibrant community that can provide the support, encouragement, education and fellowship necessary for not only weathering a toxic campus climate, but thriving as Jews.”

That strengthening of Jewish life and Jewish pride should apply to all campuses, Harvard included.

Important AMCHA Study on Jewish Identity Goes Beyond Harvard Read More »

Nike Cuts Ties with Kyrie Irving Following Antisemitism Controversy

Nike has officially ended their partnership with Brooklyn Nets star Kyrie Irving on December 5 after the point guard posted a link to an antisemitic film on Amazon.

The Athletic’s Shams Charania was the first to report on the development on Twitter, citing a Nike spokesperson. Nike had suspended their relationship with Irving on November 4, saying in a statement at the time: “At Nike, we believe there is no place for hate speech and we condemn any form of antisemitism. To that end we’ve made the decision to suspend our relationship with Kyrie Irving effective immediately and will no longer launch the Kyrie 8 [shoe brand].” The Kyrie 8 had been scheduled to become available in November.

Irving’s agent and stepmother Shtellia Riley Irving said in a statement that it was a mutual decision for Irving and Nike to go their separate ways. Following The Athletic’s report, Irving tweeted a gif that said: “There’s nothing more priceless than being free.” A couple hours later he tweeted, “Anyone who has even spent their hard earned money on anything I have ever released, I consider you FAMILY and we are forever connected. it’s time to show how powerful we are as a community.”

The movie in question, “Hebrews to Negroes: Wake Up America,” promotes “claims that modern Jews are imposters who stole the religious heritage of Black people” as well as “claims of a global Jewish conspiracy to oppress and defraud Black people” among other antisemitic tropes, according to the Anti-Defamation League (ADL). Irving was suspended for several NBA games and eventually apologized for sharing a link to the film.

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Talking Schiff with Mark & Lowell #14: Funny is Funny

Join Mark and Lowell this week for another Talking Schiff as these funny guys ponder the topic of being funny. 

Mark’s new book “Why Not?: Lessons on Comedy, Courage, and Chutzpah” is available and makes a great holiday gift! ❤️💚🎄🕎

Click on these links to buy:
Amazon
Barnes & Noble
Books-A-Million
Bookshop.org

Please follow “You Don’t Know Schiff” so you don’t miss out on any exciting episodes. Click here to subscribe on Apple Podcasts (and please leave us 5 stars and a positive review – your support means the world to us and it helps us get discovered by new listeners):

Your hosts:
markschiff.com
Twitter: @markschiff
Instagram: markschiff1
 

Lowell Benjamin
Twitter: @lowellcbenjamin
Instagram: @lowellcbenjamin

 

Talking Schiff with Mark & Lowell #14: Funny is Funny Read More »

Talking Schiff with Mark & Lowell #14: Funny is Funny

Join Mark and Lowell this week for another Talking Schiff as these funny guys ponder the topic of being funny. 

Mark's new book “Why Not?: Lessons on Comedy, Courage, and Chutzpah” is available and makes a great holiday gift! ❤️💚🎄🕎

Click on these links to buy:
Amazon
Barnes & Noble
Books-A-Million
Bookshop.org

Please follow “You Don’t Know Schiff” so you don’t miss out on any exciting episodes. Click here to subscribe on Apple Podcasts (and please leave us 5 stars and a positive review – your support means the world to us and it helps us get discovered by new listeners):

Your hosts:
markschiff.com
Twitter: @markschiff
Instagram: markschiff1
 

Lowell Benjamin
Twitter: @lowellcbenjamin
Instagram: @lowellcbenjamin

Talking Schiff with Mark & Lowell #14: Funny is Funny Read More »