Anti-Semitism on the Left: What Happens When Your Cause Turns Against You? Podcast

From the Dyke March to the Women’s March, social justice organizations have become hostile to Jews.

Anti-Semitism on the left
Gretchen Rachel Hammond

Today you’re going to meet two people, two Jewish activists who thought they were fighting alongside people who believed as they did, who believed in social justice. But found, instead, that their status as Jews placed them apart from their peers. It surprised them at first, this anti-Semitism on the left.

Jews are used to Nazis. But when Jewish activists face hatred from the left, it stings harder because these are people who are supposed to have their back. And this seems to be happening more and more. Under the guise of anti-Zionism, it’s spilling over into blatant anti-Semitism on the left.

There are those who say that we shouldn’t confuse the two. But it’s getting more and more difficult. Somehow, through layers and layers of mythology about Jews and about the Israeli-Palestinian conflict, Jews are being made to feel uncomfortable, and in some cases, actually purged, from causes they believe in.

Anti-Semitism on the left
Nisi Jacobs

Gretchen Rachel Hammond lost her job after her coverage of the Chicago Dyke March in 2017. That was when three Jewish women were kicked out of the demonstration for waving a Star of David pride flag. But there’s so much more to Gretchen’s story. Listen in her own words.

Nisi Jacobs has been marching for social justice for a long time. So, of course she was with the original Women’s March to protest President Trump. Then, suddenly, the Women’s March stopped being about women as the leadership pivoted to embrace anti-Semite Louis Farrakhan and attack Israel. Nisi talks to me about what she and other Jewish women did next. They launched the Women’s March for All. But, of course, there’s much more to Nisi’s story.

Listen to the entire podcast below.

 

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