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A difficult era for American Jews, including in Utah

03/13/2025 07:34:56 PM

Mar13

Deseret News

Rabbi Samuel Spector poses for a portrait inside the sanctuary with the ark, the cabinet in which the Torah scrolls are stored, standing behind him at Congregation Kol Ami in Salt Lake City on Friday, Feb. 28, 2025.

Anti-Defamation League CEO Jonathan Greenblatt struck a troubling contrast in his recent State of Hate address, that he titled, “Never is Now.”

While Greenblatt thanked God for a possible end to the Israel-Hamas war, he also highlighted the deep, growing sense of fear experienced by American Jews.

“The ground beneath us has profoundly shifted since (Oct. 7),” he said. “We are in a new era. One (researcher has said) that the ‘golden age’ of American Jewry is over.”

And while Utah prides itself on its religious freedom protections, Jews in Utah say they are also experiencing this fear.

A survey out from the American Jewish Committee in February found that a majority (56%) of American Jews report that they have changed their behavior due to the rise in antisemitism since Oct. 7, 2023.

This is the first time in the history of the AJC’s reports that a majority of Jews expressed fears of persecution.

The ADL found that more antisemitic incidents have occurred in the year since Oct. 7 than any other time in the last 45 years. Troublingly, prejudice is growing particularly quickly among young Americans.

And it’s not just that anti-Jewish extremism is rising. It’s also that anti-Jewish extremism is normalizing. Tropes about dual loyalty and conspiratorial control of media and the Wall Street abound on social media, per Time. More Americans incorporate anti-Jewish statements into Israel-Hamas war protests. And more Americans — over a quarter of survey respondents, including over half of Gen Z respondents — either support Hamas over Israel or at least find it acceptable if their close friends or family members support Hamas.

Rabbi Samuel Spector of Congregation Kol Ami in Salt Lake City, painted a concerning picture of the situation facing his community.

“Since Oct. 7 ... we have received multiple bomb threats,” he reported to the Deseret News. “We have been harassed and received threatening emails, phone calls, social media comments. People have also driven past our synagogue and harassed our congregation.”

Congregation Kol Ami has also added security upgrades — “literally, hundreds of thousands of dollars,” said Rabbi Spector — in the form of physical systems and armed security.

“I’ve gotten things telling me just like, how disgusting Jews are, and how much people hate Jews, and what a terrible person I am,” Rabbi Spector said. “I talked to a woman (in my congregation) yesterday ... people would, in her work, purposefully in front of her, make very derogatory comments about Israel, or ... say things to her like, ‘what do you think about Israel murdering all these babies?’”

He described the demonization of the Israeli state, calling it antisemitism “mask(ing) itself as anti-Israel sentiment (that) does so in a way that intimidates local Jewish populations ... (and) applies double standards to Israel that no other country in the world is held to.”

For context, the Jerusalem Post reported that the vast majority of Jews self-identify as Zionists, meaning they support the existence of a Jewish state.

Jewish students at the University of Utah were harassed by protestors shouting “Free Palestine” while in the act of praying. A Salt Lake City bar instituted a “No Zionists Allowed” policy in 2024. Rabbi Spector recounted stories of his friends, family and students taking off their yarmulkes for fear of being identified as Jewish.

He said he’s noticed antisemitism coming from both sides of the political aisle.

“I think people on the right are really good at calling out left-wing antisemitism, while people on the left are really good at calling out right-wing antisemitism, but I keep encouraging folks to call it out when it’s your own side, too,” Rabbi Spector told the Deseret News.

Read the full article here

Wed, April 30 2025 2 Iyyar 5785