The Observer Vol. 87 No. 9 – September 2022

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the

bserver

Jewish

www.jewishobservernashville.org

Vol. 86 No. 9 • September 2022

Shana Tova 5783

Jewish Federation & Jewish Foundation of Nashville and Middle Tennessee Community Incident Report Audit September 2022 Introduction This report serves as the first-ever annual summary of incidents that have taken place in the Greater Nashville area with respect to antisemitism, broadly defined. The report will also chronicle other security-related activities taken by the community over this period as well as provide a national and state-wide context to these issues. The goal is this report is to not scare – but rather to clearly indicate what has taken place in this community and highlight the steps taken by communal organizations considering these incidents, as well as to provide a global understanding of these trends. National Overview In the 2021 – 2022 period, there were 2,717 incidents of antisemitism reported to the ADL. This is an increase from 34% the previous year, which itself was a record, when 2,026 such incidents were reported. Of this total, 1,776 incidents were of a harassing nature, whereas 853 were categorized as vandalism and there were 88 reports of physical assault. The overall themes identified with respect to this increase in incidents include a relationship to the war between

Israel and Hamas and extremist actions by known US-based groups. In the May 2021 period, there was a decided increase in antisemitic activity and anti-Israel and anti-Zionist activity (as a sub-set), with common refrains such as ‘Israel has no right to exist’ and ‘From the River to the Sea’. Further, with respect to extremist actions, known extremist groups or individuals inspired by extremist ideology were responsible for 484 incidents in 2021, up from 332 incidents in 2020. This represents 18% of the total number of incidents in 2021. All the incidents emerged from adherents of right-wing or white supremacist ideologies. Of the 484 Continued on page 10

Jewish Federation Announces 2022 Homeland Security Grants

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he Jewish Federation & Jewish Foundation of Greater Nashville and Middle Tennessee is happy to announce that several organizations within the Jewish community have received FY 2022 Department of Homeland Security non-profit security grants, with grants totaling $782,708. Organizations receiving these funds include Akiva School, Congregation Micah, Congregation Sherith Israel, Gordon Jewish Community Center, The Temple – Ohabai Shalom, West End Synagogue and Vanderbilt University Hillel. These funds will help cover necessary and important security needs throughout the community and will help make these facilities even more secure than they are at present. These awards are the result of a collaboration process between the Federations and its many partner organizations, for the benefit of the entire Jewish community of Nashville. • A Publication of the

5 Elul 5782 - 5 Tishrei 5783

Nashville Jewish Community Welcomes New Shaliach: Omer Shabat, page 2

HAS YOUR LATEST ENERGY BILL MADE IT HARD FOR YOU TO WWW.JEWISHNASHVILLE.ORG MAKE ENDS MEET? Jewish Family Service can help.

New Year Greetings, page 25

Antisemitism Darkens the Doorsteps of Nashville Area Homes By BARBARA DAB

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arly last month West Nashville neighborhoods surrounding the Gordon Jewish Community Center, and in Richland/Cherokee Park behind West End Synagogue and Congregation Sherith Israel, were littered with packets of antisemitic flyers. This is latest example of rising antisemitism around the country. The Antidefamation League’s most recent report shows more than a 30% increase nationally in antisemitic incidents. Local law enforcement, political and civic leaders were quick to denounce the littering of the flyers. A public statement made by Mayor John Cooper, Vice Mayor Jim Shulman, Metro Nashville Police Chief John Drake, Council Members Kathleen Murphy and Thom Druffel, The Jewish Federation of Nashville and Middle Tennessee and the Gordon Jewish Community Center, reads in part: “Hateful, divisive rhetoric and antisemitism have no place in Nashville, TN. “Antisemitic attacks are on the rise and continue to expand throughout the country. Painfully, Nashville is not immune. Nashville residents both Jewish and non-Jewish have been confronted by antisemitic messages not only on social media, but also at their homes and in their communities… “This disturbing antisemitic propaganda is similar in tone and style to that used for generations to target the Jewish people and paint them as the enemy. Once Jews are defined and identified as the Jewish Family Service Provides Financial Assistance in Uncertain Times, page 6

enemy, anything done against Jews can be justified. “As a community, we will not tolerate these actions. We stand united in support of the Jewish community, and against the extremism and hatred of a small but dangerous faction of our city.” The mostly non-Jewish neighbors, who found the flyers littering their lawns and driveways filed police reports and took to social media to express their outrage and support for the Jewish community. Vicki Dooley was one such neighbor. She says she was out for a bike ride and upon her return she spotted a group of neighbors clustered around talking. “It was so disturbing; we couldn’t just throw those things in the trash. I said it should be reported immediately, so we called the JCC and then the police,” she says. She says the group was contacted by Adam Bronstone, Director of Planning and Israel Partnerships with The Jewish Federation and Jewish Foundation of Nashville and Middle Tennessee, who responded quickly with information and support. “Adam explained the intense network of law enforcement that deals with this type of thing. He also educated us about antisemitism,” she says. Dooley, who is a retired Metro Nashville Public Schools teacher, says while this latest incident seems small, things like this cannot be ignored. “None of us [who received the flyers] are Jewish, but we were disgusted, saddened, and upset. It makes you think about antisemitism through the years.” To date, no specific group has been identified as responsible for the flyers, but similar incidents were reported in other parts of the country, mainly in neighborhoods near synagogues, Jewish Community Centers, and other Jewish buildings. Rabbi Saul Strosberg of Congregation Sherith Israel says several of his congregants received the flyers, as well as non-Jewish neighbors. He says it was upsetting for everyone, but that it is important to be clear to address the act itself rather than the content of the flyers. “It shows where we are on the conContinued on page 11

Rosh Hashanah Greetings, page 25

Congregations High Holy Day Schedules page 30


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