POLICY COMMITMENT
Antisemitism
"America and Israel share a special bond. Our relations are unique among all nations. Like America, Israel is a strong democracy, a symbol of freedom, and an oasis of liberty, a home to the oppressed and persecuted… The relationship between our two countries is built on shared understandings and values."
— President Bill Clinton
When I am Mayor, I will forcefully combat hate against any group in this City. This policy message is specific to the blight of antisemitism, which has escalated dramatically over the past year.
On October 7, 2023, Israel and its people were victimized by a barbaric attack, where thousands of innocent and un-armed civilians were murdered, raped, tortured or assaulted. The culprit was Hamas. That malign group—whose written charter explicitly aims to eradicate Jews—has murdered dozens of Americans, too. The U.S. Government officially designated it as a foreign terrorist organization almost 30 years ago. And it inflicts its blood-thirsty terrorism on Palestinian people it means to rule: Hamas burrowed under civilian Palestinian communities to build and protect a terrorist infrastructure, intentionally using the population as a massive human shield.
Against this backdrop, hundreds mobilized peaceful protests on college campuses in our City to stand with Palestinian communities, as is their right. However peaceful their intent, many of them devolved into hateful antisemitism. They glorified violence against Israel or Jews or both. Others went farther, advocating acts of terrorism. Some brandished the Hamas flag, a symbol of terrorism, hate, and antisemitism.
How did college administrators respond? Many abdicated their responsibility to protect all within their campuses, including Jews. Others sought to justify and validate hate. Intellectualism was crowded out by those who found it fashionable to be bigoted and ignorant.
The tidal wave of antisemitism has also infected our City’s public schools. Some administrators and teachers either encouraged or turned a blind eye to attacks against Jewish teachers and students. My law firm had to bring a lawsuit against the Department of Education for this very problem at a public school in Brooklyn.
Protests are vital to advancing social progress and equality. But misusing Israel’s defensive response to the October 7 terrorist attack as a moment to celebrate depraved cowards like Hamas is abhorrent. Misusing it to vilify our brothers and sisters in the American Jewish community—and our critical ally, Israel—was a stain on our City.
Where did this antisemitism lead? Attacks on Jews in our City have surged more than 74% since last year, according to publicly released police data. Jews represent 11% of the City’s population, but this year they were victims of 55% of reported hate crimes.
As Mayor, I will prioritize fighting the scourge of antisemitism, so that all Jewish New Yorkers can feel safe again in their own city.
My plan will include the following specific steps:
This is my promise. You have it in writing. Hold me accountable.
Other candidates should commit to this policy. If they refuse, hold them to account.
Jim Walden
Candidate for Mayor
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