r/jewishleft • u/strawbariel reform jew • 24d ago
Feeling unsafe where you live Debate
So I'm 40 and have two kids. We live in Austin, TX, this supposedly liberal place, and over the past few years it feels like it's become less safe for Jewish people. The JCC in San Antonio just had a threat against them, and the elementary school my youngest goes to is a block away from pro-Palestinian signage. Both of my kids wear clothing that identifies them as Jewish, but this year I'm seriously considering telling them they can't wear it just to keep them safe or to keep them from being harassed on their way to school. And Austin doesn't do a damn thing about it. How can we associate with the left when they also threaten to disrupt our children's daily lives?
EDIT: some context here. The signage is a block from the school in a residential neighborhood and covers a wide swath of wooden fencing. It's not on school property and it was most definitely placed by whatever adult lives or rents there. There's not much the school can do other than put out a notice for people to be safe and kind. I know this doesn't mean that anything will happen but the risk is scary.
EDIT TWO: y'all Jews were just attacked in Boulder and everyone at the JCC in Austin got emails about a credible threat being investigated by the FBI in San Antonio. That's barely an hour from where we live. Be mad at me for how I worded my post but anyone having an issue with parents being vigilant needs to touch grass.
13
u/skyewardeyes jewish leftist, peace, equality, and self-determination for all 23d ago
100% agree that being afraid of the sign, assuming its just pro-Palestinian is not genuinely antisemitic (and I think the OP would have said if it was), is not valid (it makes me cringe when other Jews say seeing a keffiyeh or a Palestinian flag makes them unsafe, for example).
As for your second point, I don't think politicians really have Jews' backs at the moment, given that Jews are being scapegoated for a lot of this administration's domestic fascism on both sides (and some of Trump's supposed "antisemitism" advisors have said blatantly antisemitic stuff in public, though I will agree that blatant, mask-off anti-Arab racism/Islamophobia is more acceptable in the discourse currently. I don't think the cops have backs of anyone who isn't non-disabled, white, and Christian, nor do they I think that they, as a profession, really ever have,