Contributor: California was an 'earthly paradise' for Jews. Is it still?
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Contributor: California was an 'earthly paradise' for Jews. Is it still?
"California, described by one observer in the late 19th century as "the Jews' earthly paradise" for the economic and social promise it held, seems to have become newly hostile to Jewish people in recent years. More than any other place on Earth, Jews have shaped much of California's progress, from Levi Strauss and the founders of the entertainment industry to numerous other leaders in culture, science, real estate and finance."
"The current assault expresses itself in politics, in schools from elementaries to universities, on the streets, in literary circles and in anti-Zionist graffiti. Erwin Chemerinsky, the dean of the UC Berkeley Law School (and my fellow contributing writer in the L.A. Times opinion section), two years ago that "nothing has prepared me for the antisemitism I see on college campuses now." The Louis D. Brandeis Center for Human Rights Under Law and Jewish Americans for Fairness have filed a against Berkeley, alleging "longstanding, unchecked" antisemitism."
"This is not just a local issue. California's population of 1.2 million Jews is roughly three times the size of each of the three largest Jewish diaspora communities outside the U.S. - in France, England and Canada. Los Angeles itself is the world's third-largest Jewish city. Demographer Ira Sheskin noted recently that unlike New York City, which has lost roughly half its Jewish population since 1950, California's Jewish populace has continued to grow, albeit more slowly in recent years."
California was described in the late 19th century as 'the Jews' earthly paradise' for its economic and social promise but has recently become newly hostile to Jewish people. Jews have shaped much of California's progress, from Levi Strauss and the founders of the entertainment industry to leaders in culture, science, real estate and finance. Antisemitic expression appears in politics, in schools from elementary to university levels, on the streets, in literary circles and in anti-Zionist graffiti. Prominent legal figures report unprecedented campus antisemitism, and civil-rights groups have filed complaints alleging longstanding, unchecked antisemitism at major universities. California's 1.2 million Jews remain demographically significant yet feel increasingly isolated.
Read at Los Angeles Times
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