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Apodaca: 3 Orange County residents who fight against the spread of hate – Los Angeles Times

Posted By on May 14, 2021

Pete Simi is an associate professor of sociology at Chapman University.

Peter Levi is a rabbi and regional director for the Anti-Defamation League.

Kim Carr is the mayor of Huntington Beach.

These three people are different in many respects. Yet they all felt from a young age a deep desire to work for causes that are bigger than themselves, a calling that would define the course of their lives and, hopefully, make the world just a little bit kinder, more tolerant and inclusive.

They are, each in their own way, going to battle against hate. Its a daunting, uphill fight, one that has shown itself to be particularly challenging in recent times as we experience a steady increase in hate-related activity.

As Simi said, it sometimes feels as if the struggle against racism, anti-Semitism, anti-LGBTQ sentiment and other forms of bigotry amounts to two steps forward and three steps back.

Nonetheless, Simi remains committed to doing whatever he can to promote tolerance and understanding. And thats a good thing, for if were ever going to move Orange County, and the nation at large, away from the most disreputable aspects of our history and from the plague of hatred that continues to infect hearts and minds, perseverance is required.

Simi is a noted academic who has devoted his career to studying extremist groups and violence, his research taking him deep inside the psyches of white supremacists to explore their developmental influences and craft strategies to respond. His book, American Swastika: Inside the White Power Movements Hidden Spaces of Hate, cowritten with Robert Futrell, includes interviews with white supremacists and details how hate groups cultivate new members.

Hate is an insidious force that must be confronted, Simi said.

We need to address it not as a fringe problem but as a problem of society. It didnt just appear. These are people who are homegrown.

Part of the problem, he said, is that we as society have indulged and excused an everyday type of racism that can act like a gateway drug to more poisonous outcomes. Such casual racism is sometimes introduced in the home through seemingly offhand remarks and intolerant attitudes.

Simis interview subjects were often raised in such an environment and then grew into angry adolescents and adults who felt compelled to take their prejudices to a more extreme level, saying that their parents didnt have the courage to take the next steps.

Undoing such influences isnt easy and must be approached in a multifaceted manner.

Such is the challenge undertaken by Levi, who as a rabbi and for the past five years as the ADLs regional director, has long been drawn to and involved in social causes. Though the ADL is widely known for combating anti-Semitism, the organization is committed to defeating all forms of bigotry and to promoting fair treatment for everyone.

Anti-Semitism, Levi said, is often the canary in the coal mine. When you see anti-Semitism, you see other intolerance.

Changing that script, he said, requires ensuring that we have accessible means of reporting hate-related incidents and that law enforcement agencies have the resources and training needed to address hate crimes and homegrown terrorist threats. Securing accurate data is critical to making sound policy decisions about where to direct such resources, he noted.

Another piece of the effort involves calling on public officials to denounce unequivocally white supremacy and to strengthen hate crime laws and the enforcement of existing laws. And it falls on all of us to speak out against intolerance wherever we see it and in support of those who are targeted by hate groups.

The most important element in the fight against hate is education. As Simi observed, this isnt a problem we can arrest our way out of.

Its often said that people arent born with hate; they learn it. It stands to reason, then, that they can also be taught to love and accept others who are different from them and that bigotry can be unlearned. Anti-bias curriculum is key and must begin with the youngest students.

No one is born a bigot, said Levi. Lets disrupt that pattern.

Mayor Carr probably doesnt think of herself as a disrupter but she is trying to change the narrative for a city long known as a haven for white supremacists. She hopes to accomplish that not through confrontation but by promoting a welcoming, inclusive environment.

One of the things Ive learned over the past couple of years is to not call people out but call them in, she said. Rather than dwell on the past and negativity, really listen to the stories of people affected by hate and racism. Listen to their stories so that we can better understand how to make changes.

A couple of examples of that effort are the recent vote by the Huntington Beach City Council to fly the LGBTQ pride flag at City Hall and a city-sponsored picnic at Central Park intended to promote cultural diversity.

This is more powerful than some leaflets that were dropped off trying to recruit people for the KKK, she said. The way were going to combat this is to focus on the positive.

Three people. Three different approaches to turning back the scourge of hate. All are needed, but they cant do it alone. Its time for the rest of us to step up.

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Apodaca: 3 Orange County residents who fight against the spread of hate - Los Angeles Times

Federal prisoner held in NH shines light on growing NSC-131 White nationalist movement – The Union Leader

Posted By on May 14, 2021

The recent arrest of a Portland neo-Nazi on child pornography charges provided a stark reminder that New England is not immune to the expansion of white nationalist extremist groups in the United States.

An expert on the National Socialist Club, or NSC-131, said the extremist group that recently established a presence in Maine represents a tiny offshoot in the wider world of white supremacist groups and might count only about two dozen members in New England.

They formed in early 2020, and are a very small group of folks, kind of outcasts of groups like Patriot Front and other groups that had fallen apart, said Carla Hill, an associate director at the Center on Extremism for the Anti-Defamation League, which tracks the NSC.

Andrew Hazelton, 28, is being held in a New Hampshire jail on a federal charge of possessing child pornography. The criminal case was the result of a report by a Portland business owner who had employed Hazelton, had become increasingly alarmed by his behavior, and feared he might commit a workplace shooting. The employer called police after receiving an anonymous tip with an image that showed someone pointing a stun-gun device at another employee in their office.

Hazelton is a White supremacist and former member of NSC-131, which was formed in Massachusetts and pushes age-old racist tropes that were touted by Adolf Hitlers Nazi party. It targets Jewish people and non-white people, and seeks to create an underground resistance group.

NSC stands for Nationalist Social Club. The 131 stands for the letters ACA, for Anti-Communist Action, according to the Anti-Defamation League, which tracks hate groups in the United States.

Hazelton had stacks of crisp, freshly printed NSC fliers in his apartment at the time he was arrested, which were shown to a reporter by Hazeltons roommate. The propaganda calls on white men to organize and protect their families and property against perceived enemies.

NSC is largely a propaganda organization. Its tactics include racist literature campaigns and so-called banner drops, where a small group of followers unfurl a message from a highway overpass. They also boast online about training with firearms. Most of their posts revolve around photos of a small number of members, their faces obscured, holding flags or making hand gestures.

Unlike some of those other groups who wrap white supremacy in more palatable political garb, NSC makes their white supremacy obvious, Hill said.

Theyre kind of focused on a turf angle, they mark it as theirs like any street gang, she said. Its a sort of crude version of white supremacy.

Hill said the NSC members form small cliques, and that often their public actions consist of just one small group traveling to another state to make themselves appear more numerous than they truly are.

The NSC also appears to embrace a bizarre custom made popular by another far-right terror group, the Proud Boys, who insist their members refrain from masturbation. NSC-131 has posted images and messages against pornography, and in one clip posted to their Telegram channel, a pornography magazine was burned on screen.

The belief, Hill said, is that pornography and masturbation somehow undermine the virility of white men and the white race.

That may explain why the group expelled Hazelton last week by name and said on social media that it would institute more background checks and phone checks in the future, an apparent reference to the fact that investigators allege they found the child pornography on Hazeltons cell phone.

Although NSC is probably no more than two dozen members spread across the six New England States, other groups with similar ideology continue to be the top terror threat in the nation, according to an Oct. 2020 homeland threat assessment by the Department of Homeland Security. Such groups have carried out more lethal attacks on Americans since 2018 than any other ideological group, targeting people for their perceived religious, ethnic or racial affiliations.

Members of NSC also appeared to have participated in the Jan. 6 riot and sacking of the U.S. Capitol building, according to images posted in a public chat on Telegram, an encrypted messaging application that has become a safe harbor for some extremists who have been ejected from the more mainstream Twitter and Facebook.

They sometimes wave flags that appear similar to the original Maine flag that feature a prominent, centered silhouette of a pine tree and the slogan An Appeal to Heaven, misappropriating a quotation from 17th century philosopher John Locke that they believe empowers them to commit violence they believe is righteous.

Steve Brinn, president of the board of trustees of the Maine Jewish Museum and a board member of the Jewish Community Alliance of Southern Maine, attributed the recent rise of anti-Semitic and racist incidents in part to the presidency of Donald Trump, who brought hate groups closer to the mainstream, emboldening them to action.

I think Trump has a big responsibility in shouldering the blame for this escalation, because I think his attitude of preaching hate, a lot of people buy into that, Brinn said. Its a disturbing trend, really.

Brinn said that racist flyer campaigns are meant to test the waters and find out which communities will tolerate it, and said they can be one step along the path toward more violent action. Thats why its important for groups to denounce racist imagery and messages wherever they emerge, he said.

Overall, there has been a significant increase in white supremacist propaganda incidents nationally, and NSC was responsible for a small part of it. Examples include the posting of stickers and fliers that have gone up around Portland in recent months.

Its not known how many members are in Maine, but the appearance of propaganda in Portland coincided with a March message posted by the group saying it had expanded into the state, according to the Anti-Defamation League.

The groups ideology focuses on white-grievance politics; it attempts to frame local issues through the lens of white suffering at the hands of outsiders, namely Black people and Jews, who they believe receive preferential treatment in society and have supplanted white authority.

While Portland police said they are aware of the posters, they do not necessarily constitute a crime, said Lt. Robert Martin.

This is a fringe group, its not representative of the broader community, Hill said. What they do is free speech, for the most part, the banners, the stickers. Most of it is free speech. But its important for the community to tear it down, denounce it, and call it what it is, which is white supremacist propaganda.

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Federal prisoner held in NH shines light on growing NSC-131 White nationalist movement - The Union Leader

EXCLUSIVE: Part 1: ‘Hate in the Homeland’ growing, crimes not reported to FBI – KMBC Kansas City

Posted By on May 14, 2021

This story is a part of Hearst Television's series "Hate in the Homeland." Our National Investigative Unit is uncovering the battle against hateful acts in America. Stay with this station for more stories on the fight against Hate in the Homeland.The vast majority of law enforcement agencies are not reporting hate crimes to a key federal database, hampering efforts to contain a rise in hate incidents and leaving communities nationwide in the dark about the prevalence of hate in the homeland, a Hearst Television National Investigative Unit series has found. In addition, almost none of the police departments and sheriffs offices that responded to an exclusive Hearst survey said they have dedicated hate crimes units, raising questions about how seriously Americas law enforcement takes the threat. The most recent data available now indicates at least 20 hate incidents per day in the United States. But experts caution that is likely a vast undercount given the dearth of law enforcement resources, the reluctance of some victims to come forward, and the absence of widespread, mandatory data reporting. Meanwhile, the threat from hate groups and extremists spewing hateful ideologies grows, metastasizing in communities big and small. In 2020, the Southern Poverty Law Center (SPLC) said it tracked 866 hate groups. "It is a lot. And it's scary. Yeah, it's a frightening number," said Susan Corke, director of SPLCs Intelligence Project."I feel like our country is at a reckoning."'I don't believe the Holocaust happened'The voice of Tristan Webb, 19, is the sound of hate in the homeland. "I think that the Jews, they are just a parasitical race. And I mean, I don't believe the Holocaust happened. I wish it did happen," Webb says in an on-the-record interview for season two of the "Sounds Like Hate" podcast, a lengthy excerpt of which was given exclusively to Hearst Television ahead of the premiere episode's May 12 worldwide release.ABOVE: LISTEN TO EXCLUSIVE EXCERPT OF "SOUNDS LIKE HATE" SEASON TWO The 19-year-old from Michigan, who now lives in a state in the South, is also heard on tape being recruited to join The Base, a white nationalist organization designated as a hate group by the SPLC. "They tried to get therapists to talk to me. They tried to suspend me. They tried to do whatever they could to stop, you know, me, de-radicalize me and everything," Webb recounts on the podcast. "And it just didn't work and just made me more secure in what I was doing. And it worked. I mean, I got a group of people around and got people to wake up."On tape, Webb brags of founding a group called "Aryan Resistance" and resisting his own family when confronted. "Oh, yeah, no, it didn't work at all. I think no one wants to hear, you know, 'oh, you're wrong. You know, you need to stop this. Oh, you know, you're, you know, you're evil, you're radical,' because it just makes you more sure in yourself," Webb said. He declined to do a subsequent on-camera interview.Podcast co-host Jamila Paksima and her team convinced Webb to talk; the sound of his views becoming a canary in very dark coal mine. "My mother is Jewish," Paksima said in an interview for this story, "and I'm sitting here listening to this man talking about the fact that the Holocaust didn't even exist. It was you know, it's infuriating." "I think this is a huge problem in our communities we've avoided talking about and it's time to address it."'This is a national emergency' In interviews across the country, survivors of hate incidents recalled the horror, agony, and viciousness of attacks. "I didn't know if I was going to make it out alive or not," an African American man said."They put their hands on me," an Asian American boy remembered."It's so dehumanizing," another woman said."I was really at risk for my life," a fourth added.There are more victims every day. In the most recent year for which data is available, hate crimes in America rose to the highest level in a decade. Hate-motivated killings are at the highest in nearly 30 years, FBI data show. And hate crimes targeting Asian-Americans have soared 169%, according to a report from the Center for the Study of Hate and Extremism at California State University.The disparate hate groups nearly 900 by the SPLCs count span the spectrum of prejudice."The classic neo-Nazi Ku Klux Klan, there's the white supremacist, white nationalist groups, and then there's the more mainstream groups, the anti-immigrant, anti-Muslim, anti-LGBTQ, anti-Semitic," Corke explained.Because federal hate crimes reporting requirements are voluntary, data experts and anti-hate advocates agree the totals tallied nationally do not capture an accurate portrait of hate incidents each year."Hate crimes are vastly underreported, most of the vulnerable communities do not feel safe reporting it to the police. That is a national emergency," Corke said.Survey finds hate crimes units rareGreatly contributing to the lack of accuracy in hate crimes totals is that only 14% of law enforcement agencies nationwide report them to the FBIs federal database. So the Hearst Television National Investigative Unit sent a 40-question survey to more than 14,000 police chiefs and sheriffs in all 50 states and asked whether they think federal or state hate crimes reporting should be required. Of those who responded to the questionnaire, 81% said hate crimes reporting should be mandatory; 18% said it should not. Yet four in 10 told us hate crime reporting, in their view, is "insufficient" now. And only 2% of those agencies that responded said they have a dedicated hate crimes unit. Shown those survey results, Allison Padilla-Goodman, the Southern Division vice president for the Anti-Defamation League, said "absolutely" lawmakers in statehouses around the nation need to do more to combat hate incidents.Nearly 40% of states dont require hate reportingAccording to information provided by the U.S. Department of Justice, three states still do not have a traditional hate crimes law: Wyoming, Arkansas, and South Carolina. Those states, along with 17 more, the Justice Department said, do not require data collection on hate crimes; those include: Alabama, Alaska, Colorado, Delaware, Kansas, Mississippi, Missouri, Montana, New Hampshire, North Carolina, North Dakota, Ohio, South Dakota, Tennessee, Vermont, West Virginia, and Wisconsin. "Look, we cannot understand truly the landscape of hate and the landscape of hate crimes when we have faulty data," Padilla-Goodman explained in an interview recently in front of the state Capitol in Georgia, which passed a hate crimes law last year."We need for state lawmakers to really grasp and understand the impact of hate crimes and really commit to getting reporting right," she said.King's 'fierce urgency of now' enduresThe day before Emancipation Day in Washington, D.C., Susan Corke at SPLC sat for an interview at the Martin Luther King, Jr., Memorial on the National Mall.Fifty-eight years after the civil rights leader's March on Washington, his "fierce urgency of now" remains as an effort to counteract the voices spewing hate in our homeland. "We need to find the next Martin Luther King," Corke said. "In each and every one of us, that we're willing to stand up and fight together." See exclusive 'Hate in the Homeland' survey results sent to 14,000 police and sheriffs nationwide Hear exclusive portion of "Sounds Like Hate" podcast Read hate crimes laws in your stateWATCH THE HEARST TELEVISION NATIONAL INVESTIGATIVE UNIT SERIES, HATE IN THE HOMELAND: Part 1: Prevalence of Hate (May 11, 2021) Part 2: Monetization of Hate (May 12, 2021) Part 3: Prevention of Hate (May 13, 2021)Mark Albert is the chief national investigative correspondent for the Hearst Television National Investigative Unit, based in Washington D.C. April Chunko, Amanda Rooker, Dija Riyal, & Kevin Rothstein contributed to this report. Know of hate in the homeland? Have a confidential tip or inside information? Send information and documents to the National Investigative Unit at investigate@hearst.com.

This story is a part of Hearst Television's series "Hate in the Homeland." Our National Investigative Unit is uncovering the battle against hateful acts in America. Stay with this station for more stories on the fight against Hate in the Homeland.

The vast majority of law enforcement agencies are not reporting hate crimes to a key federal database, hampering efforts to contain a rise in hate incidents and leaving communities nationwide in the dark about the prevalence of hate in the homeland, a Hearst Television National Investigative Unit series has found. In addition, almost none of the police departments and sheriffs offices that responded to an exclusive Hearst survey said they have dedicated hate crimes units, raising questions about how seriously Americas law enforcement takes the threat.

The most recent data available now indicates at least 20 hate incidents per day in the United States. But experts caution that is likely a vast undercount given the dearth of law enforcement resources, the reluctance of some victims to come forward, and the absence of widespread, mandatory data reporting.

Meanwhile, the threat from hate groups and extremists spewing hateful ideologies grows, metastasizing in communities big and small.

In 2020, the Southern Poverty Law Center (SPLC) said it tracked 866 hate groups.

"It is a lot. And it's scary. Yeah, it's a frightening number," said Susan Corke, director of SPLCs Intelligence Project.

"I feel like our country is at a reckoning."

Eric Young, Huron Daily Tribune

The voice of Tristan Webb, 19, is the sound of hate in the homeland.

"I think that the Jews, they are just a parasitical race. And I mean, I don't believe the Holocaust happened. I wish it did happen," Webb says in an on-the-record interview for season two of the "Sounds Like Hate" podcast, a lengthy excerpt of which was given exclusively to Hearst Television ahead of the premiere episode's May 12 worldwide release.

ABOVE: LISTEN TO EXCLUSIVE EXCERPT OF "SOUNDS LIKE HATE" SEASON TWO

The 19-year-old from Michigan, who now lives in a state in the South, is also heard on tape being recruited to join The Base, a white nationalist organization designated as a hate group by the SPLC.

"They tried to get therapists to talk to me. They tried to suspend me. They tried to do whatever they could to stop, you know, me, de-radicalize me and everything," Webb recounts on the podcast. "And it just didn't work and just made me more secure in what I was doing. And it worked. I mean, I got a group of people around and got people to wake up."

On tape, Webb brags of founding a group called "Aryan Resistance" and resisting his own family when confronted.

"Oh, yeah, no, it didn't work at all. I think no one wants to hear, you know, 'oh, you're wrong. You know, you need to stop this. Oh, you know, you're, you know, you're evil, you're radical,' because it just makes you more sure in yourself," Webb said. He declined to do a subsequent on-camera interview.

Podcast co-host Jamila Paksima and her team convinced Webb to talk; the sound of his views becoming a canary in very dark coal mine.

"My mother is Jewish," Paksima said in an interview for this story, "and I'm sitting here listening to this man talking about the fact that the Holocaust didn't even exist. It was you know, it's infuriating."

"I think this is a huge problem in our communities we've avoided talking about and it's time to address it."

Hearst Television

In interviews across the country, survivors of hate incidents recalled the horror, agony, and viciousness of attacks.

"I didn't know if I was going to make it out alive or not," an African American man said.

"They put their hands on me," an Asian American boy remembered.

"It's so dehumanizing," another woman said.

"I was really at risk for my life," a fourth added.

There are more victims every day.

In the most recent year for which data is available, hate crimes in America rose to the highest level in a decade. Hate-motivated killings are at the highest in nearly 30 years, FBI data show. And hate crimes targeting Asian-Americans have soared 169%, according to a report from the Center for the Study of Hate and Extremism at California State University.

The disparate hate groups nearly 900 by the SPLCs count span the spectrum of prejudice.

"The classic neo-Nazi Ku Klux Klan, there's the white supremacist, white nationalist groups, and then there's the more mainstream groups, the anti-immigrant, anti-Muslim, anti-LGBTQ, anti-Semitic," Corke explained.

Hearst Television

Because federal hate crimes reporting requirements are voluntary, data experts and anti-hate advocates agree the totals tallied nationally do not capture an accurate portrait of hate incidents each year.

"Hate crimes are vastly underreported, most of the vulnerable communities do not feel safe reporting it to the police. That is a national emergency," Corke said.

Greatly contributing to the lack of accuracy in hate crimes totals is that only 14% of law enforcement agencies nationwide report them to the FBIs federal database.

So the Hearst Television National Investigative Unit sent a 40-question survey to more than 14,000 police chiefs and sheriffs in all 50 states and asked whether they think federal or state hate crimes reporting should be required.

Of those who responded to the questionnaire, 81% said hate crimes reporting should be mandatory; 18% said it should not.

Yet four in 10 told us hate crime reporting, in their view, is "insufficient" now.

And only 2% of those agencies that responded said they have a dedicated hate crimes unit.

Shown those survey results, Allison Padilla-Goodman, the Southern Division vice president for the Anti-Defamation League, said "absolutely" lawmakers in statehouses around the nation need to do more to combat hate incidents.

According to information provided by the U.S. Department of Justice, three states still do not have a traditional hate crimes law: Wyoming, Arkansas, and South Carolina.

Hearst Television

Those states, along with 17 more, the Justice Department said, do not require data collection on hate crimes; those include: Alabama, Alaska, Colorado, Delaware, Kansas, Mississippi, Missouri, Montana, New Hampshire, North Carolina, North Dakota, Ohio, South Dakota, Tennessee, Vermont, West Virginia, and Wisconsin.

Hearst Television

"Look, we cannot understand truly the landscape of hate and the landscape of hate crimes when we have faulty data," Padilla-Goodman explained in an interview recently in front of the state Capitol in Georgia, which passed a hate crimes law last year.

"We need for state lawmakers to really grasp and understand the impact of hate crimes and really commit to getting reporting right," she said.

The day before Emancipation Day in Washington, D.C., Susan Corke at SPLC sat for an interview at the Martin Luther King, Jr., Memorial on the National Mall.

Hearst Television

Fifty-eight years after the civil rights leader's March on Washington, his "fierce urgency of now" remains as an effort to counteract the voices spewing hate in our homeland.

"We need to find the next Martin Luther King," Corke said. "In each and every one of us, that we're willing to stand up and fight together."

WATCH THE HEARST TELEVISION NATIONAL INVESTIGATIVE UNIT SERIES, HATE IN THE HOMELAND:

Mark Albert is the chief national investigative correspondent for the Hearst Television National Investigative Unit, based in Washington D.C. April Chunko, Amanda Rooker, Dija Riyal, & Kevin Rothstein contributed to this report.

Know of hate in the homeland? Have a confidential tip or inside information? Send information and documents to the National Investigative Unit at investigate@hearst.com.

Read more:
EXCLUSIVE: Part 1: 'Hate in the Homeland' growing, crimes not reported to FBI - KMBC Kansas City

Survey Reveals 8 Out Of 10 Asian Americans Say They Are Discriminated Against And 77% Do Not Feel Respected In The US – PRNewswire

Posted By on May 14, 2021

SAN FRANCISCO, May 10, 2021 /PRNewswire/ --Leading Asian Americans to Unite for Change (LAAUNCH) today announced the findings of its inaugural STAATUS Index (Social Tracking of Asian Americans in the U.S.), a comprehensive assessment of Americans' attitudes toward Asian Americans, and one of the first such studies in 20 years. The survey reveals 8 out of 10 Asian Americans say they are discriminated against in the U.S. and 77% do not feel respected. The STAATUS Index examines stereotypes and prejudices that have affected Asian Americans for generations.

LAAUNCH surveyed a national sample of 2,766 U.S. residents, aged 18 and over, conducted online between March 29 to April 14, 2021. With this non-partisan survey, the non-profit organization aims to address the root causes of racism and violence towards Asian Americans that have been exacerbated by the COVID-19 pandemic.

LAAUNCH is working closely with partner organizations including the Anti-Defamation League (ADL) and Gold House, among others, to evaluate the data, raise awareness, garner solidarity across underrepresented communities and develop actionable programming that tackles bias against Asian Americans in the United States.

"I applaud LAAUNCH for their objective, non-partisan report that surveyed attitudes towards Asian Americans and Pacific Islanders. This study adds to the growing body of evidence about how insidious and dangerous anti-Asian American sentiment can be in this country. We've seen a growing number of hate crimes and hate incidents perpetrated against the AAPI community since the beginning of the pandemic. We can have an academic, theoretical discussion about whether systematic racism exists, but the actual data is clear: 8 out of 10 Asian Americans report being discriminated against," said California Congressman Ted Lieu. "Many Americans of Asian descent simply do not feel safe right now. We need to do more to address this issue in government and in society at large. I'm pleased the Senate passed the COVID-19 Hate Crimes Act, and we will pass it in the House this month. We also need to change the very restrictive standard in the federal hate crime law by passing my bill, the Stop Hate Crimes Act. I look forward to continuing to work with groups like LAAUNCH to combat discrimination and racism against the AAPI community."

"In the first quarter of 2021 alone, hate crimes against the Asian American community have risen nearly 164%. As members of this community, we are outraged to see these senseless acts of violence. We know from history that stereotypes lead to scapegoating and violence during times of crisis, but there has been a lack of national research on stereotypes of Asian Americans over the past two decades. Inspired by the ADL's research, we developed the STAATUS Index in collaboration with academics from University of Massachusetts, Boston; University of California, Los Angeles; and Princeton University to not only understand the root causes of racism and violence towards Asian Americans, but also to help shape American attitudes toward our community moving forward," said Norman Chen, CEO and co-founder of LAAUNCH.

While this is the first year of the report, LAAUNCH plans to release the survey annually to track changes in American perception and to inform new programs to address the underlying causes for racism and under-representation for Asian Americansspecifically calling for:

"As a business with roots in the Asian American community, these findings are not surprising to us," said Dominic Ng, Chairman and CEO of East West Bank, whose Foundation provided a grant to LAAUNCH to conduct the survey. "What's important is that now we have data. That is crucial to create greater awareness, educate stakeholders and inform policymaking moving forward."

The complete STAATUS Index is available at http://www.laaunch.org/staatus-index.

Key Findings:

MethodologyIn March 2021, LAAUNCH conducted research with Savanta Research to assess the attitudes and stereotypes towards Asian Americans. The survey was conducted with 2,766 respondents who were U.S. residents aged 18 and over. Results are valid within +/-1.9% at 95% confidence level. The sample was weighted using population parameters (race, age, gender, education and region) from the U.S. Census Bureau's American Community Survey to reflect the national population. The survey consisted of 39 questions conducted online.

About the STAATUS IndexThe STAATUS Index short for "Social Tracking of Asian Americans in the U.S." is a comprehensive, national assessment of attitudes and stereotypes towards Asian Americans. The index is one of the few such studies on this topic in the last 20 years. With plans to be conducted annually, the survey tracks trends in how American sentiment is changing as a result of both long-term stereotypes and current events.

About LAAUNCHLeading Asian Americans to Unite for Change (LAAUNCH) was founded with a mission to engage and empower Asian Americans to fight racism, increase representation and share resources withinits community. Its vision is to create a society in which Asian Americans are treated fairly without racism, prejudice or discrimination; fully represented in politics, business, legal, media/entertainment, sports, arts and other communities; and recognized fortheir culture, history and contributions to society.

Media Contact:Suzzette Martnez-Malavet (she/her/hers) [emailprotected] 646-670-0750

SOURCE LAAUNCH

https://www.LAAUNCH.org

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Survey Reveals 8 Out Of 10 Asian Americans Say They Are Discriminated Against And 77% Do Not Feel Respected In The US - PRNewswire

The World of Edward Said – Boston Review

Posted By on May 14, 2021

Image:Leonardo Cendamo/Getty

Attempts to cast Said as the consummate New York intellectual miss the point that his milieu was one of global, and specifically Palestinian, anticolonial struggle.

Places of Mind: A Life of Edward Said

Timothy Brennan

On February 2, 1977, Palestinian poet Rashid Hussein died in his New York apartment. Hussein had been born forty-one years earlier in Musmus, a town not far from Nazareth. Politics for Hussein, Edward Said remembered, lost its impersonality and its cruel demagogic spirit. Hussein, Said wrote of his dear friend, simply asked that you remember the search for real answers, and never give it up, never be seduced by mere arrangements. Sharply critical of his own society and its rulershe had a map of the Middle East on his wall with thought forbidden here scrawled across it in ArabicHussein was also a partisan of the Third World. I am from Asia, he pronounced in an early poem, The land of fire / Forging furnace of freedom-fighters.

Saids influence was profound, but he was not alone. Any intellectual history must account for the multitude of emigres, exiles, and migrants from Africa and Asia who carried the pillars of anti-colonialism across the world.

Another of Husseins friends, Pakistani political scientist Eqbal Ahmad, wrote that he lived in New York City as though it were a Palestinian town. Born in 1936, Hussein was nearly the same age as Said. Had the dislocations of his life not burdened his soul so heavilyhe died alone in his apartment, a lit cigarette setting fire to the mattress as he sleptHussein may very well have lived alongside Said in Manhattan for a few decades more.

Though born in different milieux, Hussein and Said were drawn into close contact by the exigencies of the anti-colonial struggle in Palestine. Hussein, who was a Muslim from a peasant family, did not attend college, but he was an adept translator of Hebrew and a deeply perceptive writer. A Palestinian citizen of Israel, like better-known poets Mahmoud Darwish and Samih Al-Qasim, Hussein first encountered his other Arab counterparts in Europe, as historian Maha Nassar has vividly documented in Brothers Apart: Palestinian Citizens of Israel and the Arab World (2017). Hussein arrived in New York in 1966. He worked as a writer there, unhappily, before setting out in 1972 to find work among other Palestinians in the Arab world. First in Beirut, then Cairo, and finally Damascus. But political circumstances would send him back to New York, were at the time of his death he was a spokesperson for the Palestine Liberation Organization at the United Nations.

Said, meanwhile, an Arab Protestant, came from an urban, bourgeois family and was deeply embedded in the scholastic institutions of the Anglophone world. He arrived in New York as an assistant professor of English at Columbia, having spent a decade studying in the United States, first at a Massachusetts boarding school, then at Princeton, and finally at Harvard, where he received his PhD for a dissertation on the life and work of Joseph Conrad.

There is no doubt that Saids influence and impact were profound, but he was not alone. Any intellectual history of the twentieth centurys second half must account for the multitude of emigres, exiles, and migrants from Africa and Asia who carried the pillars of anti-colonialism across the world. Saids life intersected closely with many friends and comrades, fellow travelers in the Palestinian cause and the promise of Third World liberation.

Indeed, it was precisely Saids participation in a global political movementhis regular, public refusal to abide by the dictates of the United States imperial way of lifethat drew the ire of so many during his lifetime. Before their recent reinvention, liberal journals such as the New Republic and Dissent regularly found column inches to attack Saids thought and personage. But the bromides of Irving Howe and Leon Wesieltier were never a match to Said, who embodied Frantz Fanons final prayer in Black Skins, White Masks (1952): O my body, make of me always a man who questions!

And yet, many reviewers of Timothy Brennans new biography of Said, Places of Mind, have taken the opportunity to domesticate the late Palestinian writer. Said is characterized as a representative of precisely those New York intellectuals who regularly derided him. In the London Review of Books, Adam Shatz goes to great lengths to argue that Said doesnt resemble Gramsci or Fanon so much as Susan Sontag. The same Sontag who rebuffed Saids (and many others) urgent appeals not to accept Israels Jerusalem Prize in 2001. Rather than an honest reckoning with how Saids commitment to the Palestinian cause and conscious affiliations with anti-imperialism world-wide distinguished him from such thoroughly American figures, reviews have exhibited a resilient orientalism. Shatz, long familiar with Saids vision and politics as one of his editors at the Nation, nevertheless lazily falls back onsuch tropes when he describesSaid as someone who donned Burberry suits, not keffiyehs. In the New Statesman, Thomas Meaney breathlessly ends his review by mentioning that along with his well-stocked shelves and formidable collection of classical music records, the Old Dominion Foundation Professor in the Humanities kept a map with the current positions of the Israeli Defense Forces. It was precisely these kinds of efforts to juxtapose culture or refinement from the symbols and practices of political action that Said perennially opposed. To account for Saids life, one must acknowledge his involvement in a community of intellectuals, activists, and indeed martyrs, who found their commitment to Palestine and their commitment to ideas not only unironic, but essential.

Throughout Places of Mind, Brennan is at his best when he deals directly with the themes, arguments, and circumstances of Saids substantial oeuvre. He is sensitive to how political judgments long shaped Saids work even before Palestine and the Third World became the causes for which he devoted most of his voice. In that way Brennans book is a rich intellectual history, summarizing the content of Saids major works, tracing the conditions of their creation, and mapping their influence. In detailing how specific conversations and locations stimulated his writing, and discussing the nature of Saids unpublished poetry, fiction, and essays, Brennan breathes new life in a crowded field of Said studies.

Many reviewers have taken the opportunity to domesticate Said, characterizing him as a representative of precisely those New York intellectuals who regularly derided him.

Saids 1975 book, Beginnings: Intention and Method, was widely feted in literary critical circles. Careful in its reading of high modernist literature andelucidation of Freud and Foucault, one of Saids early students described it as a kind of teachers book. Brennan writes that even those who had never taken a class with him could witness in its pages his style of navigating the unscripted exchanges of the seminar room. Saids 1983 collection of essays, The World, the Text, and the Critic, which Brennan draws particular attention to, was a teachers book in just this sense, but more sober and a good deal angrier. In its essays, especially its central three on contemporary practices of literary and cultural criticism, Said mounts a lucid critique of the kinds of literary theory, like that of Jacques Derrida and J. Hillis Miller, which had overtaken humanities departments by the 1980s. For Said, embroiled as he was in the culture of the university and the struggle for Palestinian freedom, it was clear that left theory was very far from playing a genuinely political role. A visitor from another world, Said wrote, would surely be perplexed were he to overhear a so-called old critic calling the new critics dangerous. What, this visitor would ask, are they dangers to? The State? The mind? Authority?

How does a Palestinian end up in New York teaching literature in the first place? The nakbainaugurated in 1948 by the establishment of the State of Israelcontinues to scatter Palestinians. But inhabitants of the Eastern Mediterranean had been regularly migrating to the Americas since the nineteenth century, when capitals forced entry into the Ottoman Empire precipitated a series of profound social and political transformations in the Middle East.

The nineteenth and early twentieth centuries were host to a period of intense intellectual ferment, often referred to as the nahda, or Arab renaissance. Characterized by the explosion of the periodical press, the rapid translation and interpretation of European texts, and the emergence of new genres of writing, new modes of political assembly, and new visions of social order, the nahda bequeathed todays Arab world with its primary institutional and intellectual foundations. Those Arabs who migrated remained indelibly linked to the nahdawi efforts of their compatriots in the Levant, publishing their own Arabic journals, like New Yorks al-Funun (The Arts), host to writers such as Khalil Gibran and Amin al-Rihani.

During World War I, some of the migrants heading toward the United States were doing so to dodge the Ottoman draft. Among them was Edwards father, Wadie, who would end up in the U.S. Army, fighting the Germans in France. His wartime service earned him and his family U.S. citizenship and inculcated Wadie with a profound Americophilia. On the Fourth of July, Wadies daughter Jean Said Makdisi recounted in her 1990 memoir Beirut Fragments: A War Memoir, we went to the picnics at the American Embassy, where we ate hot dogs and Crackerjacks and watched the square dancing.

Born in Jerusalem in 1935, Edward Said grew up between British Egypt and British Palestine. Brennan, drawing on Saids private papers and more than a hundred interviews with his friends and family, paints a detailed picture of the rich literary and musical life Said encountered as a young man in Cairo, a world Said describes in his 1999 memoir Out of Place. Had he been born a generation earlier, Said may very well have been an important member of the nahdas last generation, caught up in the furies of empire and the modernity of Arabic. He would have been at home, among the intellectuals who frequented the bar at the King David Hotel in Jerusalem. Those Arabslike Jabra Ibrahim Jabra, George Antonius, Albert Hourani, Musa Al-Alami, and Walid Khalidi (who narrated their milieu)spent their evenings reading T. S. Eliot by candlelight and their working hours writing histories or novels or eloquent, if terribly ill-fated, appeals to London, Paris, and Washington for the right to self-determination. Baudelaire said, the heart has one vintage only, Hourani wrote in 1957. If so, mine will be marked forever by what happened in Palestine. After 1948, however, Hourani would resign himself from the political activity of his youth, becoming the doyen of Middle Eastern history in the Anglophone world from his position at St. Antonys College, Oxford.

Said argued that Orientalism was an armature of empires political and economic conquests.

Others, like Alberts brother Cecil Hourani, would continue to actively develop the political and academic institutions of the Arab worlds new nation-states. Brennan details Saids engagement with some of these younger representatives of the nahda, especially those associated with the American University of Beirut (AUB), which was founded by American missionaries in 1866 as the Syrian Protestant College and is a key site in the annals of Arab thought. Among them was Charles Malik, an early intellectual influence who happened to be the husband of Saids mothers cousin. A philosopher by training, he studied with Martin Heidegger at Frieberg and finished his PhD at Harvard in 1937. But he was also an important Lebanese diplomat. Erudite and accomplished, Brennan recounts how Maliks presence was extremely important to the young and ambitious Said. But Maliks transformation into a belligerent cold warrior, chauvinist in his Christianity and rabid in his anti-communism, led Said to disavow his early mentor. Said would write that Malik was the great negative intellectual lesson of my life.

Also at the American University of Beirut was Syrian-born and Princeton-trained historian Constantine Zurayk. Best known for his 1948 book Mana al-Nakba (The Meaning of Catastrophe), which sought to account for the loss of Palestine with regard to its Arab past and future, Zurayk was also a key advocate for the development of modern methods of teaching and research in his administrative roles at AUB, as historian Hana Sleiman has recently documented. Zurayk was a close family friend of Saids wife, Mariam. In his regular visits to Beirut after their marriage, and especially during the 197273 academic year which he spent there, Said regularly consulted with Zurayk. Brennan argues that Zurayk became Saids chief influence at this time.

But soon Said was drawn to a new generation of Arab intellectuals who largely disavowed the reformist politics and patrician style of Zurayk and his ilk. These Arab writersin Jabra Ibrahim Jabras taxonomy, the rebels, the committed, and the otherswere by no means monolithic in their attitudes and politics. In journals such as Al-Adab, Al-Tariq, Shir, Hiwar, and Mawaqif, Arab intellectuals revolted against the scripts of liberal political action that had been nourished by the nahda and against the formal conventions of Arabic literature, especially in poetry. Said would begin reading and corresponding with many of these thinkers, including the Palestinian poet Mahmoud Darwish and Syrian philosopher Sadiq Al-Azm.

It was in the 1970s, in midst of his deepening involvement with the political and literary revolutions of the Arab world, that Saids intellectual and political energies were poured into the critique of imperial knowledge, culminating with the 1978 publication of Orientalism, his best known work. In that book, essentially a work of intellectual history, Said described and critiqued what he referred to as the system of ideological fictions that had until that point been uncontroversially known as Orientalism. Drawing on the fields major scholarly and literary works produced from the late eighteenth century to the late twentieth in imperial France, Britain, and the United States, Said argued that Orientalism became an armature of those empires political and economic conquests.

Orientalisms publication generated furious debate. Among its harshest critics was Al-Azm, with whom Said engaged in an acrimonious exchange. To Arab Studies Quarterly, a journal Said coedited, Al-Azm submitted a sharply criticaland rather lengthyreview of Orientalism. In response, Said wrote to its author, I am a skeptic and in many ways an anarchist who doesnt believe as you do, in laws, or systems, or any of the other claptrap that inhibits your thought and constricts your writing. For you Marx is what Khomeini is to his followers, he continued, you are in fact a Khomeini of the Left which is one thing my heroes, Gramsci and Lukacs, could never have been. Al-Azm responded in kind, requesting that his review be published as is or not at all. Perturbed, Said nevertheless agreed to publish the forty-page review on the condition that his response be printed as well.

In the end, Al-Azm published his review in the 1981 issue of Khamsin, the London journal of a collective of radical Israeli intellectuals. In the review, Al-Azm accused Said of unfairly maligning Marx, as would other Marxist critics including Aijaz Ahmad and Mahdi Amel. More significantly, Al-Azm argued that Said was practicing what he called Orientalism in reverse, essentializing the West in the same way the orientalists who were his targets essentialized the East. In the wake of 1979s Iranian Revolution, Al-Azm feared Saids critique of Orientalism made room for the further entrenchment of the idea that Islam was inherently opposed to Western ideas, images, and institutions.

Orientalism was only the latest example in a tradition of the oppressed defending themselves from the slanders which accompanied land robbery, labor exploitation, and political domination. Indeed, the critique of orientalism is as old as orientalism itself.

Said was not the only target of Al-Azms critique, however. He also took aim at other Arab intellectuals, including Syrian poet Adonis (Ali Ahmad Said Esber) and Elias Khoury, whom he accused of being too open in their embrace of revolutionary islamanics, as he called those partisans of Islamic revival in the Middle East.

After Al-Azm published his review, he and Said never spoke again, according to Brennan. At the end of the decade, Al-Azm would attack the entire Palestinian intellectual and political class, including Said again, in an essay provocatively titled Palestinian Zionism, for the German journal of Islamic studies Die Welt des Islams. He would compare Said to early Zionist ideologues like Eliezer Ben-Yehuda and Leon Pinsker. Saids Palestinian idea, Al-Azm argues in that later essay, bore clear Hegelian affinities with the Zionist idea. To that end, Al-Azm concludes, Yasser Arafat was Chaim Weizmann, George Habash was the mirror image of Ze'ev Jabotinsky, and Naif Hawatmeh, the Palestinian Ben-Gurion.

As only a few of his legion of critics would acknowledge, Saids Orientalism was only the latest example in a tradition of the oppressed defending themselves from the slanders which accompanied land robbery, labor exploitation, and political domination. Indeed, the critique of orientalism is as old as orientalism itself. In the first half of the nineteenth century, Arab intellectuals who traveled and studied in Europe, including Ahmad Faris al-Shidyaq and Rifa'a al-Tahtawi, criticized, corrected, and even satirized the writings of prominent orientalists like Silvestre de Sacy. In the 1880s, Jamal al-din al-Afghani, an influential and peripatetic West Asian intellectual, offered a powerful riposte to French philologist Ernest Renans scurrilous if typical pronouncement that Islam was inimical to scientific progress. Intellectuals across the Ottoman Empireindeed across Africa and Asiawould regularly denounce imperial knowledge and its political implications throughout the nineteenth and twentieth centurys anti-colonial revolutions, rebellions, and intifadas. For the colonized, the critique of colonial knowledge was fundamental. For me, Indian social theorist Partha Chatterjee recounted, child of a successful anti-colonial struggle, Orientalism was a book which talked of things I felt I had known all along but had never found the language to formulate with clarity. . . . [I]t seemed to say for the first time what one had always wanted to say.

As Said himself acknowledged, in the decades leading up to 1978, Arab intellectuals publishing in the West had attacked orientalisms edifice with increasing ferocity and clarity, as imperial structures and attitudes proved resilient even in the wake of political decolonization. For example, the prolific Palestinian historian Abdu Latif Tibawi, who received his PhD from the University of London in 1948 and who would work and teach in England for the rest of his life, published a short but perceptive study in 1964, English-speaking Orientalists: A Critique of Their Approach to Islam and Arab Nationalism. A year earlier, Egyptian Marxist Anour Abdel-Malek published a long essay, Orientalism in Crisis, from his exile in Paris. Abdel-Malek primarily took to task the neo-orientalism of Europe and the United States, as well as the europeocentrism of the social sciences and humanities in general.

Indeed, Saids specific critique of orientalism cannot be separated from the general assault on the established institutions and protocols of knowledge production that accompanied the mass movements of the 1960s and 70s globally. Campuses erupted into the streets as the practical implications of imperial science became ever-apparent in the midst of endless war and underdevelopment. The editors of the short-lived but influential Review of Middle East Studies would acknowledge this fact in 1978: it is our opinion that much of what is wrong with Middle Eastern studies is also wrong both with other social science writing and also with work on other regions of the world. They acknowledged their debt to groups such as the Committee of Concerned Asian scholars, which would lead its own revolt against Cold War Asian studies in the United States in the midst of the Vietnam War. Said would mention these efforts of decolonializing knowledge with appreciation in the final chapter of Orientalism.

Although vestiges of its imperial designs remain today, the study of the Orient, as it were, shifted dramatically after Saids dissection. Middle East studies, as a field constituted principally in the crucible of the Cold War, would become increasingly critical of its own institutions and origins. The impact of Saids book on the academy also went far beyond the field he specifically targeted. We feminists read Orientalism by Braille, Sondra Hale would write in her 2005 essay Edward SaidAccidental Feminist. An anthropologist of the Sudan and one of the founding editors of the Journal of Middle East Womens Studies, Hale would register the profound impact of Saids book on gender studies of the Middle East. Like Foucaults History of Sexuality, Orientalism was largely absent of women, yet it raised a critique that would become foundational in future writing about the use of Middle Eastern women in imperial justifications for war as scholars like Lila Abu-Lughod, Laura Nader, and Suad Joseph have since elaborated.

It is now time for us together to expose and destroy the whole system of confinement, dispossession, exploitation, and oppression that still holds us down and denies us inalienable rights as human beings. It is our job to create a genuine world culture of brotherhood and common cause.

Said never saw his book simply in academic terms, however. In a letter to British historian Roger Owen, the editor alongside Talal Asad of the Review of Middle East Studies, Said made clear what he saw as his projects political stakes: I find the work on Orientalism to be a contribution to the struggle against imperialism. In addition to his participation in Beiruts intellectual scene, Said was increasingly involved in the political struggles being organized by Arabs who, like himself, resided in the United States. Indeed, the first draft of the argument Said would put forward in Orientalism was commissioned by his close friend, Ibrahim Abu-Lughod, in 1968 for a volume responding to the disastrous ArabIsraeli War of 1967. The book was published by the Association of Arab American University Graduates (AAUG), which was founded in 1967 by a formidable group of Arab intellectuals including philologist Muhsin Mahdi, radical lawyer Abdeen Jabra, and Abu-Lughod himself. A political scientist, Abu-Lughod and Said first met when they were both at Princeton, Said in his final year of college and Abu-Lughod doing his PhD. After Princeton, both Palestinians spent time in Cairo, where their relationship would deepen. The older Abu-Lughod, Brennan writes, tutored the French-identified Said in third-world political insurgency, especially the events then unfolding in Algeria. Said became deeply involved in the AAUG, and would cofound with Abu-Lughod the Arab Studies Quarterly in 1979, which was published under the groups auspices. While the 1967 war had emboldened American supporters of Israel, it was also the occasion of the increased political mobilization of Palestinians internationally, often in defiance of Arab governments as well as Israels supporters in the West. Said, his colleagues in the AAUG, and Arab Americans in general were increasingly subject to surveillance, harassment, and intimidation by the U.S. government and Zionist groups like the Anti-Defamation League and the Jewish Defense League.

By the mid-1970s, Said, whilst being recruited by Johns Hopkins, Columbia, and Harvard, was considering a departure from the United States altogether. In 1974 he would write to Zurayk inquiring about a permanent position for himself in Beirut: Whatever knowledge of the Middle East I now possess is being pressured into the service of the American Empire, and why not put it to our service? Although Said did not in the end take the job as research director of the Institute for Palestine Studies which he was offered, his involvement with the Third World continued apace. In addition to Abu-Lughod, whom he called his guru, Said became close with prominent anti-war intellectuals in the United States, like Noam Chomsky and Eqbal Ahmad. And increasingly, the great theorists of anti-colonialism, especially Frantz Fanon and Aim Csaire, would become touchstones of his thought, alongside the Arab humanists and European Marxists he had long drawn from. Saids writing would leave little room for confusion as to where his thought was aimed. It is now time, he would write 1977, for us together to expose and destroy the whole system of confinement, dispossession, exploitation, and oppression that still holds us down and denies us inalienable rights as human beings. It is our job to create a genuine world culture of brotherhood and common cause.

For the memorial service following Saids death in 2003, Brennan wrote that Saids words so often expressed my thoughts that I found it hard over time to remember what I knew before I met himwhat I had said and believed before knowing him, and what (by contrast) I had taken entirely from him. A catalog of Brennans principal interests over the last four decadesfrom humanism, philology, and empire to Giambattista Vico, Erich Auerbach, and C. L. R. Jamesbetray Saids mark.

Like Said, Brennans efforts have often been extra-literary and meta-critical in character, the grammar of global politics and the life of ideas the subjects of much of his work. And Brennan, too, has not shied from political activity. As a graduate student at Columbia during the Reagan years, Brennan was among those who protested U.S. intervention in Nicaragua. Imperialism is Brennans primary object of critique. A close second, however, is the increasingly marginalized field of postcolonial studies, which he characterizesand sometimes caricaturesas a post-structuralist effort to obfuscate the social and political effects of imperialism and to deny the anti-imperialist criticism that preceded it. In a long chapter on Said in his 2006 book Wars of Position: The Cultural Politics of Left and Right, Brennan argued that those who take Said to be the progenitor of the academic field known as postcolonial studies are gravely mistaken. Postcolonialisms methods and motives departed significantly from Saids own efforts to understand and critique imperialism in Orientalism and elsewhere, according to Brennan. A good deal of postcolonial studies drew on Orientalism without being true to it, Brennan writes. The books theory traveled, and it did not travel well.

Under Saids tutelage, Brennan would produce a study of Salman Rushdies life and work, publishing his first book Salman Rushdie and the Third World in 1989 just as Rushdie was catapulted into public consciousness with the controversy over his novel The Satanic Verses. The Rushdie Affair, as it became known, occasioned a flurry of writing. A decade of rigorous thinking about secularism, liberalism, imperialism, and literature was put to the test as an Indian Muslim writer in London was attacked for blasphemy by coreligionists. Gayatri Chakravorty Spivak, Agha Shahid Ali, Talal Asad, and many other formidable thinkers all jumped into the fray to clarify their positions on the uses and abuses of Rushdies writing.

Said had a nuanced view of postcolonial studies, appreciating that a leading motif of it has been the consistent critique of Eurocentrism and patriarchy.

In the pages of the academic Marxist journal Social Text, Brennan would spar with another of Saids students, Aamir Mufti, over the interpretation and reception of Rushdies novel. For the uninitiated, the language of the debate may appear obscure. Both Mufti and Brennan opposed the cooption of Rushdies plight in the name of purportedly Western values against the Muslim horde in Europe and the United States. For Brennan, however, Rushdieas a metropolitan subject writing in English and publishing in Londonwas himself participating principally in a Western conversation. Against that reading, Mufti argued that Rushdie was part of the struggle over Islamic culture in the late twentieth century. Brennan, Mufti argued, was obscuring the nature of this global fight under the guise of anti-imperialism. Brennan in turn, accused Mufti (and others, like Sara Suleri), of summoning high theory and the language of the Western academy to make arguments about ethnic collectivities and contemporary imperialism that simply did not hold. London literary celebrities, Brennan concluded, do not speak for Bradford factory workers.

Despite Brennans disdain for postcolonial studies in general, there is no doubt that the brief enthusiasm for work that fits below postcolonialisms very large umbrella was crucial to making Brennans career. His exasperated response to Mufti, detailing the breadth of his expertise in the Islamic elements of Rushdies work, and his own role in first delineating them, speaks precisely to the ironies of postcolonial studies rapid rise and fall in literature departments. Postcolonialism, after all, never in reality congealed into any kind of doctrine, but more often simply denoted an interest on the part of its practitioners in colonialisms myriad effects, which is more than can be said about prevailing approaches to the humanities or social sciences in general. However deficient postcolonialism may be for tackling the material realities of our colonial present, the fields gradual disappearance and replacement in U.S. universities with geographical idioms totally untethered from the language of power and dominationwhether world literature, global history, or the global Anglophonecan only be seen as a loss.

In contrast to Brennans judgment, Said himself had a much more nuanced appreciation of postcolonial studies, tempered always by his suspicion of purely academic endeavors in general. In a university that was at the timeeven more than it is todayoverwhelming white and male (like Brennan himself), Said identified with appreciation that a leading motif of postcolonial studies has been the consistent critique of Eurocentrism and patriarchy. At the same time, however, Said was increasingly frustrated with the literary criticism and theory that was being practiced and celebrated in U.S. literature departments and humanities journals like Critical Inquiry and Diacritics. In a 1992 interview, he admitted to not reading lit. crit. anymore: It seems to me that whereas, say, ten years ago I might eagerly look forward to a new book by somebody at Cornell on literary theory and semiotics, now Im much more likely to be interested in work emerging out of concern with African history.

Said nevertheless found work to praise. In the afterword to a new edition of Orientalism in 1994, he singled out Ammiel Alcalays After Arabs and Jews: Remaking Levantine Culture (1992), Paul Gilroys The Black Atlantic: Modernity and Double Consciousness (1993), and Moira Fergusons Subject to Others: British Women Writers and Colonial Slavery, 16701834 (1992) for rethinking and re-formulating historical experiences which had once been based on the geographical separation of peoples. Saids own work was characterized by a patent refusal of separation. He refused to separate the literary from the historical, the material from the cultural, and, indeed, the personal from the political.

Said dedicated his eloquent 1979 book The Question of Palestine to his late friends Rashid Hussein and Farid Haddad, a Palestinian communist and physician tortured to death in an Egyptian jail in 1959. To those two, one could add Kamal Nassir, a brilliant Palestinian lawyer and writer killed by Israeli agents in Lebanon in April 1973. Said had dinner with him the night before his assassination. That list could be expanded still, by adding Hanna Mikhail, an accomplished Arabist with a PhD from Harvard who abandoned a comfortable career at the University of Washington to join the Palestine Liberation Organization in Jordan and Lebanon, where he would come to be known as Abu Omar. He would die at sea in 1976, on an ill-fated mission from Beirut to Tripoli with eleven others. Abu Omar, Said would write of his friend in 1994, embodied the prevailingly generous and unconventional principles of the Palestinian revolution. This was Saids world. In New York but not of it, Saids life cannot be contained by the cliches of campus novels and parochialism of the U.S. literary establishment.

Endlessly caricatured, ridiculed, and disdained, Said never wavered in his commitment to the Palestinian people, evenand especiallywhen they were abandoned by their own leadership.

Endlessly caricatured, ridiculed, and disdained, his arguments regularly misconstrued and disfigured by his critics and opponents, Said never wavered in his commitment to the Palestinian people (to whom, it should perhaps be noted, Brennan dedicates Pieces of Mind). Evenand especiallywhen Palestinians were abandoned by their own leadership, Said refused to acquiesce to the status quo, or celebrate half-measures. He surrounded himself with people who respected his cause and he admired them in turn. On the occasion of Eqbal Ahmads retirement from Hampshire College, Saidwhile holding back tearsoffered this tribute:

I want . . . to take this opportunity, to say on their behalfI have no right to speak on their behalf, but Ill tryto say on behalf of the many refugees, camp dwellers, wretched of the earth, who have been forgotten by their own leaders, and by their fellow Arabs and Muslims, that Eqbal has been one of their guiding lights, and for that no Palestinian can ever thank him enough.

Saids world is certainly different from ours. Palestinian institutions have been turned inside out. Unlike the PLO of Saids 1970s, todays Palestinian Authority in the West Bank serves not as a place where Palestinians from around the world can work for their liberation, but rather serves to administer Israels occupation itself. The U.S. university, too, has been transformed. Most who teach at universities today, even at Columbia, are insecure in their jobs, housing, and health care. While genuinely left-wing positions remain rare in the university, more and more intellectuals on the marginsmany of them young and in the streetsare articulating their opposition to the U.S. policy of endless warfare at home and abroad, to use the imperial locution.

Some things, however, continue unchanged. Israel remains belligerent in its zeal to dispossess Palestinians from Haifa to Jerusalem to Gaza. Seventy years, but actually longer, Palestinian anthropologist Khaled Furani observed in 2018, of not only wanting more land but also less and less Palestinians. On a daily basis, home by home, sometimes neighborhood by neighborhood, Palestinians continue to be killed outright or killed slowly, expelled from their lands, stripped of their livelihoods and communities. What also remains is the Palestinian will to rebel. The greater the Palestinian insistence, the deeper the Zionist denial, Said wrote in The Question of Palestine. While defenders of Israel appear increasingly desperate to everyone watching, public support of the Palestinian people still draws the ire of university administrators and the professional political class in the United States. Saids work and example, thenattuned as he was to the shape of Palestinian freedom to comeremains as instructive as ever.

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The World of Edward Said - Boston Review

Abe Foxman to be honored at congress tribute for Jewish American Heritage Month – The Jewish Standard

Posted By on May 14, 2021

May is Jewish American Heritage Month, and the annual congressional tribute marking the month will honor Abe Foxman of Bergen County on Friday, May 21.

The National Museum of American Jewish History will host the online tribute, which will feature a roster of politicians, office-holders, diplomats, and other leaders, both Jewish and non-Jewish. Its set for Friday, May 21, at noon; you can watch it on the museums website, at http://www.nmajh.org/jewish-american-heritage-month and on its Facebook page, at http://www.facebook.com/NMAJH. (Its easy to Google these links.)

This years Jewish American Heritage Months theme is about taking care of one another and supporting communities other than our own. It is inspired by the sage Hillels quote: If I am only for myself, what am I? And if not now, when? in the context of what we have experienced as a nation this past year during the pandemic and in rightfully increasing conversations racial injustice.

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Mr. Foxman, who survived the Holocaust as a child in Poland with the help of his nanny, and then found his parents after the war, is the retired director of the Anti-Defamation League. He is an authoritative voice on the subject of anti-Semitism and he is in a unique position to deliver a message to the American people via a Congressional venue as America grapples with horrific anti-Semitic incidents that thus far have been unprecedented in American history.

It is a widely acknowledged that Abe Foxman personifies and follows the path of Jews who helped shape the United States into the great country it is today. It has always been the Jewish American Heritage Month celebration series mission and goal to recognize exemplary American Jews who embody patriotism, coupled with timeless Jewish values that have allowed the Jewish community to thrive in these United States.

The annual celebration first began in 1980 as a week in April dedicated to American Jewry, and in 2006 President George W. Bush, at the request of Congress, named May as Jewish American Heritage Month.

President Joe Biden said: The Jewish American experience is a story of faith, fortitude, and progress. It is a quintessential American experience one that is connected to key tenets of American identity, including our Nations commitment to freedom of religion and conscience. This month, we honor Jewish Americans past and present who have inextricably woven their experience and their accomplishments into the fabric of our national identity.

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Abe Foxman to be honored at congress tribute for Jewish American Heritage Month - The Jewish Standard

USPTO Leadership Speaking Engagements for the week of May 10 | USPTO – United States Patent and Trademark Office

Posted By on May 14, 2021

Tuesday, May 11 (10-11 a.m. ET)Drew Hirshfeld, performing the functions and duties of the Under Secretary of Commerce for Intellectual Property and Director of the USPTOWashington State Bar Association-IP Section 26th Annual IP InstituteFireside chat, current USPTO programs and prioritiesFor more information and to register, click here.

Tuesday, May 11 (2-3 p.m. ET)Scott Boalick, Chief Judge of the Patent Trial and Appeal Board (PTAB)American Intellectual Property Law Association Virtual Spring MeetingPanelist, The Interplay Between District Court and PTAB LitigationFor more information and to register, click here.

Wednesday, May 12 (1:30-2:30 p.m. ET)Bismarck Myrick, Director of the Office of Equal Employment Opportunity and Diversity (OEEOD)Jewish American Heritage Month Flagship Event with Dr. Misha GalperinOpening remarks, celebrating Jewish American Heritage Month To watch the livestream of this event, click here.

Friday, May 14 (11 a.m. to 1 p.m. ET)Drew Hirshfeld, performing the functions and duties of the Under Secretary of Commerce for Intellectual Property and Director of the USPTOExplore the breakthroughs of Asian American and Native Hawaiian/Pacific Islander (AANHPI) inventorsOpening remarks, celebrating the work of AANHPI innovatorsFor more information and to register, click here.

All events to be held in a virtual format.Events open to the public are noted with a link. Other events are shared for advisory purposes only.Follow our social media to stay up-to-date with highlights from these engagements and others. Media inquiries can be directed to USPTO Press Secretary Paul Fucito.

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USPTO Leadership Speaking Engagements for the week of May 10 | USPTO - United States Patent and Trademark Office

New Film Explores Life Of Key Figure In Catholic-Jewish Relations – The Tablet Catholic Newspaper

Posted By on May 14, 2021

Abraham Joshua Heschel, far right, marches with civil rights leader Martin Luther King Jr. and others in Selma, Ala., in 1965, which is featured in Martin Doblmeiers 2021 documentary Spiritual Audacity: The Abraham Joshua Heschel Story. Heschel was a moral theologian and expert on the prophets who also played a key role in Jewish-Catholic relations and the Vatican II document on that topic. (Photo: CNS/courtesy Journey Films)

NEW YORK When filmmaker Martin Doblmeier considers the interfaith growth between Catholics and Jews, Pope Francis October 2018 Angelus prayer for the 11 victims of the shooting at the Tree of Life Synagogue in Pittsburgh comes to mind.

Its a moment Doblmeier doesnt know would have happened had it not been for the 1965 Vatican II document on interfaith relations Nostra Aetate, and in particular, the contribution and influence of 20th-century theologian Rabbi Abraham Joshua Heschel.

I dont think that necessarily would have happened had there not been an opening and a total transformation of the Catholic churchs understanding of working together and having a sense of value in other faith traditions, Doblmeier told The Tablet. Its a concrete example of how the world has really changed and I think Heschels stamp is all over that moment.

Earlier this month which is Jewish American Heritage Month Doblmeier released his latest documentary, Spiritual Audacity: The Abraham Joshua Heschel Story, that illustrates Heschels commitment to moral issues, justice, and interfaith dialogue through his involvement in the Selma to Montgomery march, anti-Vietnam War activism and Nostra Aetate.

Heschel was born in Warsaw, Poland in 1907. He received a Ph.D. from the University of Berlin in 1933 and stayed in Germany until 1938 when he was arrested and deported under the Nazi regime. In 1940, he emigrated to the U.S. with a visa secured by the Hebrew Union College in Cincinnati. His mother and three sisters all died in the Holocaust.

Heschels status as a renowned theologian grew from there, especially through the publication of his books The Sabbath (1951), and The Prophets (1962).

In 1962, Pope John XXIII summoned Catholic leaders to Rome for Vatican II, where they wrestled with issues intended to connect the church to the modern world. Chief among them was the churchs relationship with other faiths, particularly Judaism.

The American Jewish Committee was invited to consult on an interfaith relations document that became Nostra Aetate, and its leaders chose Heschel to lead the dialogue. Great progress was made through what became a sincere friendship between Heschel and Cardinal Augustin Bea, head of the Secretariat for Christian Unity. However, it wasnt always easy.

After Pope Paul VI took over the work of the council in 1963, following John XXIIIs death, a second draft of the document called for the eventual conversion of the Jews, which Herschel rebuked.

I would rather go to Auschwitz than give up my religion, Heschel said at the time.

Heschel flew to Rome to meet with Paul VI on the topic, who left the decision up to the council. The rest was history.

They had several days of debate about precisely this document. The thousand or so bishops actually got up one after another and they spoke, John Connelly author of From Enemy to Brother: The Revolution in Catholic Teaching on the Jews, 1933-1965 said in the film.

Virtually all those who spoke out in favor of a strong document condemning antisemitism and going back to the earlier document that had distanced itself from the agenda of conversion, he continued. I think they had Rabbi Heschels words ringing in their ears.

The result was Nostra Aetate being approved on October 28, 1965. It called for mutual respect and understanding between the Catholic Church and the Jewish people, denounced antisemitism, called for fraternal dialogue between the two faiths, and did not call for the eventual conversion of Jews.

In the film, historian Taylor Branch called it a tremendous moment for religious history.

In a conversation with The Tablet, Doblmeier also acknowledged the rocky state of Catholic-Jewish relations to that point and the role of Heschel in moving those relations forward.

Im sure in the 1930s Heschel could sense that there was not going to be a lot of vocal support coming to the Catholic church and yet, 30 years later, he has the courage, the conviction, to offer his support and willingness to participate in the transformation of the Catholic church at a time when the church is actually calling out itself, challenging itself to turn into a church that really can face the modern world, Doblmeier said.

Months before Nostra Aetate was approved, Heschel marched hand in hand with Rev. Martin Luther King Jr., Rev. Fred Shuttlesworth, the late Congressman John Lewis, and others in the Selma to Montgomery march to support black citizens right to vote. He also advocated against the Vietnam War.

As Shai Held, co-founder of the Mechon Hadar educational institute notes in the film, Heschels commitment to action in part stems from the lack of action from the world against the Nazis.

He had an incredibly keen, almost excruciating sense of the moral consequences of indifference. The Jews were murdered, no one did anything, Held said. He saw his own war on indifference as a kind of reaction to the horror of living in a world where indifference was rampant.

Doblmeier called Heschels stance on indifference a lesson he left for all people of faith.

If theres one legacy left to us by Abraham Joshua Heschel it is that indifference is its own form of sin. A person of faith cannot respond by being indifferent, Doblmeier said.

Spiritual Audacity: The Abraham Joshua Heschel Story is available to watch on the websites of local PBS stations or it can be purchased on Amazon and journeyfilms.com.

The documentary completes Doblmeiers Prophetic Voices trilogy on religious visionaries, social activists, and peacemakers who shaped 20th century America. The first two films highlighted Howard Thurman and Dorothy Day.

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New Film Explores Life Of Key Figure In Catholic-Jewish Relations - The Tablet Catholic Newspaper

What’s Going On 5/13 Our Time Press – Our Time Press

Posted By on May 14, 2021

SPRINGTIME IN AMERICAMay 2021 opens with May Day, an observation of the historic struggles and achievements of workers and the labor movement. May is Asian American and Pacific Islander Heritage Month. Other May tenants include Mothers Day, National Teachers Day, and National Nurses Day. Without fail, it is the month when zodiac sign Taurus makes its exit and is immediately followed by Gemini. On 5/28, another retrograde Mercury stalks us through 6/22.

THE NATIONAs America transitions to something approximating normalcy in the post COVID19 vaccination era, we seem to be repeating pre pandemic unpredictable behaviors, especially among the electeds.

FOR THE RECORD: Atlanta, Georgia Mayor African American Keisha Lance Bottoms, Democratic Party rising star, said that she is no longer interested in a second term. While newly-installed Boston Mayor, Democrat African American Kim Janey, will join the crowded mayors race this year. As head of the City Council, Janey was next in line of succession when her predecessor Mayor Marty Walsh left to become President Bidens Secretary of Labor. Detroit police chief, Black American Republican James Craig, 64, retires effective June 1. Will he run for Michigan Governor next year? Michigans Democratic Governor Gretchen Whitmers lips are sealed about re-election plans. However, she has a nice war chest. A Nigeria-born businessman, Republican Austin Cheng plans to challenge Whitmer and he vows to cancel Black History Month if he is elected.Republican governors are revising voting rights laws in Georgia, Florida, Texas, Iowa and Arizona designed to suppress the votes of Blacks and other people of color. Governors argue that the 2020 election was fraudulent, which it was not. The Democrats in the House have drafted the For The People Act, a sweeping voting rights bill, which would circumvent much of the revision initiated by the GOP Governors and restore much of the muscle removed by the US Supreme Court in 2013, from the Voting Rights Act of 1965. Senate hearings on the bill begin this week. The GOP House is awash in internal battles, working to oust caucus members unfaithful to POTUS 45.This is the year of REDISTRICTING, that procedure that draws boundaries for electoral and political districts in the United States, a ritual done every 10 years, following the US Census numbers. Redistricting affects political power.

THE 6/22 NYC PRIMARYIs NYC ready for a full-time re-opening? It has an abundance of public safety problems on the Streets in Brooklyn, the Bronx, Harlem and Times Square, the citys tourism Mecca. Too much gun shooting and homicides and too many problems in its subway system, not to mention the widespread anti-Asian assaults. NYPD crime stats are alarming with comparable 2020 stats. Reading the crime stories in the NYC tabloids, a picture emerges of a city with a large population of residents who need mental health counseling. Primary contestants who are hawkish on law and order are going to be favored by most voters. Forget Defund the Police chatter. Its not going to happen now.And endorsements, how much are they worth? Mayoral hopeful Eric Adams got the editorial nod from the NY Post. Mayoral hopeful Kathryn Garcia got the NY Times endorsement. NYS Senator John Liu, former NYC Comptroller endorsed NYS Senator Brian Benjamins candidacy for his old job.The Primary winners will be candidates who were most effective 1) branding themselves aka name recognition and 2) with an explanation of RANKED CHOICE VOTING, to their constituents.

NYC COUNCILThe following is an introduction to some of the 330 contenders for the NYC Council.MANHATTAN: District 9, Some Central Harlem candidates: William Allen, williamallennyc.org; Cordell Cleare, cleare2021.com; Billy Council, billycouncilharlem.com; Athena Moore, athenamoore.com; Dr. Keith Taylor, taylormadeforharlem.com; Joshua Clennon joshuaclennon.com; and Ruth McDaniels, friendsofruthmcdaniels.com.

BROOKLYN: District 35 candidates:Michael Hollingsworth, tenants rights organizer; Crystal Hudson, community activist; Curtis Harris, Green Earth Poets Caf; Renee Collymore, small business owner and teacher; Regina Kinsey, Reginakinsey.com; Diedre Levy, Jewish Filipina special ed teacher; Hector Robertson, hectorrobertson.com. Sharon Wedderburn, Community Board member; and Maayan Zik, Black Orthodox Jew community activist.

ARTS/CULTUREEDUCATION: Just learned about the George Jackson Academy, a Manhattan school, located at 104 St Marks Place, founded in 2003, originally serving boys from elementary to middle school from underserved communities, which today is a middle school with a student/teacher ratio of 10 to 1. School is named after the late Harlem-born George Jackson, himself a product of private schools like Monsignor Kelly School and Fordham Prep, which recruited poor but talented boys, a Harvard University graduate, who relocated to LA where he became Motown Records CEO before launching a career as film/tv producer/co producer of film classics like New Jack City, Jasons Lyrics, and Krush Groove Visit gjacademy.org.

US NEWS & WORLD REPORT: The following NYC schools made the top 50 of 18,000 public schools in the US News & World Report 2021 Best US High Schools. Townshend Harris, Flushing (12), Brooklyn Tech (22) HS of Math Science & Engineering at CCNY (28 Queens HS for the Sciences, York College (30) Bronx HS of Science (35) Staten Island Technical HS (37) Stuyvesant HS (44) and HS of American Studies, Lehman College, Bronx (49)

Norma Jean Dardens, Miss Mamies Spoonbread Too at 366 West 110 Street, Harlem made Michelins List of the Nations best affordable eateries. Spoonbread referenced as a soul food classic with menu items like meat loaf, Louisiana catfish and baked turkey wings.Yamiche Alcindor was named moderator of WASHINGTON WEEK, the Peabody Award winning weekly PBS-TV new analysis, which airs on Fridays at 8 pm. Alcindor was White House correspondent for PBS News Hour and guest MSNBC politics consultant.

NEWSMAKERSHarlem-based living legend Jeanne Parnell, the grand dame of talk at City Colleges WHCR-FM morning radio shows celebrates her 85th birthday anniversary on May 20. Quarantined and cabin-fevered, her friends are pressuring her to throw a party. A veteran NYC public school educator and arts administrator, the Brooklyn-born Parnell is a product of the HS of Performing Arts, the Fame school, and Howard University. She cut her teeth in journalism doing stints at WWRL-AM, Inner City Broadcasting Radio before arriving at WHCR where she hosts her City Lights show for more than 20 years.

A Harlem-based branding/media consultant, Victoria can be contacted at victoria.horsford@gmail.com

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What's Going On 5/13 Our Time Press - Our Time Press

Meet the sociologist who left his Chabad community and wrote a pathbreaking study of ex-Hasidim – Forward

Posted By on May 14, 2021

Read this article in Yiddish

When Schneur Zalman Newfield studied at Chabad yeshivas, everyone thought he was a pious young man who had little knowledge of the outside world. They couldnt have imagined that Newfield had secretly assembled a stash of contraband books - modern Yiddish literature, science and history texts and even Russian novels - which he feared would lead to his expulsion.

The scenario might sound like something youd read in the memoirs of a Jewish intellectual raised before the Russian revolution. But Schneur Zalman Newfield is still in his 30s. Born in Brooklyn in 1982 and brought up in the Lubavitch bastion of Crown Heights, today he is an assistant professor at Borough of Manhattan Community College who specializes in the sociology of religious communities. His monograph, Degrees of Separation: Identity Formation While Leaving Ultra-Orthodox Judaism, is the first sizable scholarly study of ex-Hasidic Jews by someone who has left a Hasidic community.

Like many Lubavitch Hasidim, Newfields parents are baalei-tshuva or Jews who became religious later in life. His father, Shlomo, is a dermatologist who graduated from Columbia and earned his medical degree from Harvard. His mother, Basha, went to Queens College. Despite his parents academic backgrounds, they sent him to religious schools and yeshivas where no secular studies were taught. Although he spoke English at home, he could read only Yiddish and Hebrew.

A trip to the post office would launch a sequence of events that altered Newfields path in life. When he was 14, his father took him to apply for a passport. As he was unable to read or write in English, Newfields father filled out the paperwork for him, but the post office worker wouldnt allow someone else to sign it. Newfields father showed him how to write his name and had him practice several times until he could do it himself. Realizing he was limited by his illiteracy in English, Newfield decided to learn how to read and write in his mother tongue.

His uncle, Jeff Janus, to whom he would later dedicate his book, Degrees of Separation, tutored him in writing and gave him elementary English primers. Within a few years, Newfield graduated to more sophisticated material, devouring classics such as Aleksandr Isayevich Solzhenitsyns The Gulag Archipelago and what he described to me only half-jokingly as goyishe bikher (gentile books) - masterworks of Yiddish literature by Sholem Aleichem and Isaac Bashevis Singer.

The more secular literature and history I read, the more interested I became in learning further, Newfield said. I had a thirst to learn about the outside world and others beliefs.

Before Newfield was 23, he had seen more of the world than most Americans. Besides attending yeshivas in Miami, Chicago, Morristown (New Jersey), Crown Heights and Buenos Aires, he had spent a summer as a shaliach, or religious emissary, in Singapore and visited Russia, Paraguay, Australia and Vietnam.

But I was always in spaces where the Lubavitch bubble was dominant, he noted.

Like most of the 74 ex-Hasidim Newfield interviewed, no one event led him to leave his community. Ideas he encountered in books played a role, as did the death of the movements charismatic Rebbe, Menachem Mendel Schneerson, whom Lubavitchers saw as a likely Messiah. In Singapore he befriended Rabbi Dr. Rachel Safman, a professor of sociology who stirred his interest in the social sciences. After earning his GED at 21, Newfield attended Brooklyn College and earned a PhD from NYU. Reading sociological studies of religious exiters, Newfield notes in Degrees of Separation, stopped me in my tracks and ultimately led to this book.

In Degrees of Separation, which compares the experiences of Lubavitch and Satmar exiters, Newfield argues that even when those raised Hasidic leave the community physically, mentally they can never make a complete break from it. The values, beliefs and habits with which they were raised continue to color every aspect of their lives, from how they understand human relations to mundane actions like how they tie their shoes. Newfield notes that ultimately ex-Hasidim live in an in-between state even years after leaving.

Image by Temple University Press

Coming from the community he was studying presented Newfield with both advantages and challenges. Newfields fluency in Yiddish and familiarity with Hasidic life proved invaluable for his research. However, he had to be careful not to project his own experiences onto his interviewees. In some cases, his Chabad background may have made his Lubavitch informants hesitant to divulge certain sensitive details, especially those involving sexual abuse.

One striking aspect of Newfields research is his examination of the different measures the Satmar and Lubavitch communities take to prevent members from leaving. While Satmar Hasidim aim to isolate themselves, building exclusively Satmar towns like Kiryas Joel, Lubavitch Hasidim live in what Newfield terms the Lubavitch bubble or Global Lubavitch. Far from being insular, they have regular contact with less religious Jews because of the communitys outreach work. That doesnt mean, however, that Lubavitch Hasidim necessarily accept a childs decision to leave the community.

One informant, Dina, the daughter of Chabad emissaries, told Newfield that her parents are accepting of all Jews, secular or religious. Yet, her own decision to leave the community was beyond the pale for them.

Newfield explained that the contradiction stems from the fact that a non-Lubavitch Jew who visits Crown Heights or Chabad outposts elsewhere is thought of as a child who was born among the gentiles. Therefore he cant be blamed for not knowing better.

But if an eygene, an undzere [both terms mean roughly one of our own], wants to leave, its a real problem, Newfield said. How can it be that people who saw the light, who know the beauty and warmth of the Hasidic lifestyle, how can they decide that they want to live a non-Orthodox lifestyle? Its an existential threat and they have to be isolated and handled in some way so as not to contaminate the community.

No matter how harsh the response to Lubavitch exiters, its often mild compared to what Satmar exiters face.

The threat of kicking children out of a Lubavitch yeshiva because of the parents violations is unheard of, Newfield said. Satmar Hasidim, however, do try to curb their neighbors behaviors with the threat of expulsion. A woman who begins wearing less conservative clothing or a man who trims his beard too much may be warned that if they dont change their ways their children will be expelled from the communitys religious schools.

The schools work in cahoots, Newfield said. If the kids are kicked out of one school, other schools wont accept them. If the parents want their kids to go to Hasidic schools, they will have to move. Its a way of kicking a family out of the community even if its not articulated that way.

In divorce cases, the community frequently raises hundreds of thousands of dollars to ensure that exiters dont get full custody of their children.

The mother of one of his subjects, Mrs. Grossbaum, told Newfield that the community is not democratic enough to accept a mothers decision to leave the community and take her child with her. If such a case ends up in court, Mrs. Grossbaum said, a secular judge wont accept the explanation that the father and his community are fighting for the childs future. Instead, Grossbaum added, the best option for the community is for someone to testify that the exiter has mental-health issues and the children therefore cannot live with her.

For many community members, this isnt perjuryleaving the community is considered a sign of mental illness. And if an exiter is deemed sane, its often assumed he comes from a broken home or has suffered sexual abuse. While five of Newfields subjects did report having been sexually abused, most did not cite it as their primary reason for leaving.

Despite the retaliation some community leavers face, Newfield told me that nearly all of the 74 ex-Hasidim he interviewed remain in contact with their families.

Theres a widespread misconception that Hasidim excommunicate or shun those who leave and cut off all communication, Newfield said. Thats not the case at all. Most families maintain ties.

Newfield himself is close with his parents and siblings.

Meet the sociologist who left his Chabad community and wrote a pathbreaking study of ex-Hasidim

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Meet the sociologist who left his Chabad community and wrote a pathbreaking study of ex-Hasidim - Forward


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