{"id":40425,"date":"2018-12-28T06:00:00","date_gmt":"2018-12-28T15:00:00","guid":{"rendered":"https:\/\/www.juneauempire.com\/opinion\/opinion-fight-anti-semitism-with-love\/"},"modified":"2018-12-28T09:12:57","modified_gmt":"2018-12-28T18:12:57","slug":"opinion-fight-anti-semitism-with-love","status":"publish","type":"post","link":"https:\/\/www.juneauempire.com\/home\/opinion-fight-anti-semitism-with-love\/","title":{"rendered":"Opinion: Fight anti-semitism with love"},"content":{"rendered":"
It’s been almost two months since the murder of 11 Jews praying on the Sabbath in Pittsburgh<\/a>.<\/p>\n It’s also been nearly two months since I received the biggest postcard the United States postal service allows, from the Republican Women of Juneau. You may remember: “If you give Jesse Kiehl your vote … you may as well give him your wallet.”<\/p>\n It has the picture of a man with a wad of $100 bills he’s putting into his jacket. It’s black and red and white. Press reports shortly before the Nov. 6 election documented similar fliers in North Carolina, California, Pennsylvania and Connecticut. Every single one targeted a Jewish candidate and people suggested to me that this was part of the “Republican playbook.”<\/p>\n [Opinion: #LOVETHYNEIGHBOR (No exceptions)]<\/a><\/ins><\/p>\n In fact, in a Washington Post article<\/a> on Nov. 6, Scott Kendall, a Jewish Republican and chief of staff to former Alaska Gov. Bill Walker, said he phoned the group that created the flier — the Republican Women of Juneau — and asked what they were thinking after he was flooded with calls and emails.<\/p>\n “I’d like to believe it wasn’t intentional,” Kendall said he told them. “But whatever you do, you need to put out a statement that you condemn anti-Semitism.”<\/p>\n I understand that while Jewish people recognize the anti-Semitism in the graphic and words, many others don’t. For those unfamiliar with anti-Semitic tropes, the ones used in the mailer are reminiscent not only of World War II German government propaganda, but also of anti-Semitic imagery used in modern history. This is why it seemed so important to me that the Juneau Jewish Community (JJC) ask for a meeting with the Republican Women of Juneau; if they are non-Jews, they may be unfamiliar with the tropes. In particular, we addressed our request to the Republican Women whose contact information was readily available on its website and the Alaska Public Offices Commission website.<\/p>\n