Atlanta Jewish Times, Vol. XCIII No. 9, March 2, 2018

Page 1

JOIN US FOR THE

Jewish Breakfast Club

Luncheon

Thursday, March 8 11:30 am – 1:00 pm

JEWISH MUSIC FESTIVAL PREVIEW, PAGES 13-28 SHTETL TIME IRON WOMAN ONLY THE GOOD

Opening night, go back to the future with modern takes on Yiddish and klezmer. Page 16

Music activist Chana Rothman is the hardest-working woman at AJMF9. Page 18

Four decades later, Billy Joel is no stranger to the ATL Collective treatment. Page 27

Find out the challenges and goals our very own Jewish Millennials are facing. See more details on page 18

Subscribe, Support, Sustain

VOL. XCIII NO. 9

WWW.ATLANTAJEWISHTIMES.COM

MARCH 2, 2018 | 15 ADAR 5778

Anti-Jewish Incidents Jump in SE

Determined to Celebrate Purim

Atlanta faced persistent and sometimes torrential rain Sunday, Feb. 25, but a little water couldn’t wash away the fun and tradition of the 27th annual Atlanta Purim Parade & Festival in Toco Hills. The rain might have dampened expectations, but participants like these riders on the Torah Day School of Atlanta float kept rolling merrily along LaVista Road. More photos, Page 34

Subscribe, Support, Sustain Support the AJT and Subscribe Today. 1-year subscription for home delivery of the Atlanta Jewish Times: $65 in Georgia, $89 outside of state, delivery by U.S. mail. To subscribe, go to www.atlantajewishtimes.com/subscription. For more information, please call 404-883-2130.

INSIDE Candle Lighting �������������������������� 4 Israel News �����������������������������������6 Opinion �����������������������������������������8 Politics ���������������������������������������� 30 Arts �����������������������������������������������35 Obituaries �����������������������������������36 Crossword �����������������������������������37 Marketplace �������������������������������38 Education ������������������������������������39

Anti-Semitic incidents surged by 32 percent in the Southeast in 2017, according to a report released Tuesday, Feb. 27, by the Anti-Defamation League. ADL’s four-state Southeast Region — Georgia, Alabama, Tennessee and South Carolina — reported 74 incidents in 2017, compared with 56 in 2016, according to ADL’s annual Audit of Anti-Semitic Incidents. Among those incidents were bomb threats against Jewish community centers in each state, including multiple threats against the Marcus JCC, for which an Israeli-American teen was arrested. Nationally, ADL reported almost 60 percent more anti-Semitic incidents in 2017 than in 2016, the largest single-year increase since the tracking of incident data began in 1979. Anti-Semitic incidents at schools and colleges nearly doubled for the second year in a row. The Southeast saw 53 incidents of harassment, including 13 bomb threats, up 15 percent from 2016; 20 incidents of vandalism, double the 2016 total; and one physical assault after none in 2016. About a third of the incidents occurred at Jewish institutions or Jewish schools, and a third took place at colleges or non-Jewish schools: 21 at non-Jewish schools, up from 17; five on college campuses, up from three; and 24 at Jewish institutions and schools, up from 13. “It is deeply concerning to observe the rise of anti-Semitism in places where our children should be learning how to positively impact society,” said Phil Rubin, who chairs the ADL Southeast regional board. ADL’s anti-bias training is in high demand, Southeast Regional Director Allison Padilla-Goodman said. ■


Turn static files into dynamic content formats.

Create a flipbook
Issuu converts static files into: digital portfolios, online yearbooks, online catalogs, digital photo albums and more. Sign up and create your flipbook.