Day: August 24, 2023

Categories Leo Frank

OPINION: Holocaust survivor’s message is a call to action for us all – The Atlanta Journal Constitution

A few days before 95-year-old Esther Basch, the Honey Girl of Auschwitz, came to town to share her story as a Holocaust survivor, the Jewish Federation of Greater Atlanta received a bomb threat.

The federations building in Midtown was evacuated. After a two-hour investigation, police determined the bomb threat was a hoax.

This incident took place the day before the 108th anniversary of the killing of Leo Frank, a Jewish man who was lynched in Marietta by an antisemitic mob.

That anniversary had barely passed before antisemitic flyers, stuffed in plastic bags, were distributed throughout the Cobb County city. Similar incidents had previously occurred in Kennesaw and Acworth, according to news reports.

This was the environment that awaited Basch and her daughter, Rachel Turet, both of whom live in Arizona. They have been touring the country nonstop for the past year to share Baschs message of love how she has managed to forgive the Nazis who imprisoned her and murdered her father and countless others. She came at a time when some people seem intent on fomenting hate.

Last year in the U.S., antisemitic incidents climbed to the highest level in more than four decades, according to the Anti-Defamation League. Incidents increased by 36% over the previous year.

In May, the Biden Administration released the first U.S. National Strategy to Counter Antisemitism. Meanwhile, in Georgia, where incidents increased 63% over the previous year, state lawmakers in the last legislative session failed to bring to a vote a bill that would have defined antisemitism and included it in the states hate crime law. The change would allow for harsher criminal penalties when Jewish people are targeted in crimes.

Jewish institutions in some cities, including Atlanta, have turned to community-based programs under the direction of Secure Community Network, a nationwide tracking system that helps assess threats and set up protocols.

I appreciate and admire Baschs ability to forgive people who committed unspeakable horrors. But, when we spoke by phone, I was angry and disgusted about the inability of our leaders to address acts of hatred with consequences that might actually serve as a deterrent. I am self-aware enough to know that I have no compassion for perpetrators of hate speech and hate crimes. I wanted to understand Baschs journey to forgiveness.

Antisemitism is growing, a cause of concern for everyone who knows history, she said. It makes me feel very, very sad.

Basch began publicly sharing her story of being held in a Nazi concentration camp after meeting one of the American soldiers who liberated the camp.

When I speak, it feels like a burden is off my shoulders, she said before an event held at Congregation Beth Tefillah in Sandy Springs. I dont remember what I had for breakfast, but I remember every second of my past.

On Baschs 16th birthday, she and her mother were sent to Auschwitz. When they were pulled from their lives, her mother was still carrying the eggs that she planned to use to bake a cake for her.

Basch, who grew up in Czechoslovakia, would later learn her father, a rabbi, was sent directly to his death. It was her father, she said, who taught her to love people, regardless of their race or religion, and to use positive thinking to lead a happy life.

She said miracles kept her alive during her time in Auschwitz and at the labor camps, where she was held for more than nine months before U.S. soldiers liberated prisoners.

When the soldiers invited them to collect whatever they wanted from town, Basch found a jar of honey and used her fingers to lift its sweetness into her mouth. Eating the honey made her so ill that she had to stay in the infirmary for a month to regain her health, earning her the moniker the Honey Girl of Auschwitz.

Survivor accounts like Baschs are increasingly important as the history of the Holocaust fades in our collective memory. Rabbi Ari Sollish, director of the Torah Center ATL, said hearing stories from people like Basch people who have maintained a positive outlook on life can serve as inspiration for us all, particularly those who are young.

The point is not to bring everyone back 80 years, he said. It is about education and positivity and love and sensitivity and how we should be there for each other.

We have seen recent examples of this in the outpouring of support for members of the Jewish community when acts of hatred have occurred in metro Atlanta, Macon and other parts of Georgia.

Basch said she has felt that same kind of support from the people she has met during speaking engagements the neo-Nazi who begged her forgiveness, the children who promise to never forget and the adults who find her forgiveness contagious enough to make changes in their own lives.

If I dont forgive, if I hold a grudge, I only hurt myself, Basch said. I cannot forget the horrors they put me through, but I can forgive.

Read more on the Real Life blog (www.ajc.com/opinion/real-life-blog/) and find Nedra on Facebook (www.facebook.com/AJCRealLifeColumn) and Twitter (@nrhoneajc) or email her at nedra.rhone@ajc.com.

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OPINION: Holocaust survivor's message is a call to action for us all - The Atlanta Journal Constitution

Categories Mary Phagan

Holocaust survivor faces torrent of online abuse on Elon Musk’s X … – Ynetnews

Lucy Lipiner is no stranger to antisemitism. A 90-year-old Holocaust survivor, she was forced to live through one of the worst atrocities to ever take place in human history. Yet her lived experience still hasnt prevented the torrent of antisemitic abuse that she, and all Jewish people, currently are experiencing on social media in particular on Elon Musks X (formerly known as Twitter). This week was no exception.

Lipiner, who boasts just under 30,000 followers on the platform, says she regularly uses social media to engage and push back against the rising antisemitism that she is seeing.

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Holocaust survivor Lucy Lipiner regularly uses social media to call out Holocaust denial and revisionism

(Photo: Tel Aviv Institute)

I was appalled at the rise in antisemitism that seemed more blatant less hidden than in the past and more like what we had seen before the war in Europe. I felt, as a survivor, compelled to speak up, she told Ynet.

And she has definitely spoken up. Lipiner regularly uses social media to call out Holocaust denial and revisionism, using her own personal story from Nazi-occupied Poland, as well as her own collection of family photos from the Holocaust, to share the truth.

From taking on former UFC fighter Jake Shields for spreading antisemitic conspiracies to calling out anti-feminist right-wing pundit Pearl Davis for her antisemitic song, to exposing the antisemitism in UN Special Rapporteur Francesca Albaneses tweets, Lipiner is extremely active in the conversation on the X platform.

Lipiner considers anti-Zionism a form of antisemitism.

I also thought the rise of BDS was simply a veiled form of antisemitism in the guise of anti-Zionism, which increasingly felt like nothing less than todays version of age-old hatred of Jews, she said.

This week, when she published a post on X about the anniversary of the lynching of Leo Frank, she was met with a massive onslaught of white supremacist antisemitism in response. The result was a community note a fact-checking tool meant to add context to tweets - which incorrectly stated that Leo Frank, the victim of the lynching, murdered and raped a 13-year-old girl. In fact, Frank was wrongly convicted for the rape and murder of Mary Phagan, in a case that is widely believed to be permeated with blatant antisemitism akin to the Dreyfus affair.

I tweeted about the 108th anniversary of the lynching of an innocent Jewish man Leo Frank who was accused of murder amidst a horrifically antisemitic community environment. His lynchers were never brought to Justice. A community note says it all: antisemitism is still alive and kicking today, she said.

Beyond the community note, the responses to her tweet were also antisemitic. One comment read: Gee its almost like they were kicked out of 109 countries for a reason Another: You don't have to be in colonized Palestine to defend the indefensible, you simply have to be a zionist.

While hundreds pushed back and eventually the X platform removed the community note, the evidence of the antisemitic mob remains. Lipiner said that she routinely receives ugly antisemitic threats and messages in her private messages on social media as well, including users mocking her with Holocaust jokes about gas chambers.

Hate-filled trolls seem to enjoy engaging with me. Mostly they deny the Holocaust ever happened or diminish it, compare it to other events- or a favorite of trolls is to co-opt the term Nazi, using it to describe Israel and its right to defend itself against terror, she said.

In another message, Lipiner shared with Ynet, an X user wrote to tell her that she is not a real Jew and that the Torah says the Jews were and are a black race of people. You're not black so stop spreading lies to the public. We are sick and tired of you stealing our history. Not the real Jews is a phrase most commonly used by Black supremacists including Louis Farrakhans Nation of Islam and the Black Hebrews movement - claiming Black people, and not Jews, are the true chosen people of God.

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Holocaust survivor Lucy Lipiner pushes back against antisemitism on social media

(Photo: Tel Aviv Institute)

Yet in the face of such vile conversation, Lipiner isnt backing down; instead, shes doubling down.

The trolls honestly dont bother me. Ive dealt with so much worse, and I guess I must be relevant, she joked. But she is concerned about the level of vitriol on social media, in particular X.

On paper, these platforms may look fair and as if they are searching for the correct balance on the fine line between free speech and hate speech, but in Elon Musks case I think he has shown his true personal feelings and that is influencing what he allows to stand on X, she explained.

Concerns of antisemitism and other forms of cyberbullying have only intensified over the past week, with Musk announcing that he intends to do away with the blocking feature completely.

Despite the challenges, however, Lipiner sees participation in social media as a critical tool.

The role of social media is simple, she said, "to educate, educate, educate. People are reacting to this instantaneous, immediate gratification with less thought than ever before. Slogans carry enormous weight on social media allowing people to latch on to antisemitism and racist attitudes as if its the flavor of the month.

To help push back against the harassment, threats and intimidation, which have become almost expected for a Jewish person on social media today, Lipiner has partnered with the Tel Aviv Institute to help Jewish and non-Jewish influencers combat antisemitism online.

Hen Mazzig, co-founder of the Tel Aviv Institute told Ynet: We work with over one hundred Jewish online content creators and influencers, but no one has the stamina that Lucy has to fight antisemitism online. Every time she speaks at our signature content creator laboratories the participants are blown away by her courage, tenacity and tireless dedication to speaking truth to power.

Lipiners best advice for those in the fight against antisemitism is to: Have a thick skin, do your research, be as honest as possible, and always work toward a greater good, even if it seems like an impossible dream.

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Holocaust survivor faces torrent of online abuse on Elon Musk's X ... - Ynetnews