EMPOWER YOURSELF. EMPOWER OUR COMMUNITY.
The work of CJP’s Center for Combating Antisemitism is geared toward making antisemitism socially and politically unacceptable. Since October 7, we have accelerated and adapted the implementation of our 5-Point Plan to combat antisemitism and anti-Zionism to meet urgent needs in our community and leverage opportunities to make proactive and long-term impact in civic spaces, campuses, and schools.
To empower our community and our allies, we’ve provided resources for you to enhance your knowledge, find like-minded groups working toward fostering a flourishing community, and discover opportunities for action and activism.
Resources were curated in part in collaboration with the Foundation to Combat Antisemitism (FCAS).
Solidarity is necessary and critical in the short-term, but building allyship is long-term work that entails learning and requires grace and compassion.
Over 100 Jewish groups unequivocally reject Islamophobia and anti-Arab hate.
Boston’s Jewish community has plenty of support in the battle against antisemitism.
Talking to Jewish students about Israel and the Palestinian territories can be a sensitive and complex topic.
This lesson plan for middle and high school students teaches how to be an ally, advocate and activist in the wake of an antisemitic incident.
The Anti-Defamation League shares six tips for supporting Jewish students in the classroom.
We all have a responsibility to report and respond to antisemitism or biaswhen we see it. Download the ADL incident report to learn how.
The Anti-Defamation League offers 18 best practices for security.
A guide of low-cost and no-cost safety tips for Jewish institutions.
Deborah Lipstadt, the U.S. Special Envoy for Monitoring and Combating Antisemitism, suggests that Jewish pride can be a way to counter antisemitism.
Online abuse includes antisemitism; organizations suggest ways to respond.
How to recognize it, what its effects are, and how to stop it.