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).
As part of CCA’s efforts to increase antisemitism and Holocaust education in the K-12 space, we are proud to support school student visits to “Auschwitz. Not long ago. Not far away.,” a powerful exhibit at Park Plaza.
CJP's Center for Combatting Antisemitism (CCA) recently provided CSI with $1 million in security funding to address urgent expanding needs.
"When societies reach a crisis, they have two options—to think about what they can do or who they can blame. It seems that many college students have chosen the latter."
Forty people kicked off a months-long learning journey involving specialized training, coaching and targeted campaigns on racial justice and leadership.
Sarah Plymate reflects on her teenage daughter's experience at "Standing Strong: Empowering Teens to Recognize and Respond to Antisemitism,” hosted by TribeTalk.
Brandeis University provides a list of online resources for countering antisemitism.
Our new commercial’s core message is that while political issues should be debated, hate speech and intimidation simply can’t be tolerated.
An open letter from CJP President and CEO Rabbi Marc Baker and Jewish Community Relations Council of Greater Boston (JCRC) CEO Jeremy Burton to Newton Mayor Ruthanne Fuller regarding a May exhibit at the Newton Free Library, The Ongoing & Relentless Nakba.
The Biden-Harris Administration has taken aggressive action to implement the strategy and to speak out forcefully against hate of all kinds, especially in the wake of the Oct. 7 attacks.
Universities are increasingly addressing this question regarding pro-Palestinian encampments. Student protesters say they are not antisemitic, but others disagree.
This video series consists of three segments, all under 20 minutes long, explaining the history of Jews and antisemitism, and the current state of antisemitism.
A PBS NewsHour report finds that higher education across the U.S. is struggling on the issues of allowing pro-Palestinian protests and preventing antisemitism and intimidation.