(Jewish Group) Between Kanye and the Midterms, the Unsettling Stream of Antisemitism
Simon Taylor was on his way to an appointment in Flatbush when he pulled into a local filling station one afternoon last week. It was a lovely fall day in Brooklyn, but as he began to fuel up, the climate turned sour: Another customer, spotting the skullcap atop Rabbi Taylors head, launched into an expletive-laden rant about how much he hated Jews, and then, when the rabbi photographed his license plate, started chasing him with an upraised fist.
Rabbi Taylor, a 58-year-old father of five who oversees social services and disaster relief programs for an umbrella organization of Orthodox Jews, was shaken. A native of England who now lives in Brooklyn, he wondered if the incident was connected to a mainstreaming of antisemitic rhetoric in America.
Ive never had anything like this in New York, and it definitely felt to me like this whole Kanye West thing had something to do with it, said Rabbi Taylor, referring to the ugly utterances of the hip-hop legend Kanye West, now known as Ye. All it takes is a couple influential people to say things, and suddenly it becomes very tense.
For Jews in America, things are tense indeed. Next weeks midterm elections feel to some like a referendum on democracys direction. There is a war in Europe. The economy seems to be teetering. It is a perilous time, and perilous times have never been great for Jews.
When systems fail, whether its the government or the markets or anything else, leaders often look for someone to blame, said Jonathan Greenblatt, the chief executive and national director of the Anti-Defamation League, which seeks to monitor and combat antisemitism. Jews have historically played that role.
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It's from The New York Times, but you should be able to read the entire article.