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Antisemitism in America

A Warning

ebook
1 of 1 copy available
1 of 1 copy available
A NEW YORK TIMES BESTSELLER 
In an urgent and personal new book, Democratic Leader Chuck Schumer, the highest-elected Jewish official in America, sheds light on the Jewish American experience and sounds the alarm about the troubling resurgence of antisemitism.

For the first time in generations, antisemitism has become a daily reality in America, and it’s getting worse. Jewish synagogues and their congregants are targeted and sometimes killed by extremists, Jewish students are harassed and attacked on campus, conspiracy theories about Jews have gone mainstream on social media, and debates over Israel have veered into dangerous territory. Senator Chuck Schumer tackles the historical, political, cultural, and international forces that have led to the alarming rise of antisemitism in America in the 21st Century.
ANTISEMITISM IN AMERICA: A WARNING is a timely work of nonfiction that illuminates his generation’s Jewish experience. From Brooklyn in the 1960s to Harvard in the 1970s to the inside of a secure bunker on January 6, 2021, Schumer takes readers on a personal journey of how Jewish Americans like him have come to understand their history, their place in America—and why they worry about the future of Jewish life in America.
This book is a warning, informed by the lessons of history, about what can happen when the world’s oldest hatred is allowed to rise unchecked.
 
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    • Kirkus

      April 1, 2025
      A prominent lawmaker stands athwart rising bigotry. The Senate minority leader recalls a not-so-distant time--1980, the year he was elected to Congress--when prejudice against Jews was clearly waning in America. Today, however, amid a spike in documented antisemitic incidents, the highest-ranking Jewish elected official in U.S. history is more worried "than ever before" about this virulent form of intolerance. This is a sober--yet vivid and wry--book, grounded in the rich particulars of Schumer's Brooklyn youth. Like a character in a Philip Roth novel, he grew up among fellow Jews who loved baseball, grieved John F. Kennedy's assassination, and "were extremely proud to be Americans." He recounts his family's Jewish holiday celebrations and even shares benign jokes that make light of Jewish stereotypes. He traces antisemitism deep into the past, piggybacking on the work of scholars who've argued that bigotry against Jews stems from the relative age of the world's major religions. Judaism came first, which means that Christianity and Islam "had to explain why the old religion was no longer good enough." If this part of the book is competent but unoriginal, Schumer is stronger on the 21st century, demonstrating how antisemitism became scalable online, spreading after the 9/11 attacks and the 2008 financial crisis. But "the biggest turning point" was Hamas' Oct. 7, 2023, attack on Israel, which was followed by a documented jump in antisemitic incidents and divisive campus demonstrations. The far right has long been "a natural home" for antisemitism, Schumer writes, but offensive bias is present in some far-left claims and protest chants about Israel. Throughout, Schumer's arguments and anecdotes support his belief that antisemitic tropes lose their power when we "understand the truth about the people who are hated, and how wrong the prejudices are." An urgent warning about resurgent prejudice against Jewish people.

      COPYRIGHT(2025) Kirkus Reviews, ALL RIGHTS RESERVED.

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  • English

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