Black-Jewish Relations Today
Ordinary is extraordinary.
By Mik Moore
"Why can't blacks be more like us?"
This was the essence of a question posed by an older Jewish
woman at a synagogue forum on black-Jewish relations. The year was 1995, during
a period when the relationship between the black and Jewish communities was a
topic of considerable discussion.
Throughout the 1990s I attended countless forums, engaged in
dialogue, wrote articles, and formed alliances, all in an effort to improve the
relationships between blacks and Jews. Nostalgia and resentment were the dominant
feelings among Jews in those years. Nostalgia for the glory days of
black-Jewish relations, exemplified by the image of Rabbi Abraham Joshua
Heschel marching arm in arm with Rev. Dr. Martin Luther King Jr. at Selma,
Alabama. Resentment of black anti-Semitism in light of the two communities'
shared struggles.
In the 1990s, conflict between blacks and Jews was more
visible than cooperation. Yet in recent years, conflicts have receded and
cooperation is ascendant. Blacks and Jews are enjoying a period of relative
normalcy.
It is a long time coming. After reaching an apex in the
1950s and 1960s, when the interests of the two communities were aligned on the
most important issues, relations deteriorated with each succeeding decade.
After the Civil Rights Movement
In 1968, the Ocean-Hill/Brownsville teachers' strike pitted
black community activists against the heavily Jewish union. Black anti-Semitism
mingled with Jewish racism in what was ultimately a struggle for power. The
civil rights struggle had come north, and Jews, among others, were challenged
to make sacrifices in the name of racial equality. It was a challenge made more
difficult when the messengers were less like King, more like Malcolm.
Affirmative Action
In 1978, Supreme Court Justice Thurgood Marshall wrote the
dissenting opinion in Bakke v. University of California Regents, a decision
that struck a major blow to affirmative action plans. Just 20 years earlier
Marshall had worked side-by-side with Jewish lawyers from the American Jewish
Congress and NAACP on the most important legal work of the civil rights
struggle.
As a strong supporter of affirmative action, Marshall was
most distressed by the opposition of Jewish groups, saying, "the trouble
with Bakke to my mind was that the Jewish people backed it."
Violence in Brooklyn
For many Jews, black-Jewish relations in the 1980s could
best be summed up with one word--Hymietown--Jesse Jackson's controversial name
for New York (he also referred to Jews as "Hymies"). That very same
town played host to most significant conflagration between blacks and Jews,
when long-simmering tensions boiled over in Crown Heights, Brooklyn in 1991.
One Jew was killed during several days of rioting by black residents, which
followed an accident in which a car driven by an Orthodox Jewish driver killed
a young black child.
Yet the 2000s have not been similarly contentious. The
relative harmony can be attributed to a variety of factors.
Changing Neighborhoods, Changing Fears
Conflict between the two groups has been displaced. Jews are
no longer a dominant "outsider" presence in black neighborhoods. In a
widely condemned statement in 2006, former Atlanta mayor Andrew Young expressed
the frustration of at least some blacks when characterizing small businesses in
black communities: "I think they've ripped off our communities enough.
First it was Jews, then it was Koreans, and now it's Arabs."
Improvements in public safety have reduced the fear of crime
some Jews associated with blacks. Instead, particularly since September 11,
2001, Jews are more likely to fear violence from Arab and Asian Muslims.
High-profile black anti-Semitism has largely disappeared.
The Nation of Islam and Louis Farrakhan, who loomed so large in the 1990s, are
no longer a Jewish communal concern. Reverends Jesse Jackson and Al Sharpton
have largely put their conflicts with the Jewish community behind them. No one
in the black community has emerged to replace them.
In 2006 an American Jewish Committee survey found that
almost 60% of Jews thought most or many Muslims were anti-Semitic. Only 21% of
Jews thought the same thing about blacks. In fact, Jews were more likely to
think most or many Evangelical Protestants were
anti-Semitic. While Jewish beliefs about black anti-Semitism have held
steady, their beliefs about Muslim anti-Semitism have risen dramatically--up
fifty percent since the year 2000.
Demographic Changes
Blacks are no longer the largest minority group in the
United States, surpassed in 2003 by Latinos. It is not surprising that Jews
have placed a greater emphasis on developing relationships with the Latino
community, particularly in cities like Los Angeles and New York with large
Jewish and Latino populations. The less complicated history between Jews and
Latinos, coupled with Latinos' growing political power, have facilitated
partnerships between the two communities.
The diversity of both the black and Jewish communities have
created alternative channels for communication. African and Caribbean
immigrants have begun to achieve economic and political power, at times
dividing them from native born blacks, but creating a clean slate in their
relationships with Jews. Organizations for Jews of color like Ayecha are creating opportunities for intra-religious,
interracial understanding.
Common Political Causes
There are also enduring examples of common causes among
blacks and Jews, especially in partisan politics. The two communities continue
to represent the base of the Democratic Party. In recent elections, black,
Jewish, and gay voters were the only groups to give Democratic candidates at
least 75% of their vote. In 2006, more than 80% of Jews and more than 90% of
blacks voted for Democrats.
Shared liberal politics has led to cooperation on public
policy. At the federal level, Jewish and black organizations like the Religious
Action Center of Reform Judaism and the NAACP have mobilized support for a
higher minimum wage, Medicaid expansion, and opposition to Social Security
privatization. The American Jewish Committee's recent statement affirming its
commitment to anti-poverty programs may foreshadow even greater cooperation.
Social and Economic Justice
At the local level, some of the old partnerships have been
rekindled through the recent entrance of synagogues in the field of
congregation-based community organizing. In 2002, the Jewish Fund for Justice
began to support the involvement of synagogues with church-based organizing
networks like the Industrial Areas Foundation. Today, dozens of synagogues in
cities like Columbus, Boston, and San Francisco, are hosting actions where
hundreds of Jews sit side-by-side with hundreds of black, white, and Latino
church-goers. Their common agenda often includes expanding health care,
improving schools, and building affordable housing.
In the 2000s, we have seen a renaissance of local Jewish
groups committed to social and economic justice issues, often working closely
with local black and Latino groups. Many of these organizations were formed by
local Jewish activists saddened by deteriorating relationships between Jews and
communities of color, and angered by the Jewish role in this deterioration.
Groups like the Progressive Jewish Alliance in California have been particular
successful at rebuilding burnt bridges and reestablishing trust between
communities.
Enduring Divisions
Division still exists, of course. National security and
foreign affairs, particularly in the Middle East, have revealed deep fissures.
Jewish organizations, and many Jews, have supported much of the Bush
Administration's agenda in these areas, in part out of concern for Israel's
security. Blacks have largely opposed these American policies.
At the same time, many blacks have been sympathetic, even
supportive, of faith-based initiatives that bring government money into
churches to support social service programs. Jews have overwhelmingly remained
steadfast in their opposition to what they view as a breach in the wall
separating church and state.
A Realistic Outlook
Yet these divisions have not felt like betrayals. Blacks and
Jews seem to have a more realistic and less romantic vision of the relationship
among their communities.
Every January we celebrate the birthdays of two icons of
black-Jewish relations: Rabbi Abraham Joshua Heschel on January 11, and Rev.
Dr. Martin Luther King Jr. on January 15. Each year there are many events to
celebrate both anniversaries, and we undoubtedly hear a great deal about the
heroic work of these men, work they occasionally did together.
But time has a way of smoothing over the rough edges of
history. Neither Heschel nor King was universally beloved in his community.
Despite the serious engagement of many Jews and Jewish organizations in the
civil rights movement, most sat on the sidelines. Some criticized Heschel and
other Jewish leaders for their participation in the struggle for black civil
rights. The high period of black-Jewish cooperation was also a period of
significant black-Jewish conflict.
The current era of normalization presents opportunities for
alliances less burdened by the weight of history and unrealistic expectations.
It should be embraced as a welcome change by blacks and Jews alike.
Mik Moore is the Director of Communications and Public
Policy at Jewish Funds for Justice (JFSJ), a national organization committed to
creating a just, fair, and compassionate America. He is also the editor of jspot.org, the blog and action center of
JFSJ which features Jewish perspectives on contemporary issues of social and
economic justice.