EMPOWER YOURSELF. EMPOWER OUR COMMUNITY.
Explore resources to enhance your knowledge, find like-minded groups working toward fostering a flourishing community, and discover opportunities for action and activism. From kids to teens to allies to educators — when we face Jew hate together, we’re helping to create a strong and vibrant Jewish future.
Resources were curated in part in collaboration with the Foundation to Combat Antisemitism (FCAS).
Ford Foundation president Darren Walker invokes his hero Elie Wiesel to explain why the world cannot be indifferent to antisemitism.
For opinion writer David French, Elon Musk's use of free speech to explain the antisemitic tweets on X rings hollow.
An antisemitic attack in Paris is the focus of "Prayer for the French Republic," on stage at the Huntington Theatre.
We’re proud to announce the inaugural grantees of our groundbreaking 5-Point Plan to combat antisemitism.
Local campus Hillels are educating Jewish and non-Jewish students alike on how to combat antisemitism and cultivate allyship.
Antisemitism strikes a Jewish family's idea of home in the new production at the Huntington Theatre, "Prayer for the French Republic."
Rabbi Marc Baker, president and CEO of CJP, discusses the national march for civil rights in Washington, D.C., and how it inspires him to work for social change locally.
Journalist and author Tom Teicholz recommends educating Gen Z about the threat of newly resurgent antisemitism, citing Rabbi Diana Fersko's recent book on the subject and developments in high schools and colleges.
Rabbi Diana Fersko, the author of a new book about antisemitism, makes the case for no longer "denying, diminishing and avoiding" hatred of Jews, but rather facing the issue proactively.
The individual claimed the joke was from the TV show "The Office" and that it referenced the KGB. The joke allegedly involved slapping his colleague.
Repair The World Fellow Rebeccah Lipson joins CJP and the ADL for The March on Washington. She says "the decision to journey from our base in Boston to Washington, D.C. wasn't just a logistical one; it was an unequivocal statement of our commitment. We wanted to take what we learned and put it into action."
In the Jewish community, we understand all too well that racist, antisemitic, and extremist violence are intended to push us into the realm of despair and silence. We stand on the shoulders of prior generations who bravely gave their hearts, souls, and lives to democracy and freedom for us to continue that fight.