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).
Colleges’ responses to Oct. 7 Hamas attack on Israel highlight struggles of Jewish college students.
This Chanukah, we will come together to observe the inaugural Shine A Light Shabbat on Friday, Dec. 8.
The organization #ShineALight offers a conversation guide for Shabbat. The first step to eliminating forms of hate is to talk about it openly and honestly.
Watch the program from the largest pro-Israel gathering in history.
Some Jewish students now say they fear for their physical safety. Meanwhile, university leaders face a high-wire balancing act.
When do we stop being silent and when do we say the antisemitism must be condemned and it is not acceptable on our campuses?
Charging Jews with “genocide” is not an objection to occupation, but a lie that justifies opposing Jews “by any means necessary.”
We have work to do, which is why I’m so proud that over the past year CJP has partnered with ADL and so many other organizations to launch our 5-Point Plan to combat antisemitism and anti-Zionism. We will not likely eliminate a 3,000-year-old hatred in our lifetimes, but we will certainly be stronger and fight against it more effectively when we fight it together.
Offering comfort, support and a secure place to worship, Jewish religious leaders are trying to keep community members safe in both body and spirit.
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."
The head of the Anti-Defamation League, Jonathan Greenblatt, reflects on the march for equality in Washington, D.C.
The Anti-Defamation League encourages participation in a march on the 50-year anniversary of the 1963 March on Washington.