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6 2 $
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Grape Juice
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scan at $ 3.99 each. BUY
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2 2
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3 FOR
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Breakstone’s Whipped Butter
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lb. Gefen
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4 MARCH 4, 2021
JEWISH EXPONENT
JEWISHEXPONENT.COM
H eadlines
Panel Gets Pragmatic About
Racial Injustice
L OCA L
SOPHIE PANZER | JE STAFF
RABBI DAVID Saperstein
thinks the deaths of African
Americans due to COVID-19
and police brutality in 2020
acted like a shofar blast to the
nation. “We are at a moment, in
terms of race issues in America,
where there is a sense of
immediacy, a sense of urgency,
a sense of moral compulsion,
that we have accepted struc-
tural forms of racism for far
too long,” he said. “And it’s
been a wake-up call.”
The director emeritus
of the Religious Action
Center of Reform Judaism
spoke about racial justice
on Feb. 24 during “Global
Connections: Navigating the
New Abnormal,” a monthly
leadership panel organized by
American Friends of Rabin
Medical Center. Robert Siegel,
host of NPR’s “All Things
Considered” from 1987 to
2018, served as moderator.
For this month’s topic,
“America’s Race Crisis: What to
Do About It,” Siegel asked his
guests about concrete actions
Americans could take to heal
the harm caused by systemic
racism and white supremacy.
Professor Eddie Glaude, chair
of the department of African
American Studies at Princeton
University, responded with
questions of his own.
“What is your conception of
justice? What is your idea of a
just society?” he asked.
He argued that true equality
would only be possible if those
in positions of power moved
away from a model of racial
justice as a philanthropic
enterprise or charitable gesture
and toward a reimagining of
society. Siegel pressed him for
examples. “It could involve a range of
actions around criminal justice
reform and police reform,
supporting the repeal of quali-
fied immunity,” he said. “What
I think we need broadly, Robert,
is a public infrastructure of
care, but that’s a discussion for
another time.”
Annette Gordon-Reed, a
professor of history at Harvard
University and a Pulitzer Prize
winner, said white people
who wanted to fight racism
could support people of color
by engaging in conversations
about race and inequality with
their loved ones.
“It’s a very tough thing
We are at a moment, in terms of race issues in America, where
there is a sense of immediacy, a sense of urgency, a sense of moral
compulsion, that we have accepted structural forms of racism for far
too long.”
RABBI DAVID SAPERSTEIN
Clockwise from top left: Rabbi David Saperstein, Robert Siegel, Eddie Glaude and Annette Gordon-Reed
Screenshot by Sophie Panzer
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to confront family members
and friends, people who you
love and who you depend
upon, when they say things
or do things that are racially
problematic,” she said.
She said that although it’s
not an easy task, the conversa-
tions are critical, since people
are more likely to take these
ideas seriously if they come
from those they already know
and trust.
Saperstein, who is the former
United States Ambassador-
at-Large for International
Religious Freedom, said
fighting against gerryman-
dering and other threats to the
Voting Rights Act of 1965 was
a crucial step in achieving true
equality. He invoked Genesis
as a repudiation of racism.
“A whole range of interpre-
tations of the Bible asked, ‘Why
would we all be descended
from one couple? Why was
Adam made from the dust of
the four corners of the earth?’
So that none of us can claim
that the merit of our ancestors
was greater than anyone else’s,”
he said.
He expressed concern about
the breakdown of bipartisan-
ship in the United States and
the threat it posed to the racial
justice movement, calling it one
of the most dangerous aspects
of American political life.
“As you look back, Robert,
over the last century, in the
20th century, almost every
single achievement of social
justice in America happened
because of a bipartisan coali-
tion of decency on Capitol Hill,
and multiracial, multi-ethnic,
multireligious, nonpartisan
coalitions in communities
across America,” he said.
Siegel also asked the panel-
ists if they believed universal
social programs to combat
economic inequality, such as
public health care, or targeted
programs based on the injus-
tices experienced by individual
minority groups would be more
effective in creating change.
Glaude advocated for a
targeted approach in response
to the fact that racial inequality
was the result of policies that
specifically targeted people of
color for exclusion and harm.
One example was the exclu-
sion of Black people from G.I.
Bill benefits that helped build
a largely white middle class in
the late ’40s and ’50s.
Gordon-Reed argued that
both forms of intervention are
necessary. “The advantage of universal
[programs] is that you don’t
stir people up, and you know
everybody gets something,
and that’s when you begin the
process of knitting the country
together, by people sharing
something. That’s critical,” she
said. l
spanzer@jewishexponent.com; 215-832-0729
MARCH 4, 2021
5