Newsletter
Newsletter Support JNS

JewBelong to put up antisemitism awareness billboards during holidays

They will read: “If you think turbulence is scary, try wearing a Jewish star.”

JewBelong Antisemitism Billboard (cropped)
A billboard against antisemitism in America put up by JewBelong. Credit: Courtesy.

December 2023 had the highest number of antisemitic incidents of any month last year, the Anti-Defamation League reported. The activist group JewBelong is attempting to make sure that doesn’t repeat itself this month.

To that end, as of Dec. 9, the nonprofit organization is placing billboards on main roads near four airports in the United States: Chicago O’Hare International Airport in Illinois, Hartsfield-Jackson Atlanta International Airport in Georgia, Fort Lauderdale-Hollywood International Airport in Florida and Phoenix Sky Harbor International Airport in Arizona.

JewBelong Antisemitism Billboard
A billboard against antisemitism in America put up by JewBelong. Credit: Courtesy.

They will read: “If you think turbulence is scary, try wearing a Jewish star.” They are projected to reach around 19 million travelers this holiday season.

“The Jewish community is only 2% of the entire country so we need to work extra hard to break through to the wider American public,” said JewBelong co-founder Archie Gottesman. “Since so many people head to the airport during this season, what better way to get our message out there? It is outrageous that Jewish people are scared because of senseless growing antisemitism. Good Americans know this.”

JewBelong has run nearly 800 billboards across the United States, some of which have been vandalized, reaching more than 2 billion people, according to the organization.

“The Democratic Party has changed,” David Wecht said. “Hateful anti-Jewish invective and actions are minimized, ignored and even coddled.”
The opinion piece, written by columnist Nicholas Kristof, parroted “cartoonishly evil Hamas propaganda that would make Goebbels blush,” Eitan Fischberger, a Middle East analyst, stated.
The state said that it is giving its 2025 Montana Exporter of the Year Award to a company that exports "$5.4 million worth of products to Canada, Egypt, European Union, Japan, Kuwait, Palestine, Qatar, Saudi Arabia, South Korea, United Kingdom and United Arab Emirates.”
A new documentary by filmmaker Abner Benaim is a personal project that takes us to the terrorist attack against Alas Chiricanas flight 901 and explores the aftermath it left on the families of the victims, including Benaim himself.
The department “will continue to deprive the regime of funding for its weapons programs, terrorist proxies and nuclear ambitions,” the U.S. treasury secretary said.
“This is yet another hateful incident meant to intimidate Jewish New Yorkers and divide our city,” New York City officials stated after swastikas were discovered in Highland Park and Forest Park.