Newsletter
Newsletter Support JNS

Missouri art center ‘heartbroken’ over pain caused by anti-Israel show

“We are putting safeguards in place to prevent this type of policy violation from happening in the future,” stated the St. Louis organization’s board chair.

Craft Alliance
Craft Alliance, an arts center in St. Louis. Source: Google Street View.

Craft Alliance, an arts center in St. Louis that promotes contemporary craft, apologized for and removed an exhibit that it said “contained antisemitic imagery and slogans calling for violence and the destruction of the Jewish State of Israel.”

“Despite repeated requests, the artists did not share the artwork and titles with organization leadership prior to the exhibit,” the center stated late last month. It added that the artists, whom it didn’t name, in its artists-in-residence exhibit “Planting seeds, sprouting hope” violated the center’s “policies on anti-bullying, diversity, equity, inclusion and accessibility.”

“We are heartbroken for any pain this might have caused our visitors, members, staff, and volunteers,” stated Jackie Levin, the center’s board chair. “We are putting safeguards in place to prevent this type of policy violation from happening in the future.”

Dani Collette, one of the artists, told St. Louis Public Radio that the center’s decision was “incredibly disrespectful.”

The missing person wasn’t identified until a hospital staffer recognized her from a post on Facebook.
StandWithUs stated that “some Jewish students at UC Law San Francisco already feel compelled to conceal their Jewish identity out of concern for their safety.”
“It is critical that we work across party lines to stop and reverse this dangerous trend,” stated Sen. Jacky Rosen, co-chair of the Senate Bipartisan Task Force for Combating Antisemitism.
“I believe very much in the state of Israel and its right to exist,” East Brunswick mayor Brad Cohen told JNS. “It’s critical to me that it remains a Jewish state in the Middle East.”
Russia-Iran trade on the northern route has grown to bypass the U.S. blockade of the Persian Gulf.
The site was also used by Hamas for the manufacture of explosive devices.