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PBS to air four-part documentary series on blacks, Jews in America

“The black and Jewish communities found themselves swimming against parallel currents,” said host Henry Louis Gates Jr.

Henry Louis Gates Jr.
Henry Louis Gates Jr. speaks on a panel about race in America on the “Understanding Our World Stage” at the National Book Festival, Aug. 31, 2019. Credit: Shawn Miller/Library of Congress via Wikimedia Commons.

PBS is set to air a new four-part documentary series written by “Finding Your Roots” host Henry Louis Gates Jr., which examines the relationship between black and Jewish Americans throughout U.S. history.

Titled “Black and Jewish America: An Interwoven History,” the series premieres on Feb. 3 and is scheduled to run on consecutive Tuesdays through Feb. 24.

PBS described the project, which airs during Black History Month, as tracing a relationship “defined by solidarity and strained by division,” shaped by the forces of racism and antisemitism, and by civic and cultural cooperation, particularly during the civil-rights era.

“The black and Jewish communities found themselves swimming against parallel currents,” Gates said in the trailer for the first episode. “It wasn’t a perfect partnership but stood as proof that people could bridge deep divides.”

“When I was growing up, I only thought of race in terms of black and white,” Gates said. “It wasn’t until much later when I learned about antisemitism that I realized blacks and Jews face common enemies, but when we stand together, we are a formidable force.”

“But I don’t wanna romanticize the alliance because it wasn’t an untroubled relationship,” he added.

Gates will be hosting a virtual town hall discussion in advance of the premiere.

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