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Tree of Life Inc. to get $1 million in federal funds for antisemitism curriculum

The organization originating from the 2018 mass shooting at the Pittsburgh synagogue will work to educate K-12 students about hate.

Tree of Life Synagogue
A makeshift shrine to the victims of the mass shooting at Tree of Life*Or L’Simcha Synagogue in Pittsburgh. Credit: Brendt A. Petersen.

Sen. Bob Casey (D-Pa.) succeeded in placing an earmark in the government funding legislation to provide $1 million to create what he described as enabling thousands of students to receive “the tools to disrupt hate.”

The Senate voted 74-24 at 2 a.m. on March 23 in favor of a federal spending bill that included funding to create a school curriculum to educate children and teens about discrimination and bigotry.

Tree of Life Inc. will receive the monies to develop the program’s content.

The organization emerged after the Oct. 27, 2018 shooting that left 11 Jewish worshippers, most of them elderly, dead at the Tree of Life*Or L’Simcha Synagogue in Pittsburgh. Tree of Life Inc. will create a curriculum for K-12 students to teach how to identify and challenge antisemitism, in addition to other forms of identity-based bigotry.

All of Pennsylvania’s senators and congresspersons voted for the spending bill, save for one—Rep. Summer Lee (D-Pa.) a member of the progressive “Squad” in the U.S. House of Representatives who objected to the bill’s $3 billion in support for Israel.

Chayim Frenkel told JNS that “it’s a whole brand new sound system, brand new room, but it’s still my KI.”
“In many ways, speaking openly about faith can actually feel more natural outside of Washington,” Arielle Roth, administrator of the National Telecommunications and Information Administration, told JNS.
“I firmly believe that acknowledging any one people’s pain does not preclude you from the acknowledgment of another people’s,” the New York City mayor said.
“The worst thing about J Street is it’s duplicitous,” Yechiel Leiter, the Israeli envoy in Washington, said at a National Task Force to Combat Antisemitism event at Museum of the Bible on Monday.
Authorities say about 100 fliers containing antisemitic imagery and language were thrown from a vehicle onto residential streets early Saturday, prompting increased patrols in the area.
“Hatred directed against one faith community is a threat to every faith community,” the World Jewish Congress stated after authorities responded to reported gunfire and casualties at the Clairemont center.