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#First100Days Crash Course: Week 2

Islamophobia & Antisemitism
Published on
February 5, 2017
Last Updated
September 10, 2024

(Trump’s first 100 days in Office — a period of time historically used as a benchmark to measure the potential of a new president — PRA will share readings, videos, and tools for organizing to inform our collective resistance based on principles for engaging the regime, defending human rights, and preventing A form of top-down political system that concentrates state power in the hands of a single leader and/or group of close allies. Learn more . Daily readings will be posted on our Facebook and Twitter accounts and archived HERE.)

Week 2: Islamophobia & Antisemitism

Contemporary Islamophobia rests on a long history of conflict and it is important to to be aware of how Islam was seen in Europe over many centuries, because these tropes are the basis for most contemporary narratives. There are complex interactions among Islamophobic Individual beliefs that favor one group over others, or disfavor a particular group, and/or laws, policies and traditions that inscribe such beliefs in institutions. Learn more , The act of favoring members of one community/social identity over another, impacting health, prosperity, and political participation. Learn more , exclusion, and violence and it may be more accurate to discuss the topic as “Islamophobias” rather than as a single phenomenon.

Antisemitism is a durable and unique historic and contemporary form of prejudice or A way of portraying a person or group as malevolent, sinful, or evil; often a precursor to scapegoating and conspiracism. Learn more appearing at various times based on perceptions of religion, ethnicity, and race. In the U.S., Christian supremacist notions created systems of The use of violence, intimidation, surveillance, and discrimination, particularly by the state and/or its civilian allies, to control populations or particular sections of a population. Learn more that kept Jews in a second-class status until after WWII. While institutionalized antisemitism as a form of oppression is no longer a major force, prejudice and demonization remain. Although Jews are actually a diverse ethnoreligious group, their biased critics often project on them a racial identity that has motivated intimidation and violence.

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Do’s and Don’ts for Bystander Intervention: If you witness public instances of racist, anti-Black, anti-Muslim, anti-Trans, or any other form of oppressive interpersonal violence and harassment, use these tips on how to intervene while considering the safety of everyone involved.

Authors

Political Research Associates (PRA) is a social justice research and strategy center. Since 1981, we have been devoted to supporting organizations, civic leaders, journalists, and social sectors that are building a more just and inclusive democratic society.