When Bullying of Jewish Students Masks Ugly Anti-Semitism
Last year, Jewish high school students from Queens told me, almost as an aside, that classmates roll pennies in front of them. Two years ago, a group of high school students from the Binghamton, N.Y., area told me they were called cheapie, had to listen to chants of Heil Hitler and Nazi, and were kicked and otherwise intimidated on a Facebook-promoted Kick a Jew Day.
A recent court case chronicles a similar environment at a Long Island school. A Jewish student (now 16 years old) at Northport High School was addressed not by his name, but by calls of Jew or Hey, Jew or You dumb Jew. He was told: Jews are disgusting, Being Jewish must suck, Hitler was a good person. He was subjected to jokes, such as, How many Jews can fit into a car? Two in the front, three in the back, and 6 million in the ashtray, and, Whats the difference between a Jew and a pizza? A pizza doesnt scream when it goes into the oven.
The type of anti-Semitism we associate with the 1930s, 40s and 50s still occurs in some places in the United States where Jews are a distinct minority, school officials are indifferent and parents do not know what to do. Some parents fear that bringing up the problem might actually make things worse (if the school does not change, and even if it does, they worry that their child might be blamed). The Northport case offers an important cautionary tale.
The high school student was bombarded with anti-Semitic provocations. From time to time, coins would be dropped in his path, and classmates would implore, Get them, Jew, or Pick it up, Jew. And on Valentines Day 2011, a student walked up to him and read a poem: Roses are red, violets are blue. My love for you is burning hotter than 100 Jews burning in an oven.
http://m.forward.com/articles/170499