When Institutions Normalize or Promote Hate — What Can You Do?
Sometimes the most dangerous antisemitism doesn’t come from individuals — it comes from systems. When schools, NGOs, unions, or corporations adopt antisemitic policies, invite hate-promoting speakers, or suppress Jewish voices, you need a different playbook.
This guide walks you through how to document, challenge, and expose institutional antisemitism — and where to get backup from legal, media, and advocacy networks.
Step 1: Define the Incident
This is not about individual harassment — it’s about official decisions or programs that:
- Promote antisemitic ideology under the guise of “activism” or “justice”
- Exclude Jewish voices from diversity or inclusion initiatives
- Fund or endorse groups that call for the destruction of Israel
- Enforce curriculum or programming that spreads antisemitic tropes
Step 2: Document & Preserve Evidence
- Save screenshots of meeting minutes, event posters, speaker bios, emails, and social media posts
- Note who funded or approved the action (e.g., student government, school board, NGO leadership)
- Write a clear summary of what happened, when, and how it was justified
Step 3: Report to Watchdog & Legal Organizations
- StandWithUs – Legal & Policy Support
- ADL – Hate Monitoring & Advocacy
- FIRE – If free speech rights are being violated
Step 4: Take Strategic Action
- File public statements, petitions, or open letters
- Submit op-eds to your campus or local paper
- Gather allies across communities (religious, ethnic) to join in opposition
- Use watchdog data to challenge NGO funding sources or policy decisions
Step 5: Know Your Rights
- Title VI protects Jewish students from discrimination at federally funded schools
- First Amendment rights apply in many union and school settings
- Many states have laws preventing BDS discrimination in public institutions
