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Introduction

Why this book? Why now?


As educators, we have the responsibility to make sure all our students feel welcome and safe.


In no way is this book meant to point fingers or assign blame. Instead, because of the rise in

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About the Book

safe schools for jewish students:

an educator's guide to preventing antisemitism

  • Confronts a growing crisis in our educational institutions: the unintentional incorporation of antisemitic tropes into school curricula and DEI training, often under the guise of social justice.
  • Exposes how the misuse of critical theory, distorted allyship frameworks, and emotionally charged activism have led well-meaning educators to silence, marginalize, and even vilify Jewish students and teachers.
  • Arms educators, administrators, and DEI professionals with additional tools to recognize bias, unpack false narratives, and restore integrity to justice-driven education.
  • Addresses the 3 Ds of antisemitism: Demonization, Delegitimization, and Double-standards.
  • Reveals the inversion of blame now too often used in school curricula.

Quotes

significant insights

Martin Luther King Jr.
Martin Luther King, Jr.
"When people criticize Zionists, they mean Jews. You're talking anti-Semitism."
Rabbi Jonathan Sacks
Rabbi Jonathan Sacks
"I was recently talking to some schoolchildren, and they asked me: is criticising Israel antisemitism? I said ‘No’ and I explained the difference.
"I asked them, ‘Do you believe you have a right to criticise the British government?’ They all put up their hands.
"Then I asked, ‘Which of you believes that Britain has no right to exist?’ No one put up their hands. ‘Now you know the difference,’ I said, and they all did."

c. 2026 Ezra Barany

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