You are on page 1of 2

Trump Effect: Jewish and Muslim Organizations Form New Alliance

A new Muslim-Jewish Advisory Council will work to protect religious minorities'


rights as well as other 'issues of common concern.'
Judy Maltz Nov 14, 2016 8:13 PM
A Muslim student speaks during a protest at the University of Connecticut in
Storrs against the election of Trump as president, November 9, 2016. Pat
Eaton-Robb, AP
U.S. Muslim groups pledge to not sit idly by as hate crimes spike in America
Opinion Israels squalid embrace of Trump: Not in my name
Opinion If Trump pushes for an exclusionary, unjust America, we American Jews
will resist and fight him
Analysis Steve Bannon's appointment is a moment of truth for U.S. Jews
Less than a week after an election that left many minority and religious groups
in the United States feeling disenfranchised, two important organizations one
Jewish and the other Muslim announced an unusual alliance on Monday.
The American Jewish Committee and the Islamic Society of North America have
teamed up to form a new national group of leading Jewish and Muslim Americans:
The Muslim-Jewish Advisory Council.
In a press release, the AJC said that the new group brings together recognized
business, political and religious leaders in the Jewish and Muslim American
communities to jointly advocate on issues of common concern.
Read more on Trump and American Jews: President Trump has shattered Jews'
American idyll (Chemi Shalev) | 'You deserve to be gassed': Hate crimes
skyrocket after Trump win (Debra Nussbaum Cohen) | To the Trump voter who
just told me to leave the country (Bradley Burston) | Rabbis and congregants
take to New York streets to protest (Jennie Kamin) | Trump requests security
clearance for son-in-law Jared Kushner in unprecedented move
The co-chairs of the 31-member council are Stanley Bergman, CEO of the Henry
Schein healthcare company, and Farooq Kathwari, president and CEO of the
Ethan Allen furniture company.
Among its initial action items, the press release said, will be to develop a
coordinated strategy to address anti-Muslim bigotry and anti-Semitism in the
U.S. and to protect and expand the rights of religious minorities in the
country.

Our two communities share so much in common and should find ways, where
possible, to work together for the benefit of the entire country, said Bergman.
The council members include religious and lay leaders from both communities.
Among the most prominent names on the membership list is Joseph Lieberman,
the former senator who was the Democratic vice presidential candidate in 2000.
Judy Maltz
Haaretz Correspondent

You might also like