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Summer Camps Create a Place for Fun and Friendship,

or a Breeding Ground for Hate

BACKGROUND – TALKING POINTS – ACTIONS TO CONSIDER – STORIES MAKING NEWS

BACKGROUND

 

Summer camps worldwide offer a wonderful opportunity for children to build lifelong friendships and strengthen their cultural identity. American Jewish children and teens have a long history of spending their summer in sleepaway and day camps. In Israel, several charitable organizations sponsor camps that bring together Palestinian and Israeli youth to encourage a future generation that values understanding, empathy and peace – transcending barriers of conflict and fostering hope for a harmonious future.

 

U.S. Jewish Summer Camps

 

American Jewish kids have long flocked to summer camps in the mountains of upstate NY, near the lakes and hills of the Midwest and in many popular outdoor settings across the country. There are also Jewish camps in other nations, including the first of its kind in Brazil for descendants of forcibly converted Jews. About 40% of American Jews attended a Jewish summer camp, a number far greater than those who attended a full-time Jewish school.

 

The history of Jewish summer camps pre-dated World War II. In the aftermath of the Holocaust, however, Jewish communal leaders saw camps as opportunities for cultural enrichment and foster Jewish unity. The author of a book on American Jewish summer camps commented that “American Jews were incredibly anxious about the future of Jewish culture and Judaism as a religion.”

 

Flip Frisch attended Wisconsin’s Camp Herzl in the 1980s and “credits the camp with my entire Jewish identity. The whole reason I stuck with Judaism was camp and the connections I made.” Frisch returned to Camp Herzl as a camp counselor, later became a program director and today works at her synagogue.

 

Second Gentleman Doug Emhoff is planning to visit a Pennsylvania Jewish summer camp that he attended as a teen. He will be speaking to campers about Jewish life and anti-Jewish hatred. Emhoff is not the only adult returning to his roots. Many camps have alumni networks and reunions. Dozens of Camp Ramah alumni have been married since the 1950s. Young Judea’s Camp Tel Yehudah is celebrating its 75th anniversary this year.

 

Peace-Promoting Camps

 

Seeds of Peace is a U.S.-based summer camp that brings together kids and educators from both sides of conflicts. The peacebuilding charity was founded by an American Jew, and was originally focused on the Palestinian-Israeli peace process. The first summer camp in Maine in 1993 included 46 Israeli, Palestinian, Jordanian and American teens.

 

Haifa Staiti, a Palestinian from Jenin, described how it was hard “talking with Israelis I had up until now only thought of as enemies.” As a 14-year-old attending Seeds of Peace, she became friends with an Israeli; their friendship continues more than 20 years later. Canada’s Heart to Heart and MIT’s MEET are similar camp programs.  

 

There also are organizations connecting Palestinian and Israeli youth in Israel with peers in the Palestinian territories. The Peres Center for Peace and Innovation is a leader in promoting coexistence. Through the Peres Center, founded by the former Israeli prime minister and president, young Palestinians and Israelis team up in the Twinned Peace Sports Schools program. Arabs and Jews play together on the same teams in soccer, basketball and other sports. One Voice and The Jerusalem Youth Chorus also bring Israelis and Palestinians together throughout the year to build common bonds.

 

Palestinian Summer Camps Promote Hate

 

In stark contrast, some leaders within Palestinian society – who have a history of naming schools and sports stadiums memorializing terrorists – have chosen summer camps as opportunities to undermine peace and promote violence. The Palestinian Authority operates summer camps in the West Bank. This year’s camps openly taught that a Palestinian state will replace Israel. Children were taught to paint maps of Palestine from the River Jordan to the Mediterranean Sea, reinforcing the often-heard chant: “From the River to the Sea, Palestine will be free.”

 

A record 650 PA camps are educating 65,000 West Bank Palestinian youth in 2023. A senior PA leader last year described the importance of these camps: “The goal of these camps is to serve as a melting pot and formulate the consciousness of these children according to the Palestinian national ideology.” He highlighted the “national action” undertaken by a terrorist who murdered 10 Israelis, honoring him as “deserving blessings” for his “milestone” sniper attack.

 

Iranian-backed Hamas and Palestinian Islamic Jihad terrorists run their own camps in Gaza. They serve as a tool for indoctrinating the younger generation with radical ideologies and training them to become future operatives in their terrorist organizations. A PIJ leader explained to the campers that it is their responsibility to keep the “flame of jihad” until the “liberation of Palestine,” meaning the destruction of Israel.

TALKING POINTS

1. Summer camps can promote positive or negative values

Youth camps are usually intended to create a fun and upbeat environment where campers enjoy the outdoors, learn new sports and skills, and make lifelong friends. American Jewish summer camps create an opportunity where campers connect with their heritage, traditions and values. Palestinian leaders, however, use summer camps to exploit impressionable young minds and to promote extremist ideologies and glorify violence. Recognizing the impact of summer camps in shaping young minds, it is essential to support and promote initiatives that prioritize inclusivity, peace and coexistence – fostering a brighter future for all.


2. Some summer camps promote peace between Palestinians and Israelis

There also are organizations connecting Palestinian and Israeli youth in Israel with peers in the Palestinian territories to foster tolerance, coexistence and understanding. Seeds of Peace, founded by an American Jew, is a U.S.-based summer camp that bridges kids and educators on opposite sides of conflict. The Peres Center, established by former Israeli prime minister Shimon Peres, teams up young Palestinians and Israelis in the Twinned Peace Sports Schools program. In one program, Arabs and Jews play together on mixed soccer teams and finish the year with a World Cup-themed tournament. There are other examples of summer camps that reach across divides and nurture peaceful relations.


3. The Palestinian education system nurtures systemic hate and violence

Palestinian children – like children everywhere – are not born to hate. Influential Palestinian leaders and politicians propagate inflammatory rhetoric and use Palestinian schools, summer camps, TV networks and mosques to spread inciteful propaganda. UN-run schools employ teachers who incite violence – creating an indoctrination system that teaches incitement to terrorism against Israelis and Jews. Palestinian Authority textbooks promote jihad and reject Israel’s right to exist. The PA, Hamas and Palestinian Islamic Jihad run summer camps that extend the hateful themes taught in their classrooms. This incitement is then passed down from one generation to another through education and socialization. The perpetuation of this messaging makes it challenging to foster meaningful dialogue and pushes Palestinian-Israeli peace further away.

ACTIONS TO CONSIDER

A. Contact your Congressional members to demand reforms at UN-run Palestinian schools

Contact your U.S. Representative and Senators as well as the White House to support the UNRWA Accountability and Transparency Act introduced in the Senate in February. The bill would withhold U.S. contributions to UNRWA until the schools and other infrastructure it operates are no longer staffed by anti-American and anti-Jewish extremists who promote attacks against Israel. Congressional representatives respond best to personally written emails.

 

B.  Support normalization with peace-seeking Palestinians and Muslims

Show your support for peace-seeking Palestinians and pro-Israel Arabs who work against Palestinian incitement, such as Palestinian human rights activist Bassem Eid and Israeli-Arab IDF veteran Yoseph Haddad. Strengthen connections and celebrate ties with nations that embrace the Abraham Accords and are allied with Israel. An increasing number of Islamic nations are choosing normalization with Israel while Palestinian leaders reject peace and educate their children to hate others.

STORIES MAKING NEWS

‘Swatting’ Attacks Target U.S. Synagogues

 

A new, potentially deadly scare tactic has emerged to target American Jews with the intent to disrupt prayers, invoke fear and send Jews scrambling for the exits. Swatting is when a caller phones the police alleging a false imminent danger at a specific location with the goal that the police will show up and use force. A man was killed inside his home in a 2017 swatting incident in Kansas. The term is a play on SWAT teams – specialized police units deployed for high-risk situations.

 

The deadly ‘prank’ is now being used to put Jews in the crosshairs. The ADL recently announced that criminals aimed their sights at multiple synagogues. It is believed that white supremacists are behind this assault on Jewish houses of worship.

 

Hatred of Jews in America

  • San Diego rabbi assaulted by man at 7-11, yelling “Jews all deserve to die! Israel is killing people! Israel doesn’t deserve to exist!”
  • Gunshots fired outside of Memphis Orthodox Jewish school; police praise school security for preventing casualties; shooter taken down by police
  • San Diego County human relations commissioner resigns after anti-Jewish rant at meeting; public official stated that he read a few verses from the Bible – he referred to it as “the book of Jews” – and concluded that “it states go kill Palestinians” and is currently taught in synagogues
  • Auschwitz Memorial and White House condemn Fox News’ Greg Gutfeld over Holocaust comments
  • Gov. DeSantis’s team fires aide who secretly made video with Nazi symbol
  • Off-campus Univ. of Michigan frat houses vandalized with anti-Jewish symbols – including swastika
  • Patriots’ owner Robert Kraft speaks with rapper Meek Mill on NAACP panel about antisemitism and racism
  • ADL among seven national Jewish organizations that launched Large Communities Task Force Against Antisemitism, known as J7; includes Jewish groups from Argentina, Australia, Canada, France, Germany, UK
  • Arnold Schwarzenegger to receive inaugural Award of Courage from Holocaust Museum LA for longtime advocacy “against antisemitism and bigotry”


Stories Impacting the U.S. and Israel

The Focus Project develops and distributes news, background, history and weekly talking points on timely issues to inform individuals and organizations about issues affecting the American Jewish community and Israel, and help readers speak with more consistency and clarity. The editions also provide potential responses for addressing incidents of Jew hatred and anti-Zionism. With input from a spectrum of major American Jewish organizations, we focus on that which unites us, rising above political and individual agendas.



Recognizing that Jew hatred comes in many forms and directions, we strive to address all sources as they arise, and educate our growing audience on topics ranging from inter-religious relations to relevant international developments. From week to week, we may focus on issues arising from the political left, university campuses, from the political right and from institutions, government, and corporations. We don’t try to address all issues in each edition. We hope you will find this information useful in your writing and/or speaking. We are always open to your feedback: info@focus-project.org.

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