By Jack Miller & Wilfred M. McClay
Friday, July 04, 2025
In May, Americans were shocked by the brazen murder of
two Israeli Embassy staffers in Washington, D.C. It was the latest tragic
episode in a surge of antisemitic violence across the country, from college
campuses to the streets of our capital city. Jewish Americans are
understandably alarmed, and many
of our
country’s political
leaders have condemned the violence and hate as “un-American.”
Are they right? Are these antisemitic attacks
un-American? We should be very careful in using the word “un-American.” It has
a history of being misused, and sometimes used in dishonest ways. As Americans,
we rightfully prize our freedom, and being a free society means that we give a
wide berth to all sorts of opinions and differences.
But our freedom does presuppose something important: a
shared respect for the fundamental values that are basic to the American way of
life. Those are the values and the vision conveyed in our Declaration of
Independence, the belief that all men are created equal and have a natural
right to their life, their liberty, and their pursuit of happiness.
It is vital to recognize the deep Jewish roots of those
ideas. Go to any church in America, sit down and pick up the Bible, and what is
the first book that you come to? The first book, of course, is Genesis,
followed by Exodus, Leviticus, Numbers, and Deuteronomy—the first five books of
the Jewish Torah, followed by the rest of the Hebrew Bible (or Tanakh). These
books were part of the Old Testament that the settlers who built America
carried with them when they came to our shores, the texts from which our Founders
drew their inspiration for the principles behind our political tradition. As
one of us has previously
written with Pete Peterson, the Hebrew Bible shaped foundational principles
including the separation of powers, our sense of justice, and the exalted
vision of human dignity at the heart of our nationhood.
That spirit is what binds us all together as Americans.
We may, and we do, have differences of opinion on how best to achieve a good
society, and that alone does not make any of us un-American. What does make
someone un-American is when they reject our fundamental principles and turn
against them altogether.
The alarming surge of antisemitism is becoming an
increasingly open and troubling feature of nearly
all
Western
societies, including our own. It has even taken root on our college
campuses, which are supposed to be bastions of free thought and inquiry. This
surge threatens to become a tidal wave, with potentially terrifying
consequences.
A few incidents in just the past few months make the
point. A New York man pleaded guilty in February to threatening
a synagogue in Albany with firearms; and then the aforementioned gunman who
remorselessly
pumped 21 bullets into two young Israeli Embassy employees outside the
Capital Jewish Museum in Washington in May; followed by the attack in Colorado
allegedly by an Egyptian citizen, in the country illegally, who threw Molotov
cocktails at demonstrators supporting Israeli hostages in Gaza, killing
an 82-year-old Jewish woman. This kind of barbarism is becoming too commonplace
in our country. It is against all that we stand for, and it cannot be allowed
to continue.
And that is why it is important to insist that
antisemitism is un-American. It is not enough to just say that such criminal
acts violate our laws. They offend our fundamental beliefs about the freedom
and dignity of the individual person, ideals that America pioneered at its
founding and that the nations of Europe and most of the civilized world claim
to honor.
For Americans, nothing expresses the distinctively
American view of the matter better than George Washington’s letter
to the Hebrew congregation at Newport, Rhode Island, in 1790. It’s a
beautiful letter and one that should make every American proud to read. Here is
the most important message:
The citizens of the United States
of America have a right to applaud themselves for having given to mankind
examples of an enlarged and liberal policy: a policy worthy of imitation. All
possess alike liberty of conscience and immunities of citizenship. It is now no
more that toleration is spoken of, as if it was by the indulgence of one class
of people, that another enjoyed the exercise of their inherent natural rights.
For happily the government of the United States, which gives to bigotry no
sanction, the persecution no assistance requires only that they who live under
its protection should demean themselves as good as citizens, in giving it on
all occasions their effectual support.
Washington enunciated general principles that should
apply to all men and women because of their inherent natural rights. He was
also writing as the first American president, specifically to a Jewish
audience, making clear his recognition that Jews have a long history of having
been subjected to bigotry and persecution—but that in the United States of
America, this new country, things would be different.
Washington continued in the same vein, concluding the
letter with these words of benediction:
May the children of the stock of
Abraham, who dwell in this land, continue to merit and enjoy the goodwill of
the other inhabitants; while everyone shall sit in safety, under his own vine
and fig tree and there shall be none to make him afraid. May the father of all
mercies scatter light and not darkness in our paths, and make us all in our
several vocations useful here, and in his own due time and way everlastingly
happy.
America has, indeed, been an incomparably wonderful land
for Jewish people, a land in which they have been able to flourish and achieve
according to their own abilities and their own hard work. It also is equally
true that America owes a profound and incalculable debt to those Jews who
helped foster principles upon which much of the American experiment in
democratic self-government was erected. Jewish Americans have helped our nation
find cures for many of the worst illnesses, helped it become an economic and
cultural juggernaut, and helped enrich our legal tradition. The Jewish people
have contributed in ways large and small to the soul of America, both its
making and improving.
But suddenly this all seems to be changing. In the months
after the brutal October 7, 2023, attack on Israel by Hamas terrorists, while
the vast majority of the American people have not wavered in their support of
Israel and the Jewish people, some of our most eminent university campuses
became overrun by antisemitic mobs. These are not demonstrators exercising
their First Amendment rights of “peaceable” assembly. These are mobs who
barricaded buildings, screamed obscenities, and committed acts of violence and
vandalism.
So, is antisemitism un-American? Without a doubt it is.
Fortunately, the vast majority of Americans are not antisemitic, and
see antisemitism as a grave threat. They believe in that vision in our
Declaration of Independence and want to work to get us ever closer, as we
previously had been doing, to realizing it in full.
The Founders adopted the Exodus story as a symbolic
expression of America’s quest for liberty against the tyranny of worldly kings
who counted themselves above the law. In that way, as in so many other ways,
the American story and the Jewish story have been intertwined—and to negate one
is to negate them both. We can’t let that happen if we are to continue as the
land of the free.
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