Race and Responsibility: A Conversation on Black-Jewish Relations and the Fight for Equal Justice

Miranda Schonbrun

Race and Responsibility: A Conversation on Black-Jewish Relations and the Fight for Equal Justice

April 12, 2021 / 5:00 pm - 7:00 pm / Add to Google

Online

Eric K. Ward, Western States Center and Michael Rothberg, UCLA, moderated by Tina Sacks, the School of Social Welfare, UC Berkeley

How are the historical experiences of the Black and Jewish communities at once distinct and interconnected? Should we see efforts to combat racism and antisemitism as separate struggles? What are African Americans’ and Jews’ responsibilities to one another in America’s current racial reckoning? In this conversation, Eric K. Ward, a leading expert on the relationship between racism, antisemitism, and authoritarian movements; and Michael Rothberg, an eminent scholar of historical exclusion and its legacies, will tackle these questions and other pressing matters in contemporary Black-Jewish relations. The discussion will be moderated by Professor Tina Sacks of the School of Social Welfare.

Erik K. Ward is a nationally-recognized expert on the relationship between authoritarian movements, hate violence, and preserving inclusive democracy. He is currently the Executive Director of the Western States Center and a Senior Fellow of the Southern Poverty Law Center. In his civil rights career of more than thirty years, he has worked with community groups, government and business leaders, human rights advocates, and philanthropy. His seminal essays include “Skin in the Game: How Antisemitism Animates White Nationalism” (Public Eye, 2017), “As White Supremacy Falls Down, White Nationalism Stands Up” (Pop Culture Collaborative, 2017) and “The Evolution of Identity Politics” (Tikkun, 2018).

Michael Rothberg is Professor of English and Comparative Literature at UCLA, where he holds the 1939 Society Samuel Goetz Chair in Holocaust Studies. His first book was Multidirectional Memory: Remembering the Holocaust in the Age of Decolonization (Stanford UP, 2009). Offering a powerful new framework for the relationship between the collective memories of two of the great traumas of the twentieth century, the book has had a path-breaking impact in Holocaust studies and memory studies. His most recent book, The Implicated Subject: Beyond Victims and Perpetrators (Stanford UP, 2020) is a far-reaching and penetrating analysis of what it means to be implicated in systems of injustice, both historical and current.

Tina Sacks is an assistant professor in UC Berkeley’s School of Social Welfare. An expert on racial inequities in health, social determinants of health, and poverty and inequality, she is the author of Invisible Visits: Black Middle Class Women in the American Healthcare System (Oxford, 2019). She has written powerfully about the way that her Black and Jewish roots shaped her sensitivity to systems of discrimination and violence.

Suggested Readings:

The Implicated Subject: Beyond Victims and Perpetrators – Michael Rothberg

Skin in the Game: How Antisemitism Animates White Nationalism – Eric K. Ward

Far more unites Black and Jewish Americans than divides them – Ethan Katz and Deborah Lipstadt

From Mississippi to Chicago to Belarus, ancestors guide her way – Tina Sacks

The recording of this event can be found on the Campus Conversations website.

This event is sponsored by the Center for Jewish Studies, the Center for Democracy, Toleration, and Religion, the Department of African-American Studies, the Othering and Belonging Institute, Berkeley Hillel, the Berkeley Center for the Study of Religion, the Graduate Theological Union, the Helen Diller Institute for Jewish Law and Israel Studies, the College of Letters & Science, The Ella Baker Center for Human Rights, and HaMaqom | The Place.