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CHICAGO, ILLINOIS (June 12, 2026) – By SWC Trustee and 2026 Humanitarian Award recipient, Sara Crown Star. Click here to read in eJewish Philanthropy. Years ago, I visited Auschwitz with about 20 Jewish lay leaders, Jewish professionals, and Israeli government officials. What I remember most were the Auschwitz blueprints. The Nazis had multiple engineering drawings prepared: How thick should the pipes be to gas the Jews? Should the dead bodies drop to a basement level? What was the most efficient way to maximize the killings? They industrialized death. They turned hate into a system. That system did not end with the camps. Fast forward to August 9, 2001. It’s the Second Intifada, and I’m at a graduation in Jerusalem. A bomb goes off nearby, and I watch back-to-back ambulances race to the nearby Sbarros pizzeria, where a Hamas bomber murdered 16 people — seven of them children, one a pregnant woman — and injured 130 others. That was the day I decided to dedicate time to this fight. By 2026, the system has changed again. Hate has been re-industrialized. Not in gas chambers. Not in nail bombs. In code. The blueprints may look different, but the purpose is the same. It is emblematic of what so many members of our community are now experiencing every day. The high school student. The middle school student. Even the elementary school student who is verbally harassed, or worse. The university student who worries about walking from their dorm to class. These evils are no longer isolated. They are affecting all of us. So, here is the one thing I am asking you. I’m framing it as a dare, and the dare changes by age. If you’re under 18, I dare you: The next time you see an antisemitic post on your feed, don’t scroll past it. Reply with the truth. Report it. Or send a friend the real story. Just commit to doing it once. And if you like how it feels, do it again — and then get your friends to do the same. If you’re between 18 and 65, I challenge you: At your next dinner, at your next meeting, on the next group text where someone says something untrue about Jews or Israel — speak up. You don’t have to be eloquent; you just can’t be neutral. If you’re over 65, I respectfully ask this: Tell one young person one true story this week. And if you happen to be over 100... honestly, just keep showing up. We all stop and listen when you walk into the room. Last year, I rode home from a Brothers for Life event in Miami with a captain in the IDF bomb squad. At 35, this captain found himself deaf in one ear after his team had been hit by a rocket-propelled grenade. I asked him, “Why in the world would you volunteer for the bomb squad?” He answered: “I’m not strong, I’m not fast, and I’m not an athlete. But I wanted to be of value to the IDF, and I could do that by using my mind to disarm bombs.” The bombs we face today don’t just tick. They trend. They’re amplified by social media platforms and detonated by silence. Like that soldier, we have minds. I’m asking you to use yours. There are millions of us — and our voices, refusing silence, are louder than any algorithm. Together, let’s set the sun on hate and let’s help it rise on truth. Don’t be neutral. Not even once. For further information, please email Aram Goldberg at agoldberg@wiesenthal.com. Join the Center on Facebook, or follow @simonwiesenthal for news updates sent directly to your X feed. About the Author Sara Crown Star is the 2026 recipient of the Simon Wiesenthal Center’s Humanitarian Award. Crown Star is a venture partner with FemHealth Ventures and the president of SCS Innovations. She co-chairs the Jewish Committee of Crown Family Philanthropies and serves on the boards of the Crown Family Foundation, the Jewish United Fund and 1871 (Chicago’s entrepreneurial hub). She is also a life trustee of the Erikson Institute, president of the Colonel Henry Crown Scholarship Fund and a director of Musicians on Call and the Ortus Foundation. About the Simon Wiesenthal Center The Simon Wiesenthal Center (SWC) is a globally recognized human rights organization dedicated to combating antisemitism and all forms of hate, promoting tolerance, and advancing justice through a strategic combination of education, advocacy, and storytelling. Headquartered in Los Angeles with offices worldwide, SWC translates the enduring lessons of the Holocaust into contemporary frameworks that equip individuals and institutions to identify and confront prejudice, misinformation, and extremism. A global leader in addressing online disinformation, SWC empowers people of all ages with the media literacy tools and guidance needed to navigate today's digital landscape. Its education arm, the Museum of Tolerance and its fleet of Mobile Museums of Tolerance, delivers immersive, technology-driven experiences that foster empathy and critical thinking among diverse audiences. Through advocacy, SWC partners with governments, policymakers, and civic leaders to advance meaningful reforms and keep local and global Jewish communities safe. Its Academy Award-winning storytelling arm, Moriah Media, extends this impact through film, television, and digital content that elevate critical Jewish issues and human interest narratives. |