Harrisburg, PA – Amid the recent surge in antisemitic incidents in the United States, Jewish schools, synagogues, camps and community institutions are coming together to urge state lawmakers to protect at-risk populations. The emergency campaign is being coordinated by the grassroots advocacy organization Teach PA, a project of the Orthodox Union.
As part of the campaign, the institutions are calling on their constituencies to contact their legislators immediately while the annual state budget negotiations are underway. Legislators are also receiving data on anti-Semitic hate incidents in the country and in Pennsylvania in just the past two months.
The two security grant programs they are advocating for increased funding towards are the Pennsylvania Department of Education's Safe Schools Targeted Grant Program and the Pennsylvania Commission on Crime and Delinquency's Nonprofit Security Grant Fund. The group hopes to motivate lawmakers to increase the Safe Schools Targeted Grant Program to $5 million for nonpublic schools, and the Nonprofit Security Grant Fund to $10 million. The funds will go towards making sure more institutions can access the funds given that the grants are competitive.
Those wishing to join the campaign can do so at: https://teachcoalition.org/take-action/431/
“Earlier this year our synagogue, here in Pennsylvania’s capital, was vandalized,” said Rabbi Elisha Friedman of Harrisburg’s Kesher Israel Congregation. “While we’re thankful that no one was physically hurt, the incident resulted in anxiety for congregants to come to their house of worship. We are calling on our government to make a greater investment in our safety and that of other communities at risk of hate crimes.”
“Our voice is only powerful when we choose to use it,” said Teach PA Executive Director Arielle Frankston-Morris. “When our community becomes our own activists and advocates, our legislators can’t avoid listening to us and in this case investing in our safety and that of our children. We thank Governor Wolf and our legislators for creating these programs, but with the increase in hate crimes we are seeing across the country, specifically attacks against Jews, we are urging them to increase the security funding in a meaningful way so that more institutions will have access to these critical funds.”
Teach PA, a division of Teach Coalition, was founded in 2013 to advocate for state programs and resources for Pennsylvania nonpublic schools. It has helped secure over $100 million in scholarships for Jewish day school students and spearheaded the creation and maintenance of a school safety program that delivered $3.2 million in the last year alone to nonpublic schools. Currently, 20 day-schools and yeshivas receive support through Teach PA’s efforts. For more information, visit https://teachcoalition.org/pa/.