Jonathan Greenblatt, the head of the Anti-Defamation League (ADL), said last week that he would register as a Muslim if President-Elect Donald Trump implements a registry for Muslims in the United States.
“As Jews, we know what it means to be registered, or targeted, held out as different from our fellow citizens,” Greenblatt noted at the ADL’s Never is Now summit in New York, according to British news site Jewish News.
Trump’s proposal has sparked fears and outrage in the Muslim-American community. The hashtag #registermefirst was created by the Washington-based nonprofit ReThinkMedia, and quickly took off on social media. The suggestion by Trump surrogate Carl Higbie that Japanese internment camps during WII could be a precedent for a Muslim registry only added fuel to the fire.
“To be perfectly honest, it is legal, they say it will hold constitutional muster,” Higbie said in an interview with Fox News host Megyn Kelly earlier this month. “I know the ACLU will challenge it, but I think it will pass, and we’ve done it with Iran back a while ago, we did it during WWII with Japanese, which, call it what you will, maybe it was wrong.”
In an interview with AFP Saturday, Greenblatt said that “The day they create a registry for Muslims is the day that I register as a Muslim because of my Jewish faith, because of my commitment to our core American values, because I want this country to be as great as it always has been.”