The abandoned 428-year-old synagogue in Sharhorod
Ukraine stands as a powerful reminder of why millions of Jews in the world now call themselves Americans
I traveled there last week from my home in Kyiv
to better understand where my family comes from
Six of my eight great-grandparents fled villages like Sharhorod – places with names like Vishnevets
Mielnica-Podolska – in the first quarter of the twentieth century
My family’s story is not unique among American Jews
Anti-Semitism and industrialization in the Russian Empire slowly strangled shtetls
nearly 3 million Jews left everything behind for new lives across the sea
In 1924, Congress almost entirely closed the gates. President Calvin Coolidge signed the Johnson-Reed Act – also known as the National Origins Act – into law, severely curtailing immigration by Eastern European Jews. According to the Office of the Historian at the Department of State
the purpose of the law was to “preserve the ideal of U.S
Some of those who were denied entry to the United States because of the Act found other countries that would take them in. Those who did not, however, were forced to return to the places they had fled. For Jews, that meant Nazi Germany. Most were brutally slaughtered, including many of the passengers on the ill-fated S.S. St. Louis
a ship carrying Jewish refugees from Europe that was turned away by the United States government in 1939
I imagine what would have happened if my great-grandparents had been unable to leave
History tells me they would probably not have survived
Louis ended up back in Europe with its cargo of German-Jewish refugees after a number of countries
Last Friday, on Holocaust Remembrance Day, President Trump signed an executive order halting the U.S
refugee program for Syrians and barring entry to people from seven Muslim-majority nations
That not one terrorist who has committed a terrorist attack on American soil from 1975-2015 comes from any of the countries included in the ban raises questions about its intent
Trump’s affirmation that Christians from these countries will be given priority consideration over their fellow Muslim citizens amounts to nothing less than religious discrimination
As Jews, we must speak out. We understand the life-saving benefits of immigration. Many of these immigrants are fleeing horrific violence. In Syria alone, over 400,000 people have been killed and over 6.5 million are displaced
We have no right to be silent when President Trump turns his back on refugees
condemning the innocent to die because they are Muslims and therefore unwelcome in the United States
When even the President’s son-in-law and close adviser Jared Kushner
My great-grandparents fled their homes and arrived in the United States with little more than the shirts on their backs
and built the foundations on which my family continues to thrive
Silence on this issue is the ultimate hypocrisy
Donate to the American Civil Liberties Union
it is our duty to work together and undermine this inhumane policy
Benjamin Cohen is a Fullbright Scholar in Ukraine. Follow him on Twitter @ben_ezra_cohen
The views and opinions expressed in this article are the author’s own and do not necessarily reflect those of the Forward. Discover more perspectives in Opinion. To contact Opinion authors, email [email protected]
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