MCPS letter today - So sad this is still happening

Anonymous
Parents, We Need Your Help!
FEBRUARY 17, 2023
Dear MCPS Community,

Far too many families and communities across MCPS have come home over the past several weeks to letters from their school condemning acts of antisemitism. A concerning number of students have drawn Nazi symbols on desks, verbally assaulted Jewish peers, spoken anti-Jewish tropes, and glorified Naziism via pictures broadcasted on social media. These acts have left me – and so many of you – feeling angry, dismayed, and horrified.

Halfway through my 21st year working in MCPS, I have seen waves of hate strike our system. They do not, and have not ever, represented who we are. I know that we are so much better than this. And as with so many of the challenges we face, I also know that our community can and will rise up and collectively act upon our core values: learning, relationships, respect, excellence, and equity.

Our schools and staff are committed to being a safe and nurturing home to every student—every day. But we cannot achieve that goal alone. I need you – our parents, guardians, caregivers, and community leaders – to join me in saying NO MORE, to remind one another that the ties that unite us are much stronger than the forces that divide us.

In a message the Board of Education president and I shared on Jan. 21, after a series of antisemitic incidents, we wrote, “As we fight these repeated acts of hate, we must challenge one another to learn and understand what antisemitism, hatred, and racism are and the harm they cause.” That challenge inspired real action. But so long as this ugly problem persists, we must do more.

What MCPS is doing

Leaders in schools and offices across the district have come together to do what we do best: educate. MCPS educators took up the challenge and partnered with advocates and experts in the Anti-Defamation League (ADL) and the Jewish Community Relations Council (JCRC), among others, to deepen awareness of antisemitism, increase age-appropriate curriculum teaching about the Holocaust, restore community in the aftermath of antisemitic acts, and listen to family concerns.

When an act of antisemitic hate-bias occurs, we administer serious and appropriate discipline in accordance with the student code of conduct. But we will not punish our way out of the spike we face. Whenever possible, we must turn to education – because when our students know better, they do better.

Let’s be clear, demonstrations of hate – antisemitism – have victims.

Written symbols, gestures, and performative imitations invoking the Nazi regime and its leader Adolf Hitler are painful, frightening, and traumatic for Jewish people. They directly reference the systematic, genocidal mass murder of six million Jews during the Holocaust, which occurred less than 100 years ago. Many Jewish MCPS students have personal, familial connections to the Holocaust, both through grandparents or other relatives who survived and those who perished. The horrors of the Nazi death camps were preceded by the proliferation and normalization of blunt antisemitic images, gestures, and words -- the same images, words and gestures being casually mimicked by students today. This behavior results in Jewish students and many others feeling unsafe and threatened in their own schools and communities.

Our children must not be victims.

To learn and achieve at high levels, all students must feel physically and emotionally safe. Anxiety or pain caused by acts of hatred holds students back from bringing their best to the classroom. ALL of our children, at ALL times, must BE safe. No person should feel invalidated by the actions of another, intentionally or unintentionally.

What you can do at home

It’s easy. As the trusted and loved adults in our children’s lives, join us in educating our children. Take time to remind our students that:

Hate is wrong
Hate has victims
Hate divides us, and
Hate has consequences in civil society
Instruct your children that prejudice, discrimination, and marginalization in the form of hateful words, and symbols, have no place in school, at home, or in the community. The antidote to such hate comes from the power of friendship, love, and respect.

As parental figures, you aren’t in this alone. Many resources, like those at the bottom of this message, can help you with these difficult discussions.

Let’s challenge each other to do better.

As a community, we must speak loudly, clearly and together against antisemitism and all acts of hate and racism. Whatever your race, background, gender identity, sexual orientation or religion, when we are inclusive and welcoming, when we embrace our differences rather than let them tear us apart, we move our community one step closer to reaching our full potential. I believe we can and will reach that potential – but if we are to do so, there is no room for hate. Let us stand in solidarity to condemn antisemitism, hate, and racism. Let us do this together.

Anonymous
This has been an issue for many years. This is mcps pretending to care when they don’t.
Anonymous
Anonymous wrote:This has been an issue for many years. This is mcps pretending to care when they don’t.


What are you doing to address this issue? Do you think Kids get these ideas from home? We can see many adults and retired subscribing to this type of philosophy.

Anonymous
If it’s on social media they know who the kids are. They need to be expelled. Is Schindler’s list or any other WW2 movie ever watched in school? Maybe it should be..
Anonymous
Anonymous wrote:
Anonymous wrote:This has been an issue for many years. This is mcps pretending to care when they don’t.


What are you doing to address this issue? Do you think Kids get these ideas from home? We can see many adults and retired subscribing to this type of philosophy.



I’m Jewish. I highly doubt it’s coming from my home.
Anonymous
Anonymous wrote:If it’s on social media they know who the kids are. They need to be expelled. Is Schindler’s list or any other WW2 movie ever watched in school? Maybe it should be..


Who is going to take care of those who subscribe to similar philosophy outside of school which is where this most probably is propagated from.
Anonymous
Anonymous wrote:This has been an issue for many years. This is mcps pretending to care when they don’t.


I would say: this has been an issue for many years, this is MCPS caring but there's not much they can do. Plus it does, unfortunately, represent who we are. Not all of us, hopefully not even many of us, but some of us.
Anonymous
I'm disgusted and angry. It seems these kids know there are minimal consequences for antisemitism.
Anonymous
What is a good, short documentary to show ms and hs kids about nazi and the holocaust?

When I was an mcps student one of our field trips was to the holocaust museum and it was so impactful. My kids have never gone. Why was the holocaust field trip cut out?
Anonymous
No more restorative justice and discipline the kids. They should be expelled for hate speech.
Anonymous
Anonymous wrote:
Anonymous wrote:This has been an issue for many years. This is mcps pretending to care when they don’t.


I would say: this has been an issue for many years, this is MCPS caring but there's not much they can do. Plus it does, unfortunately, represent who we are. Not all of us, hopefully not even many of us, but some of us.


There is a lot they can do, including give detentions, suspend, and expel kids who are behaving poorly. They can also have more school programs for kids with a behavioral issues. They aren't trying at all.
Anonymous
Anonymous wrote:What is a good, short documentary to show ms and hs kids about nazi and the holocaust?

When I was an mcps student one of our field trips was to the holocaust museum and it was so impactful. My kids have never gone. Why was the holocaust field trip cut out?


Most schools don't have field trips due cost/equity. This isn't going to help.
Anonymous
I don't get this. I really, really don't. What is going on at home that these kids think this is okay?? Are their parents really talking about how much they hate Jews around the dinner table? Do they get unrestricted access to the internet? Are parents totally and completely absent? I'm struggling to wrap my head around it.
Anonymous
They can’t actually do anything. First Amendment protections. They just try to scare children into thinking something might happen.
Anonymous
Anonymous wrote:What is a good, short documentary to show ms and hs kids about nazi and the holocaust?

When I was an mcps student one of our field trips was to the holocaust museum and it was so impactful. My kids have never gone. Why was the holocaust field trip cut out?


I thought they stopped teaching about the Holocaust? Was done in 7th grade and now it's not?
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