
Hundreds of Jewish groups urge NEA to reject ADL ban
Why it matters: The proposal calls for the National Education Association (NEA) to no longer use ADL material on antisemitism and Holocaust education nor promote other ADL statistics or programs.
The big picture: An NEA executive committee still must approve the member-backed measure, but a diverse array of Jewish groups told the NEA in a letter Monday that the panel should reject that proposal.
The groups want the NEA to issue a strong statement against antisemitism, which the organizations say is behind the proposal.
Catch up quick: NEA members voted last week to cut ties with the ADL at the 2025 Representative Assembly this week in Portland, Oregon.
"NEA will not use, endorse, or publicize any materials from the Anti-Defamation League (ADL), such as its curricular materials or its statistics," according to the proposal text.
"NEA will not participate in ADL programs or publicize ADL professional development offerings."
The latest: In a letter signed by 378 Jewish organizations, the groups said the NEA measure would effectively boycott "ADL's widely respected anti-bias and Holocaust education curricula."
That includes programs used in thousands of schools nationwide, the organizations said.
"Calling for a National Education Association boycott of the (ADL) is an egregious example of the rising antisemitism in schools and society throughout North America," said Eric Fingerhut, Jewish Federations of North America President and CEO, said in a statement.
An NEA spokesperson did not immediately respond to Axios for comment on Monday evening.
Zoom in: Because it was determined to be a "sanction item," the NEA proposal is an automatic referral to the NEA Executive Committee, an NEA spokesperson previously told Axios.
"Therefore, the official action on (proposal) is adopted and referred to committee," a spokesperson said.
Context: The ADL has provided public schools with materials about the Holocaust, anti-hate training and antisemitism for four decades.
It also provides an annual report on antisemitism in the U.S., which can also be shared in schools.
Caveat: If the NEA Executive Committee adopts the ADL ban, schools can still use ADL material.
Yes, but: It sets up potential future showdowns with local NEA unions and school districts if the war in Gaza continues.
What they're saying: "Excluding ADL's gold-standard educational resources is not just an attack on our organization – it's a dangerous attack on the entire Jewish community," ADL CEO Jonathan Greenblatt said in a statement.
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