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Opinion

Where does hope come from?

'I am somewhat allergic to the term “reconciliation”. For me, that can only happen when we seek and pursue justice. Reconciliation assumes that two people are on an equal footing – and in the US, there are strands of society where this is demonstrably not the case'

November 12, 2019 10:45
A makeshift memorial for the victims of the synagogue shooting in Pittsburgh
2 min read

Last month marked the one-year anniversary of the deadliest attack ever carried out on the Jewish community in the United States. Eleven people were killed in the Pittsburgh synagogue shooting and since then we have seen similar atrocities carried out by far-right activists targeting Jews, Muslims and sexual minorities.

As communities we have suffered, grieved, and healed together, and it is this fellowship that fills me with hope amid such profound despair – and why I am travelling to the UK which has seen rising levels of antisemitism in recent months.

The message of the hope I have witnessed working so powerfully in my own community is the one I will be delivering this week at the RISING Global Peace Forum in Coventry, an event which serves as a platform for inspiration and a place to exchange ideas.

But where does hope come from?