Response to anti-Semitic East Cobb school incidents: ‘A lesson in solidarity’

Rabbi Larry Sernovitz, Temple Kol Emeth
Rabbi Larry Sernovitz, Temple Kol Emeth

Instead of presiding over Cobb Board of Education meetings Thursday, chairman Randy Scamihorn was attending a Yom Kippur service in East Cobb.

He had received an invitation from Rabbi Larry Sernovitz after anti-Semitic graffiti was found on bathroom walls at Pope High School last week.

As Scamihorn was asked to hold the Torah at the Temple Kol Emeth synagogue on the holiest of Jewish holy days, another investigation was underway for a similar incident at Lassiter High School earlier this week.

“Like many non-Jews, I am woefully inadequate in my knowledge of the Jewish religion,” Scamihorn said Friday in an interview with East Cobb News.

“I saw it as an opportunity to enhance my education.”

He said he was pleasantly surprised not just at the invitation to attend, but to take a leading part in one of the most meaningful aspects of the Yom Kippur observance.

Sernovitz and others in the local Jewish community are pushing for that receptiveness to spread throughout the community, and in particular the Cobb County School District.

After the Pope incident, the school board postponed Thursday’s scheduled monthly meetings for another week due to Yom Kippur.

But Sernovitz and other Jewish leaders said the district’s response has been inadequate. In a letter to the Pope community, principal Thomas Flugum didn’t specify the anti-Semitic nature of the graffiti, which included swastikas and “Hail Hitler” written above urinals.

Cobb school board chairman Randy Scamihorn
Cobb school board chairman Randy Scamihorn

Similar scrawling took place in a boys bathroom at Lassiter, where principal Chris Richie was specific, and further denounced the “deplorable symbols and language.”

Later, the Cobb school district issued a response that didn’t make a reference to anti-Semitism but only to “hate speech” and urged “families to talk to their students about the impacts of inappropriate and dangerous trends circulating on social media.”

The incidents took place apparently as part of a stunt on the Tik Tok social media app in which students vandalize school property and boast about it.

The “devious licks” challenge is being addressed by the social media company, but other reports of anti-Semitic incidents are unknown.

The Pope PTSA organization is planning a Nov. 20 event in response to the anti-Semitic attack that will include a campus cleanup project as well as assemblies involving faith leaders from local Jewish, Catholic and Episcopalian congregations.

It’s called “Team Up to Clean Up: Building Relationships through Service,” and details will be forthcoming, said Kelley Jimison, a Pope parent who’s leading the organizing effort.

“I see it as an opportunity to teach our students lifelong lessons,” she said. “What matters to me is that we have a chance to turn this around and make positive change out of this.”

Jimison stressed that what happened at Pope involved only a small number of students on a campus of around 2,000 students.

What she calls “a lesson in solidarity” is already taking place, as Pope students and staff produced the video below this week.

At an earlier Yom Kippur service on Thursday. Sernovitz addressed a congregant who’s soon to be Bar Mitzvahed and applauded him for being “proud of his Judaism” as he attends school.

“We’re proud of the education that you gave to your fellow students,” said Sernovitz, who also thanked parents for “staying strong and raising your kids in the face of indignity.”

Sernovitz was traveling this weekend and could not be reached for comment.

The Cobb school board will be meeting next Thursday, at which public commenters are expected to address the anti-Semitic incidents.

In speaking with East Cobb News, Scamihorn was reluctant to say whether he may bring forward an item condemning the attacks.

As chairman he can do that unilaterally, but said that “at this time, I’m going to let the investigations play out.”

Those responsible for the incidents, he said, are “woefully ignorant of what the swastika means.”

Board vice chairman David Banks, whose Post 5 in East Cobb includes the Pope and Lassiter attendance zones, also condemned the incidents, saying it’s “disappointing that we have students who would do something like that.”

What they did, Banks said, “has no Christian values.”

But he said the district processes for investigating alleged student misbehavior need to be followed, and that he’s not sure of all the details.

“We’re not going to hash it out in public,” Banks added, saying that by doing so it might become a national story. “It’s a local issue. Let the schools take care of it.”

Pope HS swastikas

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