All About Change - Julianna Margulies - The Vital Importance of Holocaust Education
Episode Date: January 22, 2024With antisemitism on the rise, the need for Holocaust education has never been more important. That’s where Emmy award-winner Julianna Margulies comes in. In 2022, Julianna helped to found the Holoc...aust Educator School Partnership, an initiative to help train undergraduate and graduate students in how to teach about the Holocaust in the classroom.  In this episode, Julianna Margulies sits down with host Jay Ruderman to discuss the misconceptions and challenges facing the Jewish community today, and what allyship means to her.  Please fill out the Listener Feedback Form - Linked HereSee omnystudio.com/listener for privacy information.
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I didn't want to shame anyone or put anyone on the defensive.
I wanted to just explain something that I realized that night when I got home and looked
at my husband and I was like, no one is hurtful.
None of my friends are.
They have no idea why their silence is so hurtful.
Hi, I'm Jay Rudiman and welcome to All About Change, a podcast showcasing individuals who leverage the hardships that have been thrown at them to better other people's lives.
This is all wrong.
I say put mental health first because if you don't...
This generation of America has already had enough.
I stand before you not as an expert, but as a concerned citizen.
I stand before you not as an expert, but as a concerned citizen.
Julianna Margulies often plays powerful characters on screen,
women who don't back down from a challenge and speak their minds.
The woman behind the scenes is no different.
I think of myself as someone who wants the world to be a better place and someone who grew up with a family saying,
when you see something, you say something,
and you always fight for the little guy.
That dedication to speaking up is one that's never wavered,
even in the face of horror. I was horrified, devastated, scared.
It felt surreal.
Just hearing about it made me, I just kept, I just was weeping.
It was a nightmare.
A nightmare that I feel like we're all still in.
Even before the October 7th attacks,
Juliana had committed herself to broadening Holocaust education in the United States.
Her own means of combating the rise in anti-Semitism.
It's still shocking to me to know that I can say something
that makes a difference in someone's life that severely.
And I'm grateful for that.
And I will use it to the good as best I can and to teach.
Juliana, thank you so much for being my guest on All About Change. I am really excited to speak to
you. So let's start with your childhood. You had a very diverse and interesting childhood growing up in New York,
Sussex, England, Paris, and then New Hampshire. Can you tell us what it was like with your
upbringing? If I were to sum it up, I would say that had my parents been married and I had been
going to all these countries with my parents together and not torn apart away from my father, I think it would have been exciting and a little bit exotic and interesting. But because
my mother and father were divorced to be in different countries all the time, I felt a
little bit like a gypsy, a little nomad, no belonging. And it felt a little lonely because I always had to reinvent myself.
I never fit in anywhere. I was the American girl in England. I was the English girl in America.
I never had the right clothing for the school uniform. My mother was just a sort of a free
spirited hippie woman who felt like we'd figure it out. And in a strange way, as an adult now,
Felt like we'd figure it out. And in a strange way, as an adult now, I actually see some of it and think, oh, you know, I had to fend for myself and I had to learn. And that's a good, those are good tools to give to children.
What I was going to ask you is, do you think that your upbringing helped shaped you into entering into a career as an actress?
Absolutely. I mean, when I really started writing about it, I realized writing is very therapeutic and it really helps you uncover things about yourself that you always knew were lurking there,
but didn't quite have the wherewithal to see it. And as I was writing about always putting on
someone else's shoes, right, in someone else's
country, in someone else's school, I kind of was trained at a very young age to be an actress
because I was always being someone else. And so when it came time to do it as a profession,
honestly, in the beginning, I felt like it wasn't a noble enough profession because my grandmother
was such a trailblazer and had been one of the first women to ever graduate NYU Law School in 1924 and started so many things.
She was a suffragette without having to march in the streets.
She just lived it.
You know, she never took no for an answer.
She just found a different way to do her life.
Okay, you're not going to accept women.
I'll start the Women's Bar Association of the Bronx.
And I wanted to follow in her footsteps.
But when I got to college and took acting classes, it was the first time, my first play
my freshman year, this curtain went up and I, for the first time in my life, felt like
I belonged somewhere.
Like I was home.
It was natural.
It was that strong.
Yeah. So being from Boston, I just want to ask you about New Hampshire. And I saw an interview
that I think you did with Seth Meyers when you came from England and you're in New Hampshire
and you had a teacher saying, you're tardy. Mrs. Lombardi. Right. Yeah. And you're like, what?
So tell me about why New Hampshire and that must have been a real culture shock.
It was such a culture shock.
Well, my middle sister and I had been living in England with my mother.
My eldest sister was in New York because she was a ballerina.
So she was studying at the School of American Ballet, living with my father on 89th Street
on the east side.
And we just kept begging my mother, please, we have to move back to America.
We have to move back to America.
I missed my sister. I missed my sister.
I missed my father.
So my mother was a teacher, and she got a job in Wilton, New Hampshire.
And so we ended up in Wilton, New Hampshire, which was not really what we were hoping for.
We were hoping to move back to New York.
So it was a culture shock to me, not only because of it being so far away from New York
City although I would try to get to New York City on weekends if I could but also because it was just
a different world it was flannel shirts and blue jeans and gee you know I remember my my girlfriend
Shauna the first time we were talking and she said geez Jesus Crow. And I said, what? Jesus Crow.
And she explained to me, that's how they say Jesus Christ. Jesus Crow.
But to me, it was a different language. And Mrs. Lombardi,
who was my Latin teacher, she was from Boston.
She told me I was Tati and I didn't know what that meant.
I really didn't know what Tati meant. And she said,
you're Tati, T-A-I-D-Y. And I remember going home that day and looking at my mother going,
we might have left England, but I have no idea what anyone's saying in this part of the world.
It took a while. And within a year, I too was wearing flannel shirts and blue jeans and
Timberland boots. And kids are resilient and they learn
to fit in. And I ended up loving that school. I want to get back to your grandmother,
because your grandmother, from what I've read, was a very special person. And as you said,
a trailblazer. What impact do you think she had on you? Because I'm the youngest,
so I'm the youngest of three, you have to sort of fight for your place in the
family when you're the youngest. The advantage of being the youngest is that no one's really
paying attention. And the disadvantage is that no one's really paying attention. So my eldest
sister was so much like my great aunt Marley. And my middle sister was sort of a cross between my grandfathers. And I got my, my grandma Henrietta
Margulies, her family descended from Austria. They were Austrian Jews and I got her green eyes and
her wide cheekbones. And not that I liked that as a kid, I wanted to, my Aunt Marley was very tall
and she had blue eyes like my eldest sister, but I took after my grandmother And she was also very athletic. My elder sister
was already a ballerina and my middle sister was already a musician. So I was the athlete,
I had to find my own path that wasn't related to them. And I realized at a very young age that my
grandmother Henrietta, her path was much more the path I wanted to walk in that she was a feminist
before feminism was a word.
And she was also incredibly smart. I truly don't believe I had the brain to be a lawyer. I'm so
grateful I got to play one on TV for as many years as I did. But when I got to college and really
thought I was going to be a lawyer and started taking pre-law, I didn't care about the small
print in all the contracts. It just bored me.
And so I realized I just didn't have that. But I think what I do have of my grandmother's
is that incredible sense of responsibility. I feel a tremendous sense of responsibility,
which I think she carried on her shoulders her whole life.
Wow. Well, I was also very close to my grandmother.
I had a tremendous impact on my life. So I really identify with that. But as a lawyer,
I want to tell you, just to disabuse you of any notion, it's not that difficult. So
let's talk a little bit about your acting career and how you got started in ER. I heard you tell a story about George Clooney
and how he convinced you to stick around
and give ER a chance
because you might become a regular.
Yeah, I mean, that was, you know,
talk about fate.
That was an unbelievable time in my life
because I was broke
and living in a five-floor walk up. And I'd done this pilot with the
original cast of ER and had such a good time, but I was a guest star in the pilot and my character
died. And I got on a plane and I went home back to New York. At the time I had done a couple of
episodes of a show called Homicide Life on the Street with Tom Fontana and Barry Levinson. And I had played
opposite Ned Beatty. And I got home from doing the pilot and Tom Fontana called and said, we want to
make you a series regular on the show. And it shot in Baltimore, which meant I could basically stay
in New York. And I said, amazing. Thank you. Homicide Life on the Street was a great show.
So I said, yes, please. I needed to pay my
rent. And right after I said yes, I came home and there was a voice message from George Clooney
saying, listen, I'm hearing from producers that your character tested really high and none of the
audiences like that you died. So don't take another job. And I remember thinking like, well,
you died. So don't take another job. And I remember thinking like, well, that's a big if.
I died in the pilot. How are they going to? And so I called Tom and I said, I don't know what to do, Tom Fontana. And I said, I can't look a gift horse in the mouth and say no to you. But at the
same time, I just don't know what to do. And he said, there'll always be a part here for you.
Take the chance. And I did. And a week later, they called and said,
come on out. And that was the big break in your career. That was my big break. Absolutely. Yeah.
So, Juliana, we're seven weeks out from October 7th. And I want to talk to you about that. First
of all, tell me your memories when you first heard about the horrendous attack that Hamas perpetrated on Israel.
I was horrified, devastated, scared.
It felt surreal.
I think even before anyone started weighing in, just hearing about it made me, I just kept, I just was weeping.
It was a nightmare, a nightmare that I feel like we're all still in. never again and teach about the Holocaust. But two weeks after October 7th happened,
the world turned against the Jews and not just Israel, but what I'm experiencing,
what I'm sure you've heard, is it's not just anti-Israel, it's anti-Jewish.
Does teaching people about the Holocaust, does it still have relevancy when it seems like so quickly after the worst atrocities
that have been perpetrated against Jews since the Holocaust that people can turn against the Jews?
I'm trying to work that out and I'm wondering what you think about that.
It's a great question. And I'll tell you, I started that program in 2021 after I had hosted a Holocaust remembrance special for CBS and saw
how lacking the education of the Holocaust is in our country. At the time, only 19 out of 50 states
taught Holocaust education. I was so distraught when I heard that and seeing the rise in
antisemitism, especially after Trump had said
there are good people on both sides in that Nazi rally in Charlottesville. But you also had people
that were very fine people on both sides. You had people in that group. Excuse me. Excuse me. I saw
the same pictures as you did. I did a lot of research and I called Jonathan Greenblatt at the ADL and I said, there is a lack of Holocaust education in this country. And from what I know, when Holocaust education is taught, anti-Semitism goes down. And he said it is 100% a fact.
Can children in seventh grade, eighth grade read the Diary of Anne Frank and can, through literature, put themselves in someone else's shoes, have empathy for that character?
It's the same.
I was just reading this article in The Atlantic yesterday about parents need to stop raising children to be the smartest and start raising them to be the kindest and most empathetic.
What happened to humanity? And I do believe that with Holocaust education,
we can teach the children. Now, listen, I started this program not knowing what I was doing. I'm
terrible at raising money. It is not in my wheelhouse, but I just thought one foot in front
of the other and you figure it out. And I can tell you that since October 7th, the amount of people
who have contacted me, who I have never met before to say
to me, we want to put money to this program, we want to get it spread out across America, which
was my original idea. I just had to start with small because that's the only money I could raise.
And the idea is to bring this program across the country. We're going to start with cities that have Holocaust museums, because one of the things I think that is very gripping and really sets the seeds
in children's minds is that when we teach a class for an hour, and then this is all for free,
and then we bus the children to the museum so they can see for themselves all the facts of the Holocaust. Jewish
life before the Holocaust, Jewish life during the Holocaust, Jewish life after the Holocaust.
They can see passports. We have over 40,000 artifacts there. It's one of the biggest
collections in the country. And I think what it does is it plants a seed because we have to start young for children
to say when they grow up to a Holocaust denier, no, it did happen.
Let me explain to you.
For me, what I'm trying to do, and I think we all need to get back to some level of humanity
and kindness and understanding.
and kindness and understanding. And for some reason, when it is about Jewish people,
there is this ridiculous trope that we are of something we are not, that the rest of the world seems to believe. And so how do we then change that narrative? How? You know, one of the things
I think that was so great for same-sex marriage was Will and Grace. One of the things I think that was so great for same-sex marriage was Will & Grace.
One of the things that Will & Grace did for the LGBTQ plus community was regular people
across America got to see gay people as normal.
This isn't a big deal.
And within two years of that show, three years of that show airing, same-sex marriage was
passed.
And so I think what I would like,
there's so much anger, all these riots and people spewing things, they have no idea what they're
saying. So I think education for me is the only way forward to bring awareness and not just for
the Jewish cause, for everything. But I'm championing that because I'm seeing such a
rise in antisemitism that my
girlfriend who lives next door won't let her son take the subway anymore because he wears a Jewish
scarf and she's scared he'll get beat up. And how can we be living like this now? It's ridiculous.
The program that you started is called the Holocaust Educator School Partnership.
And my understanding is that you're educating teachers about how to teach the Holocaust.
Well, so what we do is we actually, it's a paid internship program. So applicants apply,
college and graduate students apply. We pay them a certain amount of money. We give them eight days
intensive training on how to teach the Holocaust. They go into classes from seventh to 12th grade
and teach one hour of Holocaust education.
And a perfect example of this, because someone said to me, well, why are you teaching that in New York?
I mean, New York's full of Jews.
That is not true.
I mean, it does have a large Jewish population.
But so one of my interns, and they're not all Jewish, my interns.
They're of every ethnicity.
And one girl, she was one of my first interns.
We started with two because I
funded the first year. And then it started taking off and we had six and I started raising funds.
And then now we have 10. So it's getting bigger and bigger. But this little boy in the Bronx,
which is maybe a 20 minute subway ride from my apartment, seventh grade, 12 years old,
after class, he asked her, and this is not his fault. He said, well, if six million Jews were killed during the Holocaust, are there any living today?
So that's where we're at.
And that is, I don't want to use the word ignorant.
It's just lack of education, right?
This little boy, it's not his fault.
But the people who are teaching him have not made him aware that there are Jews in the world, right?
him aware that there are Jews in the world, right? So it is important the same way I want my son to learn about slavery, the same way I want him to learn about the Napoleonic Wars and World War I
and teach him everything about history because the adage is, if you don't learn it, history will
repeat itself. And I think that was the most frightening part.
Now, October 7th was frightening, but the most frightening part of October 7th was the
celebration after it.
That, to me, was the most frightening part.
What has happened to humanity?
I think there's a huge issue on college campuses, and I have children who are in college right
now, where there's not an understanding of the
difference between free speech and hate speech. And I think that that's what schools are grappling
with and not doing a very good job at. The other thing, I mean, you have a young child,
I have children. Have you given any thought to social media and the fact that everyone has access to social media and lies can be spread very quickly and it can whip up hatred in a matter of hours?
How do you handle social media? I mean, I'm sure you get a lot of stuff thrown at you, especially being outspoken on anti-Semitism.
outspoken on anti-Semitism? It's amazing you speak out on anti-Semitism without even mentioning anything but speaking out on anti-Semitism. I came back from that Variety Summit and I had
death threats just from speaking out on anti-Semitism. Nothing about Palestine or Israel,
but most of it's bots. When the FBI looked into it, it's Qatar and Iranian bots that want to
silence anyone who has some sort of a platform
because they don't want that around. I think social media is the devil, honestly. I mean,
my son's almost 16 now and he did not have a phone until he was 13. I was very strict about that.
He is on TikTok, but literally for basketball and cooking. So he's not, he finds social media
to be silly, but I think boys are very different than girls. Like Instagram, all that stuff to him is just ridiculous.
But it also could be that we, I don't know,
shielded him from it so long that now it's passe.
I don't know, but I think it's truly evil.
I see it with myself.
I'm a grown woman settled in my life.
And I was never on social media until I wrote a book
and Random House was
shocked that I didn't have a platform and asked me to join one. And I said, well,
what's the lesser of all evils? And they said, Instagram. So, but even that my blood pressure
goes up and I'm a fully formed human being. I can't imagine what these teenagers are going
through or college kids who are on it all day long. So you are a public figure. I mean, I'm just curious, you and your husband and you're out
there and you said you received death threats. How do you keep yourself sane? How do you keep
yourself away from really dangerous messages coming into your home?
Well, first of all, I have stayed off of Instagram pretty much since the death threat started.
If I post anything, I have my PR person do it.
They have turned off comments and I've stayed off.
I really don't go on and I see my life improving.
When I need to post something that I think is important or, for example, I adopted one
of the hostages and I've become quite close with her family.
When they send me things to post, I either give it to my publicist or I'll quickly just post it, turn comments off, and then I don't look at it.
I protect myself that way.
We never have the news on 24-7, ever. I read, and actually I've been really disappointed in the way some newspapers that I respected
have been reporting on the war when they find out that actually Israel didn't bomb that
hospital.
It was actually Hamas's rocket backfiring.
The retraction is on the third page, but the damage is already done.
And so there seems to be this constant, you know, my thing in life, I just can't bear
injustice.
I get crazy with injustice.
But I realized if I keep going down the rabbit hole, I'm just going to be angry all the time.
And I can't live my life like that.
It's toxic.
So I read the things I think I should be reading.
We watch PBS NewsHour like old people.
And I make my own opinions.
But I don't get any of my news from social media ever.
Exactly. Exactly. I mean, I know I have a young child who TikTok has just had such an adverse
impact on his life and it's dangerous.
It's very dangerous.
When do you think you first became an activist? And when your platform grew, how did that change?
Gosh, it's so interesting to hear you call me an activist. I never thought of myself as one.
I truly never thought of myself as an activist. I think of myself as someone who wants the world
to be a better place. And someone who grew up with a family saying when you see something,
you say something,
and you always fight for the little guy. My dad was really into sports, but he never,
ever cared what team won. He just wanted a good game. And he would always go for the underdog because that was more exciting for him. I grew up with that. He had such a moral compass
and a true genuineness about life.
What makes life good?
You say that you never thought of yourself as an activist, but you've never been afraid
to speak out.
And as your platform grew, as your status grew as someone who is well-known and you've
been successful, how has your speaking out changed?
What's changed dramatically for me is I didn't realize, and it could just be my naivete,
because I've never been a celebrity. I've been a quite a private person. I just happened to
act on really big shows. And so that gave me a platform I didn't really know I had.
And so what I've noticed just since October 7th and speaking out against anti-Semitism
is that it makes a big difference to a lot of people's lives that I didn't realize.
The people who have reached out, you know, when I wrote this op-ed, just a letter to
my non-Jewish friends to say why their silence was so difficult for us.
And I really tried to write it out of understanding
and compassion that they don't understand our journey. So let me try and explain why your
silence is so deafening. I had no idea the reach. Now I'm starting to learn that my words actually
reach people. I didn't know it was that big. And I'm grateful to help in any way I can.
It's not that I don't believe it. It's just
that it's still shocking to me to know that I can say something that makes a difference in someone's
life that severely. And I'm grateful for that. And I will use it to the good as best I can.
And to teach, it's just not absolutely not the journey I thought I'd be walking,
to be honest with you. Well, you have had such a successful career. I mean, from ER, I mean, I'm going to leave out
so many things, you know, to The Good Wife. And I am a huge, huge fan of The Morning Show
and your character, Laura. I think that, you know, it's superb. Your acting, I'd recommend
it to anyone to watch the show on Apple TV.
But I want to talk about, you referenced the letter that you wrote in USA Today,
and it's such a powerful letter because it's factual, and the title is, my non-Jewish friends,
your silence on anti-Semitism is loud. But it's a letter of love. You're like, I love you.
Your silence is hurtful, but I think that
where you get to at the end of the letter is your experience is not my experience. And this is
something I feel myself living through as a Jew whose family is going through this and we feel a
deep hurt that our people were attacked in unprovoked manner. But I think,
you know, I was talking to someone the other day and I'm like, how's it going? He's like, well,
you know, I go to work and people are like, how's your weekend? It's like for a lot of people,
they're not experiencing what we're experiencing. Right. At all. It was shocking because I remember
it was right after the anti-Semitism summit.
I had to fly back to New York to do this reading that I had promised to show up at.
And I was very raw still because it was October 10th or maybe 9th.
And I remember walking in and everyone was like, hey, how are you?
Smiles.
And I was like, not good.
Why?
What happened?
Literally, people said that to me. And in a weird matter what age you are. I know
I've sent it to my, you know, my father-in-law sent it out and my uncle-in-law sent it out.
All these older Jews that I know had friends write back and say, I'm so sorry I didn't check
in on you. I'm so sorry. And so, and I've heard this from a lot of people. I just got a message
today from a girlfriend of mine who's like, I just read your op-ed and I'm so sorry. I think of you all the time, but I should have reached out. And I said,
that's okay. You're doing it now. You're doing it now. And that's what matters to me. So I start
the letter by saying, I want to start by saying that I love you because I didn't want it to be
a shaming letter. I didn't want to shame anyone or put anyone in on the defensive.
I wanted to just explain something that I realized that night when I got home and looked at my
husband and I was like, no one is hurtful. None of my friends are. They have no idea why their
silence is so hurtful. And so I always feel like if you say something out of love, it is received much more
openly than if you scold or get angry. People hear it better, hopefully.
Do you think that there's a misconception that even though Jews are a tiny, tiny minority,
like as you write 0.2% of the world's population, but do you think that there's a perception that
Jews are not a minority? Even though the numbers show that we're a minority But do you think that there's a perception that Jews are not a minority?
Even though the numbers show that we're a minority, do you think there's this misguided
perception that we are part of the elite, part of the power structure of our society?
Yes, I think there's a few things that look, this is my own personal opinion. I think one,
we're confusing because
we're white. Our skin is in a different color, even though a lot of Jews are brown, but it's
confusing. I think because Jews have been literally persecuted since time immemorial,
literally had to reinvent themselves, flee to other countries, run away from people who want them dead. They have had to be resourceful and clever and smart.
And okay, here I am now in this country.
How do I make a living for my family?
And then they become successful in that country.
And this idea that Hollywood is owned by Jews, that it's the Jews that are, you know,
anytime a Jewish person is successful, no one's saying this about other
people who are successful. It's only if it's a Jew and then it becomes about money. Why is that?
Is it because we were bankers in Italy? Like, you know, where's this coming from? These old tropes,
these ideas of who Jews are. When, you know, someone had lashed out at me for speaking up on
anti-Semitism saying, you know, you rich white living in your mansion. I'm like, hold your horses there, sweetheart. I was a waitress, a bartender, a coat check girl. I worked hard for where I am now. Why should I be now labeled as something other than a hardworking, successful human being? Why? Because I'm Jewish? It doesn't make any sense.
I think there's also misconception. I mean, when I walk into synagogue and people there are Black and people of color, I mean, my wife is from, her ancestors are from Iran and India. She is,
does not look white. Half the Jews out there do not look white. But there's so many of these tropes and these misconceptions.
But at this point in time, how is it in the entertainment industry? Have you come across
anti-Semitism in your career? I have not personally, no. I don't know if you will come across
that, not on a set. Mind you, our strike just ended, so I haven't been on a set since all of this happened,
I'll let you know. I don't think that would happen. I think it's more about the audience.
So you haven't heard stories of other Jewish actors, comedians experiencing anti-Semitism
in the industry? Within the industry, I have not personally, no. I do know that there was a letter
that I signed and a whole
bunch of us signed just the same way we did with the Me Too movement and Black Lives Matter,
which is all sets need to be a safe space for all creative and tech people and crew. And we need to
make sure that anti-Semitism is a part of that, that we are protecting everybody. So there was a
letter that went around about that. And
rightfully so in this time, because, you know, listen, I still, you know, I live in a university
sort of area in New York, and I walk my dog at night and look over my shoulder. I cannot believe
I'm saying this to you in 2023. And because of all my friends who have seen me and thanked me
for speaking out on their
behalf, they also say, I hope you're wearing a hat and glasses around New York. And I'm not going to
live my life in fear at all. For the most part, people just come up and say, thank you so much.
You said everything I wanted to say in that letter. So for the most part, it's all positive.
But there's always the crazy who wants to make a statement by slashing someone's throat.
I just wish we could just tamper down this violence and show the truth of everything
and calm down so we could go at this in a way that's productive because it is not.
Yeah, I was in New York a few weeks ago with a couple of my kids visiting NYU and Columbia,
and it was not so comfortable. I want to get back to,
you know, there are other actors, you know, Sarah Silverman, Amy Schumer, Sasha Baron Cohen,
following John Lovitz right now is very outspoken. People are speaking out and
Deborah Messing, and they're getting a lot of hate back.
I mean, it seems like, I mean, you know, a lot of people in the industry, some people are taking this opportunity to speak out and to address anti-Semitism.
And you are among the first and the loudest voice, but some people don't.
Some people are just sort of giving it a pass.
And as you said, you know, we are often the canary in the coal mine. We're not the last
people that people are going to come after. Yeah, it's interesting to me. I don't blame
anyone who is afraid to speak out because until I spoke out, I didn't know I was being brave.
I didn't see it that way. And then the cap was already off and it was too late. But I was pretty shocked that I was
getting death threats when I was talking about anti-Semitism. So I try not to take it too
seriously. I got shaken up a couple of times and that's when I stopped going onto my Instagram.
And God bless, I have this incredible group of fans that somehow through Instagram or whatever,
they get to my assistant and they tell him,
please, so-and-so's be block them, block them.
So it's like I have this army of incredible fans that alert my team and then they go and
just block everybody.
And I figured that, oh, okay, but I'm not on it.
So it's not touching me.
I wasn't sleeping or eating for two weeks after October 7th.
I could not sleep or eat.
I just was a wreck.
And I thought social media makes it worse. Don't look there. And I just had to get back because me
being sick isn't going to help anybody. So I just had to take care of myself and then I could get
strong again and start speaking out in a way that I hope the non-haters at least will understand that it's coming from a
place of love. The only people that I detest are terrorists and conflating Palestinians with Hamas
is what has gotten us into this mess. I take it all in stride and I go slow. And then I also have
days where I just can't be out there in the world. I have to protect myself.
And that's what you do.
But I'm not really worried about it because I think I would feel worse if, you know, in
five years or 10 years, or if my son said to me, you know, on his wedding day, mom,
remember that horrible time in October 7th?
What did you do?
And I can say, let me tell you what I did.
Let me show you what I did.
I would rather be able to say to him, and I thought, than I
cowered. Well, Julianna, I want to thank you for speaking out and speaking out with a message of
love and trying to reach people and tell them about how we as Jews feel and how we feel insecure
and threatened and that we've experienced something that is horrific that many of us never thought
we would experience. No. So I want to thank you for all the work that you've done and for using
your voice, and I hope you'll continue to do so. And I want to thank you for being my guest on
All About Change. I really appreciate your time. Thank you. I loved being on it. Thank you so much.
I loved being on it.
Thank you so much. at mjhnyc.org. We'll also link to the USA Today op-ed we referenced during our conversation.
Today's episode was produced by Rebecca Shasson
with story editing by Yochai Meital and Mijan Zulu.
To check out more episodes
or to learn more about the show,
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That's all for now. I'm Jay Ruderman, and we'll see you next time on All About Change.