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I love that everyone is reblogging this, but now I’m terrified my gf will see this. It’s not that I think she’d be mad, just super embarrassed.
This isn’t a question. But lemme just say thanks for getting me a girlfriend Pm. First day of school I saw someone watching one of ur videos in the cafeteria and asked if I could watch with them. We became good friends and I eventually asked her out. She said yes and we’ve been dating for 10 months.
This is the cutest shit I ever heard and melted my heart 💖
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Hello People if tumblr! I’ve come to share my personal story of discrimination, as a Jew. I believe now is the time for all minorities who are discriminated against to speak up. No one deserves discrimination. No one has been killed in my community, and I am thankful for that, I see even in my own city, members of other minority groups discriminated against, and I honestly can do nothing, as a kid (though I am white), I would never risk my life if I thought I would only add a second casualty, or a second victim. I think this makes me part of the problem, but at the same time I fear for my own life, which is threatened by the same kind of people. Whether an anti-semite, or a racist(which are kinda the same idea), I believe discrimination is the lowest form of human behaviour. (low as in worst, not as in least bad) .
I’m not looking for sympathy, I’m not looking for approval, or validation. I’m here to tell my story, and hopefully, someone in a similar situation can take solace in the fact they are not alone. Anyways, now that I have made clear my intentions, let us begin.
Three years ago, I tested for my junior black belt, in the group I tested with, there was one boy, a few years older than me, who we’ll call L. Now L seemed to be a nice person, and was nice to me, and he knew I was Jewish. I treated L with respect, and he respected me back. Fast forward to the end of 2019. I wake up on a Saturday morning and my synagogue is on the news. What’s this? Someone drew a swastika on my synagogue. Of course I was not very pleased with this situation, as this all took place during the Jewish High Holidays, the holiest days in the Jewish year. Now, back to L. I find out, within that same week, the names of the vandals who drew the swastika were published as they were above 18s. I check the names and oh, what’s this? L? The guy I trained with at my karate school for 6 years? Who had never shown an ounce of hatred to me? How could this have happened? It took me a few weeks to understand the gravity of the situation, and to understand what could have motivated L to do this. I had decided that he must have been drunk, or high, or tripping harder than any other human ever. My father told me, “sometimes, the nicest people, can do horrible things.” and that idea changes the way I viewed the whole scenario. In the end, I forgave L for his behaviour, and when he wanted to rejoin the karate school, I said he should be given a chance, because he had obviously forgotten what he had learned about respect and kindness.
Not two weeks later, I open a random locker in my Highschool, what do I find? You probably guessed it, more swastikas, this time with the friendly message “death to all Jews” this angered me to no end. I left my class early at the behest of my parents, and went to the vice-principal with the photos I had taken of the locker. My father was called into the school, we discussed with the VP. Then, nothing. I was cut out of the loop. The school bolted the locker shut, and called it a day. They spoke the students who used the locker, but that lead nowhere.
In the span of two weeks, my life was changed for better or for worse. My story is one of a privileged white boy, finally understanding a fraction of what some of my fellow students might feel every day. This was an airhorn to the face. The sense of safety in my community was brutally ripped from me, I no longer felt safe in my school, or my place of worship. That was new.
This happened when I was 14. I’m sure this is much older than some people’s first experience with discrimination. I’m sure this compares nothing to what some others might experience. But this was a wake up call to me, as a white jew. I learned that, even though I am white, I am still a Jew, and nothing would stop people from defining me by my beliefs. No one is immune to discrimination. No one should ever have to suffer from discrimination.
No one I know has been beaten, or killed for being a Jew. But I know that my city is the worst city for racism in the region I live. I want to fix my community, I want to close the divide between the discriminated communities and come together to help protect each other. Maybe that’s too ambitious, maybe that’s overzealous, I’m a kid, let me dream. This is my story of discrimination, I hope it helped you feel a bit better about your own experiences like this. You are not alone. Stay strong, stay united.
If you feel stuck, or are scared to come out with your own story. Take it from me, even just typing this made me feel just a little bit better. Find someone you trust, seek help if your are being discriminated against. Please, Don’t become another statistic.
(Sorry for bad formatting or grammar, on a phone, I also suck at grammar)
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If you don’t know what this is, feel free to weep about your weak and pathetic childhood
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If your house is haunted, it has a stand. You cannot change my mind.
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My science teacher said that skin is just the bag the keeps your organs in place, and that has profoundly changed me.
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