When U.S. President Joe Biden arrives at the U.S. Capitol on Tuesday to honor 6 million Jews killed eight decades ago, his message will be as much about the present as the past.
Biden will speak to the existential threats faced by Jewish people seven months to the day since the Palestinian militant group Hamas attacked Israel on Oct. 7, killing 1,200 by Israeli tallies, in what Biden has called the deadliest day for Jews since the Holocaust.
Speaking at the Capitol, in a keynote address for the U.S. Holocaust Memorial Museum's annual National Commemoration of the Days of Remembrance, Biden will aim to cool an increasingly divided and divisive U.S. debate about Jewish security, Zionism, free speech and support for Israel, in the country with the largest Jewish population after Israel.
@ISIDEWITH2 أسابيع2W
ما هي أفكارك حول التوازن بين حرية التعبير وإدانة خطاب الكراهية في سياق معاداة السامية؟
@ISIDEWITH2 أسابيع2W
هل تعتقد أن دور قائد البلاد هو اتخاذ موقف في قضايا مثل معاداة السامية، ولماذا؟
@ISIDEWITH2 أسابيع2W
كيف تشعر بربط الأحداث الحالية بالكوارث التاريخية في محاولات لتذكرها ومنعها؟