"In order to build powerful movements we must take on antisemitism as what it is:
a divide-and-rule strategy that has served to maintain ruling classes, conceal who actually
has power, and confuse us about the real systems of oppression that pit us against one another.
... Rosenblum's pamphlet needs to be studied and the lessons applied."
- Chris Crass, organizer, The Catalyst Project:
a center for political education and movement building
Easy instructions for printing a double-sided
booklet on your home printer:
1. Click here: http://pinteleyid.com/past-booklet.pdf
Press print to begin printing preparations.
2. - In the printing options, select "Odd pages only."
- Make sure that the printer is not set to reduce, or "scale" the document. The margins are correct.
- Press print.
3. Half of the pamphlet will print. After it finishes printing, take the whole pile, flip it over, and insert it back into
the printer. (Sorry - you first readers will have to use trial and error to figure out the direction to put the paper in; I'll be adding a test sheet to the print version in a few days to help make it easier.) If you need help figuring out the right direction, see the "help sheet," the first page which printed.)
4. In the printing options, select "Even pages only" and press print.
You should be done.
If you have difficulty, press here for the non-booklet version and press print.
About author April Rosenblum
I am 27 and was born and raised in activist movements in Philadelphia, where I continue to live. I became personally politicized by government attempts in 1995 to execute U.S. political prisoner and Philadelphia journalist Mumia Abu-Jamal. Over time I've also worked on issues including police brutality, prisoners' rights, political prisoners, womens' reproductive freedom, immigrants' rights, poverty, anti-racist education, Palestinian self-determination and more. I graduated with a B.A. in History from Temple University.
My work to create this pamphlet was inspired by noticing how afraid I was to speak up when I noticed instances of anti-Jewish oppression in my movements, and my realization that, like me, my activist friends were staying silent not out of antisemitism, but because they needed a basic resource about how to confront it.
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