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Insight With Vicki Gonzalez

 

Hosted By Vicki Gonzalez

Award-winning journalist Vicki Gonzalez hosts interviews with community leaders, advocates, experts, artists and more to provide background and understanding on breaking news, big events, politics and culture in the Sacramento region and beyond.

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Monday – Thursday, 9 a.m. – 10 a.m.
on News Station

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Remembering The 1999 Sacramento Synagogue Attacks

Thursday, June 20, 2019 | Sacramento, CA
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AP Photo/Bob Galbraith

Investigators look over damage to the Kenesset Israel Torah Center in Sacramento, Calif., Friday, June 18, 1999, after a suspected arson fire. The temple was one of three targeted in arson fires during the night.

AP Photo/Bob Galbraith

In the summer of 1999, a wave of hate crimes washed across the United States. In Northern California, three synagogues in Sacramento were firebombed and two gay men in Redding were murdered in their home. Those murders linked two white supremacists to the arson. Some media outlets dubbed it "the Summer of Hate."

Before sunrise on June 18, 1999, a pair of white supremacist brothers set ablaze three Sacramento-area synagogues. They were Congregation B’Nai Israel, Congregation Beth Shalom and Kenesset Israel Torah Center. Nobody was hurt in those fires, but they caused nearly $3 million in damages and destroyed a library of Jewish history. The Sacramento community responded with interfaith gatherings and, in an era before online crowdfunding campaigns, fundraising more than $1 million for education and videos promoting diversity.

The hate crimes also planted the seed for the Unity Center, a permanent exhibit at the California Museum that “celebrates the state’s diverse people, customs and cultures” and its history of activism. The Unity Center will host a weekend of “Stand Up for Unity in Your Community” events to commemorate 20 years since the attacks.

Recent polls and studies have found that white supremacy and propaganda espousing hate is on the rise in the U.S. Twenty years after these hate crimes, William Recht, executive director of The Jewish Federation of the Sacramento Region, reflects on how far we’ve come in addressing hate and white supremacy—and how far our country still has to go.

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    Sacramento’s Jewish Community Responds To San Diego Synagogue Shooting

    Wednesday, May 1, 2019
    Seth Brysk of the Anti-Defamation League and Rabbi Mona Alfi of Congregation B’nai Israel join to discuss the recent rise in anti-Semitic violence.
  • California Synagogue Shooting Investigated As A Hate Crime After 1 Killed, 3 Injured

    Sunday, April 28, 2019
    The mayor of Poway, Calif. said the shooting at the Chabad of Poway synagogue near San Diego was a "hate crime." A 19-year-old man has been arrested.
  • Sammy Caiola / Capital Public Radio

    Sacramento Interfaith Community Gathers After Pittsburgh Synagogue Shooting, Vows To Stand Against Violence

    Tuesday, October 30, 2018
    Sacramento-area religious leaders came together Monday evening to mourn the 11 synagogue attendees who were shot in Pittsburgh last weekend. Many speakers recalled the fire bombings of three Sacramento synagogues in 1999.
  • Robert Durell, California Museum Unity Center / Courtesy

    California Museum Opens Long-Awaited Unity Center

    Wednesday, August 23, 2017
    The California Museum's new Unity Center has been in development since 1999. The new interactive exhibition aims to promote tolerance and peace through civil rights education. The Unity Center will host a free block party on Saturday, Aug. 26.

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