In Atlanta, anti-Semitism is viewed through lens of history
ATLANTA — Amid a surge of bomb threats and vandalism at Jewish institutions nationwide, members of Atlanta’s Jewish community have felt a familiar wave of apprehension about what may come next.
Because all of that, and worse, has happened in the city before.
Six decades ago, during the turmoil of the civil rights era, 50 sticks of dynamite blasted a ragged hole in Atlanta’s largest synagogue. A generation earlier, in 1915, Jewish businessman Leo Frank was lynched during a wave of anti-Semitism.
Some fear that history is once again arcing toward the viperous climate that set the stage for the earlier violence.


