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TikTok star says social media has made it ‘popular to be anti-Jew’

via NBC
This article was originally published at StateOfUnion.org. Publications approved for syndication have permission to republish this article, such as Microsoft News, Yahoo News, Newsbreak, UltimateNewswire and others. To learn more about syndication opportunities, visit About Us.

TikTok star Montana Tucker has been using her platform to raise awareness about antisemitism following the October 7 attack on Israel.

With a Jewish heritage, she created a docuseries called “How to Never Forget” to educate her followers about the Holocaust.

“Antisemitism has always been here, it has always been here,” Tucker said.


“When I released that series, that was kind of the first time I introduced my followers really to my family’s background. A lot of them never knew that I was Jewish. My name is Montana Tucker. My content, at the time, wasn’t specifically Jewish content.”

“Then a year later, with everything that happened on October 7, I felt that it was my responsibility, it was my duty to make sure that I share personal stories of what was happening,” she said. “This is my people, my grandparents didn’t have a voice back during the Holocaust, and now I have a voice and I’m able to stand up for what I believe in and speak out for people who don’t have a voice.”

“When I always heard Holocaust denial, I couldn’t believe it,” Tucker said. “That’s why, with what’s going on now in the world with all the denial, even though we were live-streamed what happened on October 7, there’s still denial about it or still denial of what is going on. I never understood that concept of people denying something that was so obviously shown with evidence of survivors, but now living in it, people denying what happened on October 7, it’s really scary and it’s even more of a reason why I keep using my voice.”

Tucker emphasized the importance of speaking out against antisemitism and Holocaust denial, particularly in the age of social media where misinformation can spread rapidly.

“I’ve had people in Hollywood come up to me that are, I’m here [motions down] and they’re there [motions up], they’re on a whole different level than me in their careers, and they come up to me and say, ‘Thank you so much for what you’re doing, you’re amazing, you’re really taking one for the team.’ And I’m like, ‘What do you mean? Like, have you shared anything? Have you posted anything?’ And they said they did in the beginning [but] when they got so much hate from it and lost business, followers, whatever it is and now they’re scared to post. In my mind I’m like ‘do hear how crazy that sounds?’”

“Especially when there are so many awesome, powerful Jews in Hollywood … I think people absolutely need to stop being scared,” she said. “If you’re going to lose business over you talking about being Jewish or you talking about innocent lives that were taken, then you shouldn’t want to do business with those people. Point-blank.”

She highlighted the need for education about the Holocaust in schools to combat antisemitism and encourages people to research and understand the complexities of the Israel-Palestine conflict.

“With Gen Z and younger generations, we live in this day and age of what’s trending, what’s popular and if you look at popular hashtags on these apps … #hitlerwasright was a massive trending hashtag on TikTok, #osamabinladen was a massive trending hashtag on TikTok, all pro-Palestine content was super trending, billions of views, versus Israel or anything to do with pro-Israel was like super, super low,” Tucker wrote online.

“Even with October 7, think about if we didn’t have social media nowadays, how different that could have been with what spiraled after,” she said. “I think what happened on October 7 was the start, and now we’re a hundred and how many days in, and it’s only gotten worse with everyone’s opinions and everyone’s thoughts in these videos … being fed to people every single day [there is] so much propaganda that I see.”

“Fortunately, I heard from survivors, but my grandma was 13 when she was taken to the Holocaust, and she’s 95 [now], so in a few years, there are going to be no more survivors left,” she said. “Imagine the denial that’s going to happen then with literally no survivors.”

“I grew up in Florida, which is one of the states that did have it, thankfully, and my grandparents used to speak at all the schools … But there are a lot of people who don’t,” she said. “It’s hard to blame these kids that just genuinely don’t know better because they weren’t taught it in school.”

“Then they come across this TikTok video that denies the Holocaust or says Jews are terrible … and that’s all they’re going to know and that’s all they’re going to believe,” she said. “If their favorite rapper or their favorite athlete spews out antisemitic comments, they look up to that athlete, they look up to that rapper, they’re going to say, ‘That must be true.'”

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