Belonging is strongest when it's visible
By Melissa Garlick
Each May, Jewish American Heritage Month invites Jews to pause and tell stories from our shared history. But history, at its best, is not only about what came before us. It is a guide for how we show up today and how we imagine the future we are building together.
Jewish life in Boston is deeply woven into the civic fabric of this city. From community organizing and civil rights advocacy to philanthropy, medicine, education, and culture, we have always believed that we are responsible not only for our own community but for the common good.
This month, Embrace Boston has been highlighting figures like Kivie Kaplan, the Boston businessman and former president of the NAACP whose fierce advocacy for civil rights earned him a place on the 1965 Freedom Plaza. Kaplan’s story reminds us that Jewish history cannot be told apart from the democratic life of this city and country, from the institutions, movements, and civic spaces that Americans have shaped together. It also reminds us that pluralism and allyship are not abstract—they are practiced through partnership, shared risk, and moral courage.
During this Jewish American Heritage Month and in this moment, I am wrestling with the question of how to honor that history in a way that makes the memory visible, shared, and alive.
That question is especially resonant in Boston, a city where public spaces convey powerful stories about who belongs. When Jewish history is made invisible, it is easier to imagine Jewish presence as conditional or marginal.
Antisemitism grows in environments where Jewish life is misunderstood, oversimplified, or pushed to the margins. But making Jewish history visible in shared civic space acknowledges its rightful place in the shared life of this city and disrupts hate. When Jewish stories are known and named, it becomes harder to reduce a community to stereotypes or to silence its presence altogether. Belonging, it turns out, is not only a value but a protective force. Cultures that make room for people to show up fully are more resistant to hate, more accountable to one another, and better equipped to uphold dignity across difference.