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Editorial: The ongoing rise in antisemitism should rally Virginians to action

Wood boards with messages on the train tracks leading to the former Auschwitz Birkenau Concentration Camp are pictured during the 36th March of the Living on Monday in Oswiecim, Poland. The International March of the Living event takes place on Yom HaShoah, where thousands of people from around the world march the three kilometers between the prisoner of war camps, Auschwitz to Birkenau in memory of the holocaust victims of World War II. (Photo by Omar Marques/Getty Images)
Wood boards with messages on the train tracks leading to the former Auschwitz Birkenau Concentration Camp are pictured during the 36th March of the Living on Monday in Oswiecim, Poland. The International March of the Living event takes place on Yom HaShoah, where thousands of people from around the world march the three kilometers between the prisoner of war camps, Auschwitz to Birkenau in memory of the holocaust victims of World War II. (Photo by Omar Marques/Getty Images)
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Virginia has served as a bulwark against religious intolerance for more than two centuries and should rise against antisemitism at this perilous moment.

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