DUBAI: Veteran US filmmaker Steven Spielberg addressed the Israel-Gaza conflict and anti-semitism while accepting an honor from the University of Southern California.
The Oscar-winning director spoke at an event where he was recognized for his work with the USC Shoah Foundation, an organization he founded in 1994 to record and preserve interviews with survivors and witnesses of the Holocaust.
Spielberg said in listening to the accounts of survivors, “the echoes of history are unmistakable in our current climate.”
Spielberg said radical views create “a dangerous environment” and lead to “a society that no longer celebrates differences.”
“We see every day how the machinery of extremism is being used on college campuses, where now fully 50 per cent of students say they have experienced some discrimination because they are Jewish. This is also happening alongside anti Muslim, Arab and Sikh discrimination,” he continued.
Spielberg said he was “increasingly alarmed” that Jews might have to “once again fight for the very right to be Jewish.”
“We can rage against the heinous acts committed by the terrorist of October 7 and also decry the killing of innocent women and children in Gaza. This makes us a unique force for good in the world and is why we are here today to celebrate the work of the Shoah Foundation, which is more crucial now than it even was in 1994,” he added.