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USHMM.org > History > Online Exhibitions > Antisemitism > Voices on Antisemitism > Transcript
Voices on Antisemitism: A Podcast Series

Bruce Pearl
September 11, 2008
Bruce Pearl
Men's Head Basketball Coach, University of Tennessee
Bruce Pearl's efforts at team-building extend beyond the court, where he tries to bridge religious and cultural differences among his players.
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TRANSCRIPT:
 
BRUCE PEARL:
As a basketball coach, I'm a visible person. And I think in most cases, I am the first Jewish person that most of my players have met.

But I gotta' tell you, when we pray, and we talk about God, I think they find some common ground with messages that they heard growing up.

DANIEL GREENE:
In February 2008, Coach Bruce Pearl led the University of Tennessee men's basketball team to the number one ranking in the nation for the first time in the school's history. But his efforts at team-building extend beyond the court, where he tries to bridge religious and cultural differences among his players.

Welcome to Voices on Antisemitism, a free podcast series of the United States Holocaust Memorial Museum made possible by generous support from the Oliver and Elizabeth Stanton Foundation. I'm Daniel Greene. Every other week, we invite a guest to reflect about the many ways that antisemitism and hatred influence our world today. Here's University of Tennessee men's basketball coach, Bruce Pearl.

BRUCE PEARL:
Growing up in Boston, there was tremendous racial tension. Neighborhoods were segregated, by not only race and religion, but ethnic backgrounds. And there was not a melting pot. It was a boiling pot.

And being Jewish, and playing sports, it was an interesting combination. There was a stereotype that existed that we weren't very tough, we weren't very physical, we weren't able to compete athletically. And so I spent so much of my younger days in athletics breaking down stereotypes.

Basketball's been very, very good to me. And it's been able to take me all over the world. And every time I've gone to Europe I've visited a concentration camp.

We went to the Czech Republic, and on this particular visit I did have my entire team with me. There were several that didn't even know anything about the Holocaust. They had kind of heard about it, but it wasn't something that was really discussed.

And the questions that came up from my players made this visit worth everything. They wanted to know: Why? And what did these people do that they brought them to this terrible place and imprisoned them, and tortured them, and murdered them—men, women and children?

And they asked questions about racism, and why is it that African Americans are supposed to dislike Jews? And we got to talk about that.

For me as a coach and a teacher, my whole thing is to bring my team together, to accept each other's differences, to tolerate one another, and that helps us become a great team.

And that's what societies have got to try to do—take different people from different backgrounds, come together with a common goal. And so I think those are some great lessons for my players to have learned.

DANIEL GREENE:
Voices on Antisemitism is a free podcast series of the United States Holocaust Memorial Museum. Join us every other week to hear a new perspective on the continuing threat of antisemitism in our world today.

We would appreciate your feedback on this series. Please visit our Web site, www.ushmm.org, and follow the prompts to the Voices on Antisemitism survey to let us know what you think. At our Web site, you can also listen to Voices on Genocide Prevention, a podcast series on contemporary genocide.


AVAILABLE INTERVIEWS:
Harald Edinger
Beverly E. Mitchell
Martin Goldsmith
Tad Stahnke
Antony Polonsky
Johanna Neumann
Albie Sachs
Rabbi Capers Funnye, Jr.
Bruce Pearl
Jeffrey Goldberg
Ian Buruma
Miriam Greenspan
Matthias Küntzel
Laurel Leff
Hillel Fradkin
Irwin Cotler
Kathrin Meyer
Ilan Stavans
Susan Warsinger
Margaret Lambert
Alexandra Zapruder
Michael Chabon
Alain Finkielkraut
Dan Bar-On
James Carroll
Ruth Gruber
Reza Aslan
Alan Dershowitz
Michael Posner
Susannah Heschel
Father Patrick Desbois
Rabbi Marc Schneier and Russell Simmons
Shawn Green
Judea Pearl
Daniel Libeskind
Faiza Abdul-Wahab
Errol Morris
Charles Small
Cornel West
Karen Armstrong
Mark Potok
Ladan Boroumand
Elie Wiesel
Eboo Patel
Jean Bethke Elshtain
Madeleine K. Albright
Bassam Tibi
Deborah Lipstadt
Sara Bloomfield
Lawrence Summers
Christopher Caldwell
Father John Pawlikowski
Ayaan Hirsi Ali
Christopher Browning
Gerda Weissmann Klein
Robert Satloff
Justice Ruth Bader Ginsburg


  • Credits
  • Copyright
  • RELATED LINKS
  • Antisemitism
    (Holocaust Encyclopedia article)
  • History of Antisemitism
    (Library bibliography)
  • Antisemitism: Protocols of the Elders of Zion
    (Holocaust Encyclopedia article)
  • Nazi Propaganda
    (Holocaust Encyclopedia article)
  • Racism
    (Holocaust Encyclopedia article)
  • Anti-Jewish Legislation in Prewar Germany
    (Holocaust Encyclopedia article)
  • Christian Persecution of Jews over the Centuries
    (Center for Advanced Holocaust Studies, Committee on Church Relations and the Holocaust)
  • Antisemitism: Special Two-Part Presentation
    (Center for Advanced Holocaust Studies, Scholarly Presentation, December 18, 2003)
  • "Past Revisited? Historical Reflections on Contemporary Antisemitism"
    (Center for Advanced Holocaust Studies, January 2003 Shapiro lecture by Steven Zipperstein)