Anna Sacks, a jewish "environmental activist", digs through trash. After joining "The Adamah Fellowship" - a 3-month program that combines organic farming with Judaism - she found "spiritual and emotional refuge", & "through the teachings and lens of Judaism", she started scavenging through garbage. Aside from dumpster diving for thrown out food to shame local businesses: on the topic of antisemitism, she told the JTA:
"One of the tropes is that Jews are all-powerful, and we’re not used to thinking of being powerful as a form of oppression. We used to think of powerlessness as a form of oppression. It’s one of the key pillars of white supremacy. What unites these movements across the world is the belief that Jews are running the world and are in power. It’s very hard to overstate how central anti-Semitism is to white supremacy."
"One of the tropes is that Jews are all-powerful, and we’re not used to thinking of being powerful as a form of oppression. We used to think of powerlessness as a form of oppression. It’s one of the key pillars of white supremacy. What unites these movements across the world is the belief that Jews are running the world and are in power. It’s very hard to overstate how central anti-Semitism is to white supremacy."