Blind Spot is the first film to document both the antisemitism that existed on American campuses long before October 7 and how it led to the explosion of virulent and often violent campus antisemitism after October 7.
A modern-day civil rights story told in the inspiring words and voices of more than two dozen students who’ve experienced and fought against this hatred on the front lines at more than a dozen schools across America, Blind Spot bears witness to their bravery in the face of extreme hostility, indifference, and efforts to silence them and erase their Jewish identity while too many school administrators fail to take action.
Joining and supporting the students in the film are more than two dozen professionals, including leading activist lawyers, elected officials from both parties, faculty, campus Chabad and Hillel directors and other Jewish community leaders, college administrators, and journalists/authors, who express their views and prescriptions for change.
Blind Spot thus offers an in-depth look at a national problem that has been building for years.
With screenings being scheduled all over the country and abroad, in theaters, film festivals, on campuses, and elsewhere, Blind Spot has also been accepted for consideration for a nomination for an Academy Award for Best Feature-Length Documentary.