The first time I asked a room full of Jewish teens if they were facing antisemitism, not a single hand went up. It was just weeks after Oct. 7, a time when Jewish students across America were being harassed, shouted down, and targeted simply for who they were. I had been asked to "take the temperature" of antisemitism in both public and private schools across Atlanta. As someone who meets with more Jewish teens than anyone else in the region, over 4,142 students just last year through our Jewish Student Union (JSU) programs, I expected to hear stories of fear,...