North Miami Mayor Alix Desulme will receive recognition next week for his efforts to combat antisemitism in and around his city.
At the 2025 North American Mayors Summit Against Antisemitism, he is to receive the Combat Antisemitism Movement’s (CAM) Mayors of Courage Award. The honor highlights leaders who confront hatred and support Jewish communities.
Desulme did not immediately respond to a request for comment.
In October, CAM announced that Desulme — along with Weston Mayor Margaret Brown, Sunny Isles Beach Mayor Larisa Svechin and Aventura Mayor Howard Weinberger — would serve on the organization’s inaugural Mayor’s Advisory Board.
Desulme said at the time that he was committed to “fostering unity, understanding, and respect among all communities.”
“Together, we can build stronger, more inclusive cities, where diversity is celebrated and hatred has no place,” he said.
The summit, which runs Dec. 2-4 in New Orleans, unites Mayors and municipal leaders for discussions on community building, civic resilience and city-led strategies to counter anti-Jewish biases.
Other CAM honorees this year are to include New York Mayor Eric Adams and Highland Park Mayor Nancy Rotering.
The program, emceed by journalist Jacki Karsh, will feature speeches by New Orleans Mayor LaToya Cantrell and Mayor-elect Helena Moreno, Beverly Hills Mayor Sharon Nazarian, CAM Chief Government Affairs Officer Lisa Katz, CAM CEO Sacha Roytman and Providence Mayor Brett Smiley, Chair of the CAM Mayors Advisory Board.
Panel discussions will include “Antisemitism in North America Today,” “Governance Strategies in Divisive Times,” “Truth, Trust, and Leadership,” “Free Speech vs. Public Safety,” and “Leading From City Hall Against Antisemitism and Bias.” There will also be breakout workshops to address proactive municipal approaches to community building and ways Mayors can support students facing antisemitism in school.
Interactive workshops and cultural programming are also planned to help participants gain practical tools to counter hate, bolster civic resilience and promote unity across the continent.
“The Summit will highlight the essential role of city leadership in confronting antisemitism, strengthening social cohesion, and safeguarding vulnerable communities,” a press note for the event said. “Building on the momentum of the establishment of CAM’s new multi-city Mayors Advisory Board and on past summits in Fort Lauderdale and Beverly Hills, the 2025 Summit is a chance to learn, share, and leave with concrete steps to drive real change and strengthen your city against antisemitism and hate through tangible city-led action.
Speakers at last year’s summit in Beverly Hills included Miami Mayor Francis Suarez and Fort Lauderdale Mayor Dean Trantalis. Other past summits have been held in Frankfurt am Main, Germany; Athens, Greece; and Dortmund, Germany.
Antisemitism in North America is sharply on the rise. Last year, the United States saw a record-high number of antisemitic incidents: the Anti-Defamation League documented 9,354 cases of harassment, vandalism, and assault — the most since tracking began, and a substantial increase over previous years.
Concurrently, law enforcement data reviewed by the Federal Bureau of Investigation showed a historic high in reports of hate crimes targeting Jews in 2024. The surge in antisemitic violence included shootings, arson and fire bombings, many attributed at least in part to backlash tied to the Israel-Gaza war and widespread online hate speech.
In Canada, antisemitic incidents have also surged. According to the data compiled by B’nai Brith Canada, reported antisemitic events rose from 5,791 in 2023 to 6,219 in 2024, the highest annual total since monitoring began in the early 1980s. On average, the organization said, Canada saw about 17 antisemitic incidents per day in 2024, up from eight per day in 2022.
After Hamas terrorists attacked Israel in 2023 and antisemitic incidents surged across the nation, Desulme and several other Mayors from Miami-Dade County, including Suarez, Miami-Dade Mayor Daniella Levine Cava and then-Hialeah Mayor Esteban “Steve” Bovo, spoke out against anti-Jewish hatred.
The following year, Desulme, Svechin, Parkland Commissioner Jordan isrow, former Bal Harbour Mayor Gabriel Groisman, former North Bay Village Mayor Brent Latham, Israeli Consul General in Miami Maor Elbaz-Starinsky and others visited Israel on a solidarity mission CAM organized and later shared their experience at a legal forum in Miami.