Join us at the 2021 ACF Virtual National Conference on Wednesday, April 28th at 4 pm Eastern.

Centered around the theme of Digitally United Against Hate, the virtual event will feature pro-Israel community leaders, authors, faculty, and legal experts.

Explore topics including antisemitism in the age of coronavirus and faculty activism in breakout sessions. Plus, there will be opportunities for alumni to network and gain strategies to combat antisemitism at their alma maters.

Algemeiner

~ By Susan Price (April 19, 2021) ~

Max Price recently joined an involuntary club that includes USC’s Rose Ritch and UCLA’s Rachel Beyda. All three had their suitability for student leadership questioned — purely because of their Zionism. Max retained his position, but if Tufts and other universities do not implement significant reforms, it is only a matter of time before the club grows.

In his role as a member of the Tufts Community Union Judiciary (TCUJ), Max pointed out inaccuracies in the wording of an anti-Israel referendum about “Deadly Exchange.” Students for Justice in Palestine (SJP) agitated for him to recuse himself from the proceedings due to a “conflict of interest,” despite a unanimous decision by the other members of the TCUJ that he had no need to do so.

SJP launched a vicious campaign against Max. He was forced to mute himself during the Zoom meeting where the TCUJ finalized and voted on the referendum’s wording. Despite the fact that Tufts students ultimately voted in favor of the Deadly Exchange referendum, SJP filed a complaint against Max with the TCU Senate, seeking his impeachment and removal, and a hearing was set for February 28, 2021. Max sought the representation of Alyza Lewin of the Louis D. Brandeis Center for Human Rights Under Law. The Brandeis Center wrote a detailed letter to the administration on Max’s behalf, but the administration’s response was not to intervene. The Brandeis Center went public with Max’s story. On February 26th, the complaint was withdrawn.

The Tufts situation pains me on multiple fronts. As leader of the Tufts Alums for Campus Fairness (ACF) chapter, I work to protect Jewish students from the bias and unfair treatment Max endured. But for me, Max’s story was not simply another distressing news item.

Max is my son.

Watching him over the last few months, I was concerned about the constant stress he was under, as well as the time he had to spend on these issues while working at his job and maintaining his grades. I am proud of him for using his knowledge and strength of personality to stand up for the truth, while conducting himself with dignity throughout the entire matter. However, his situation reminds me why, as a parent, I have chosen to remain involved. It makes me redouble my efforts to protect Jewish students who do not want to have to fight or suppress part of their identity in order to be accepted on campus.

One significant factor that caused this debacle is the impregnability of the Tufts Community Union’s independent functioning. While the student government has policies in place to preserve fairness and due process, the university needs to implement a standard process for the administration to take action when the student government oversteps or violates university policy. In the wake of Max’s incident, the TCU Senate itself has recognized its “lack of preparedness for inter-governmental disciplinary actions,” according to Tufts Daily article.

The Senate is considering various options. One is that future complaints against TCU members be heard by the Committee on Student Life (CSL), a body composed of both students and faculty. Placing inter-governmental hearings under the jurisdiction of the CSL could be a wise solution if it is implemented with modifications. The CSL includes several non-voting, ex officio members; these members ought to vote in TCU member hearings, since they have a bigger picture of the university’s goals, standards, and reputation, and are therefore more likely to represent the university’s best interests objectively and reliably.

In addition, such cases ought to follow the full, formal Student Conduct Resolution Procedure (SCRP), rather than the TCU Constitution and Bylaws, as they currently do. If Max’s case had been governed by this robust procedure, Max would have been aided by an advisor of his choice. A conduct officer from Tufts’ Office of Community Standards would have determined how best to resolve the case; a baseless complaint like this one never would have proceeded to a hearing.

Moreover, there are steps that the administration should take to actively prevent Jew hatred on campus, such as training about antisemitism during freshman orientation, as well as periodically for faculty and student government. This could be separate from or included with other anti-bias training programs. The administration and board of trustees should also adopt the International Holocaust Remembrance Alliance (IHRA) Working Definition of Antisemitism for use as a reference and educational tool. Finally, the “Group of Six” (the six centers within the Division of Student Diversity and Inclusion) could be amended to include a seventh group — Jewish students or Tufts Hillel.

As alumni, we can ensure that the future will be different by actively involving ourselves in happenings at our alma maters. Universities rely heavily on their good reputations to attract students and donors — so they are very conscious of press and public opinion. In Max’s case, once the media became aware of what was happening at Tufts, the attention may have persuaded SJP to drop its complaint.

I am sorry my son had to undergo months of this ordeal, but if his case makes a difference for future Jewish students, it will have served a purpose. Together, we must make sure these reforms come to pass, so that the list of student government members who suffer for their Zionism — at least at Tufts — ends with Max.

Susan Price is the Alums for Campus Fairness chapter leader at Tufts Universit

Jewish Journal

(April 12, 2021)

The City University of New York’s (CUNY) University Student Senate (USS) voted down a resolution endorsing the International Holocaust Remembrance Alliance (IHRA) definition of anti-Semitism and another resolution supporting a watered-down definition of anti-Semitism after a five-hour debate.

The resolution with the watered-down definition of anti-Semitism, which was being pushed by the CUNY Jewish Law Students Association (JLSA) and Students for Justice in Palestine (SJP), defined anti-Semitism as “hostility, prejudice, vilification, discrimination or violence directed against Jews, as individuals, groups, or as a collective — because they are Jews. Its expression includes attributing to Jews, as a group, practices, characteristics or behaviors that are perceived as dangerous, harmful, frightening, or threatening to non-Jews.” It also claimed that “the equation of speech and activity opposing Israel and Zionism, and/or supporting Palestinians, as inherently antisemitic is a form of anti-Palestinian racism.”

Despite their resolution failing, JLSA celebrated the fact that the Student Senate voted down the other resolution supporting IHRA, tweeting that the Student Senate recognized “the harmful effects of equating antisemitism with anti-Zionism” and “taking a stand against the racist and Islamophobic ways that IHRA has been used to smear Palestinian, Arab, Muslim, and Jewish students.”

IfNotNow, a leftist Jewish organization, similarly tweeted, “Congratulations to the students at CUNY who organized against the codification of the controversial IHRA definition of antisemitism on their campus which would’ve curbed free speech, silenced Palestinians, and done nothing to make Jewish students any safer!”

Other Jewish groups had mixed reactions. “While it is extremely disappointing that CUNY USS voted against the IHRA definition of antisemitism, we are relieved that a definition that was crafted by members of Students for Justice in Palestine, to shield themselves from being criticized for promoting antisemitism, was also voted down,” StandWithUs co-founder and CEO Roz Rothstein said in a statement.

“We commend Jewish students for standing up to such malicious bigotry and for the petition they created online that garnered thousands of signatures in favor of the IHRA definition. CUNY USS can still do the right thing by supporting the majority of Jewish students and recognizing the IHRA definition, and we call on them to do so.”

Ilya Bratman, executive director of Hillel at Baruch College, similarly said in a statement to the Journal, “While we are disappointed that the IHRA Definition was not adopted, we are relieved that the definition written by groups that do not represent the majority of the Jewish community was not adopted. We hope that next steps will include better dialogue amongst CUNY students as well as education across CUNY about antisemitism.”

Kenneth Marcus, who heads the Louis Brandeis Center and is a former professor at CUNY, said in a statement to the Journal, “As someone who cares about CUNY and spent three years teaching at what is now CUNY’s Marxe School of Public and International Affairs, it saddens me to see such profound misunderstandings disseminated among CUNY’s students and faculty. CUNY’s unique dedication to social justice advocacy should translate into strong support for the global campaign against contemporary anti-Semitism. In fact, what we’re seeing at CUNY and elsewhere is that the opposite is now increasingly the case: those who should be doing the most to oppose anti-Semitism are actually fighting on the wrong side. Instead of opposing the global resurgence of anti-Semitism, they are taking actions that will only encourage its spread.”

Marcus, who also worked for the Department of Education’s Office of Civil Rights under the Bush and Trump administrations, added that even though the Student Senate rejected both resolutions, they are not being neutral. “The IHRA Working Definition is now the international standard for defining and combating anti-Semitism. In rejecting the IHRA definition, together with a risible alternative, CUNY’s student senate has allowed itself to be used by those who are intent on undermining the international campaign to combat Jew-hatred.”

Cleveland Jewish News

(April 12, 2021)

~ The University of Illinois at Urbana-Champaign will open the country’s first university-affiliated housing option for Jewish students in the fall,  reported  The News-Gazette on Friday.

The Illini Chabad property, a former fraternity house, will be available to both Jewish freshmen and upperclassmen, though non-Jewish students can live there as well. It is made up of 32 two-bedroom suites, study rooms and more. Illini Chabad executive director Rabbi Dovid Tiechtel said plans are being finalized to build a Jewish synagogue in the building.

Residents will have kosher-meal options, housekeeping services, and a complimentary snack and beverage bar. The cost to lease a bedroom is $12,200 for August through May. Six of the rooms have already been leased, said the site’s manager.

The $7.7 million funding campaign for the building included $4.8 million in donations, Tiechtel told The News-Gazette. He added that “we are excited about the whole new level we are going to create with the housing.”

The news comes after two anti-Semitic incidents took place at the school in February and last month’s announcement that the school has created an advisory council to combat anti-Semitism on campus.

In 2020, the Louis D. Brandeis Center for Human Rights filed a complaint with the Department of Education’s Office for Civil Rights against the university’s handling of anti-Semitic activity at its school.

The post University of Illinois establishes the nation’s first Jewish student housing appeared first on JNS.org.

 

JNS.org

 In the latest installment of Jews are our own worst enemies, a group of 211 professors have decided they should redefine anti-Semitism because they are not happy with the International Holocaust Remembrance Alliance (IHRA) definition. To justify their need for doing so, they have built a series of straw men, speciously contending the IHRA limits freedom of speech, while giving Jewish cover to anti-Semites.

The biggest red herring in the ocean is that critics of Israel are silenced. The signatories of the “Jerusalem Declaration on Antisemitism” (JDA) include some of Israel’s most vitriolic critics, who have expressed themselves unfettered for years. Several have been so persecuted for their views they hold endowed chairs. Many have tenure and could not be fired even if they were unapologetic anti-Semites. Peter Beinart has been muzzled by being given a column in The New York Times.

The goal of the JDA appears to be to define anti-Semitism in such a way that it excludes anything the signatories have said or might say. For example, the new definition excludes the IHRA’s example of “drawing comparison of contemporary Israeli policy to that of the Nazis.” That allows Richard Falk to get away with writing, “Is it an irresponsible overstatement to associate the treatment of Palestinians with this criminalized Nazi record of collective atrocity? I think not.” He went on to warn of a possible “Palestinian holocaust.”

The preamble of the JDA gives some clues of where the group is coming from and how it differs from the non-political, nonpartisan IHRA. It acknowledges “antisemitism has certain distinctive features,” but reverts to the intersectionality argument of the anti-Semites who want to wrap bigotry towards Jews into “the overall fight against all forms of racial, ethnic, cultural, religious, and gender discrimination.”

Three signatories explained, “Though we do not underestimate the perniciousness of antisemitism from the left, it is clear that the most dangerous threat to Jews today comes from the extreme right and populist groups.” Really? What about Arab and radical Islamic anti-Semitism? What about the normalization of anti-Semitism by mainstream Democrats and Republicans who tolerate members of Congress like Reps. Ilhan Omar (D-Minn.), Rashida Tlaib (D-Mich.) and Marjorie Taylor Greene (R-Ga.)? What about the leadership of the Black Lives Matter movement and Louis Farrakhan?

What really upsets the professors is that the IHRA definition includes seven examples of anti-Semitism related to Israel. They want to “protect a space for an open debate about the vexed question of the future of Israel/Palestine.” Setting aside that “Palestine” has not existed since 1948 and use of the word illustrates their bias, the idea that there is a limit on discussion of the Palestinian issue is laughable and an indication of the intellectual dishonesty of the declaration. If anything, the problem is the one-sidedness of the debate, which, on college campuses, is typically anti-Israel.

Another straw man is their statement that “evidence-based criticism of Israel as a state” is not “on the face of it” anti-Semitic. No one says that it is. The problem is the veracity and quality of the evidence such as the case of the professor who speciously claimed Israelis intentionally maim Palestinians. In the same paragraph they say, “It is not antisemitic to point out systematic racial discrimination.” Yes, it is, if you can’t prove it.

Why even mention this accusation? Most likely to justify comparing Israel to Afrikaner South Africa, a meritless charge meant to demonize Israel, which is anti-Semitic.

The declaration is also designed to defend proponents of BDS, including several signatories. This is manna from heaven for the anti-Semitic BDS movement. By declaring that BDS “are commonplace, non-violent forms of political protest,” they disingenuously ignore that the campaign calls for the destruction of the only Jewish state.

The writers also ignore how BDS represents the antithesis of their platform since it is the BDS movement that seeks to silence Jews and supporters of Israel and deny them academic freedom to engage with Israeli scholars and institutions. Thanks to the JDA’s “useful idiots,” BDS advocates can say, “even Jews acknowledge we’re not anti-Semites.”

Not surprisingly, the BDS national committee said, the statement “can be instrumental in the fight against the anti-Palestinian McCarthyism and repression” of IHRA proponents. They still were unhappy it didn’t go far enough to endorse the Palestinian narrative; nevertheless, when the anti-Semites cheer you, it should be a clue that you’ve got a problem.

Unlike this unrepresentative group of self-appointed defenders of the anti-Semitic BDS movement, 136 international Jewish organizations from across the political and religious spectrum, representing hundreds of thousands, if not millions of Jews, signed a statement that “academic, cultural and commercial boycotts, divestments and sanctions of Israel are: Counterproductive to the goal of peace, antithetical to freedom of speech, and part of a greater effort to undermine the Jewish people’s right to self-determination in their homeland, Israel.”

The JDA does not even consider double standards to be anti-Semitic, granting a license to those who believe Jews can be treated differently than others and excusing the unwillingness of critics of Israel to care for the human and civil-rights abuses perpetrated by Palestinians. The IHRA does not deny anyone the right to support the Palestinian cause while the new lexicographers put their fingers on the scale of the debate by suggesting Palestinian demands are “encapsulated in international law,” by which they mean politically driven interpretations endorsing the Palestinian narrative, whereas Jewish demands for their “political, national, civil and human rights” are apparently frivolous.

The JDA definition is itself anti-Semitic because it denies Jews the same rights they ascribe to others. This is amplified by their support of BDS, which insists Palestinians have a right to self-determination, but Jews do not.

Giving a hechsher to anti-Zionists is equally problematic. To mask their anti-Semitism, many people claim they only hate Zionists, not Jews. Beinart has asserted, “Anti-Zionism is not inherently antisemitic.”

Zionism is the belief the Jewish people are a nation entitled to self-determination in their homeland that is Israel. How is denying that not anti-Semitic?

As Alyza Lewin, president and general counsel of the Louis D. Brandeis Center for Human Rights Under Law, explained, “just as it is anti-Semitic to attack, harass or discriminate against Jews on the basis of their Sabbath or kashrut observance, so, too, is it anti-Semitic to attack, harass or marginalize Jews who advocate, express or support the Zionist part of their Jewish identity.”

The JDA conflates anti-Zionism with criticism of the Israeli government, another straw man, as the IHRA states “criticism of Israel similar to that leveled against any other country cannot be regarded as anti-Semitic.”

The JDA says, “Political speech does not have to be measured, proportional, tempered, or reasonable.” It is doubtful they would apply that formula to bigoted speech directed at gays, women, Blacks, Hispanics, or other non-Jewish constituencies. Regardless, contrary to the insinuation, the IHRA definition does not deny anyone freedom of speech.

As Lewin noted, “the First Amendment protects your right to express yourself as a bigot” but does not “insulate and prevent those who make racist or anti-Semitic comments from being labeled as racists and anti-Semites.”

Similarly, the statement by the 136 international Jewish groups says, “We recognize and accept that individuals and groups may have legitimate criticism of Israeli policies. Criticism becomes anti-Semitism, however, when it demonizes Israel or its leaders, denies Israel the right to defend its citizens or seeks to denigrate Israel’s right to exist.”

So far, the IHRA definition has been adopted or endorsed by 27 governments, including the United States, Germany, the United Kingdom, France, Italy and Spain. They represent millions of people. By contrast the “Jerusalem Declaration” represents the views of 211 individuals, many of whom are far from the mainstream of the Jewish community.

What makes this statement particularly galling is that, historically, Jewish professors have not stood up for Israel or for Jewish students or against anti-Semitism on college campuses. There are rare exceptions like Alan Dershowitz, Judea Pearl and Deborah Lipstadt, but when have you read a letter signed by 200 Jewish professors condemning anti-Semitism on campus? The JDA professors seem more worried that they might be labeled anti-Semites than in fighting anti-Semitism.

They courageously stand up for BDS proponents, but where are they when Jewish students are under attack on campus? How many of these defenders of free speech have protested when pro-Israel speakers are shouted down? How many have written op-eds in the local or school newspaper protesting the toxic environment created by BDS proponents? How many have called out their peers for academic malpractice when they abuse their power to indoctrinate students with anti-Israel propaganda? How many have protested the inaction of their administration when Jewish students are under attack?

Adoption of the IHRA definition worldwide and on college campuses is long overdue. The wisdom and clarity of that definition should not be replaced by the preferences of a handful of Jewish professors with an agenda that undermines the meaning of anti-Semitism and comforts Jew-haters.

Mitchell Bard is a foreign-policy analyst and an authority on U.S.-Israel relations who has written and edited 22 books, including “The Arab Lobby, Death to the Infidels: Radical Islam’s War Against the Jews” and “After Anatevka: Tevye in Palestine.”

 

Special Podcast: Holocaust Remembrance Day ~

In this INSS podcast, dedicated to Holocaust Remembrance Day, INSS researcher Adi Kantor sits down

with Prof. Kenneth L. Marcus, founder and chairman of the Louis D. Brandeis Center for Human Rights Under Law and former Assistant U.S. Secretary of Education for Civil Rights, to discuss the issue of antisemitism and the role of education. Prof. Marcus is also the author of the article “Addressing Antisemitism Within and Through the Educational Systems in the United States,” a special publication in the framework of the INSS collection of articles on contemporary antisemitism in the United States. More than seven decades have passed since the last shell was fired in World War II, as the liberating allied soldiers stood still to the horrific sights of the systematic murder of six million European Jews by the Germans and their accomplices under the Nazi regime. But antisemitism has never really disappeared since then. Especially in the last decade, it seems that this phenomenon has increased and has become alarming. How should educators of our time approach this issue? Why do we see an increase in antisemitism in the education system in the US today? What is the relation between anti-Israel and anti-Zionism and antisemitism, and how is it reflected in contemporary American society ? And how should the Biden administration address this issue?

Watch the Podcast Here

Brandeis Brief – April 2021

 

Brandeis Brief: April 2021

We begin this Brief with good news from Tufts University, where courage, tenacity, and legal advocacy prevailed last month when Students for Justice in Palestine dropped its efforts to impeach Jewish student leader Max Price. We then turn to more positive developments at the University of Texas and the University of Illinois Urbana-Champaign. While the IHRA Definition continues to gain support and momentum in communities throughout the country, some critics have attempted to silence supporters of the Definition and promote dangerous alternative definitions that exclude the forms of anti-Semitism which masquerade as anti-Zionism. Also included in this Brief are LDB analyses regarding anti-Semitism in American educational systems, as well as other topics. Finally, the Brandeis Center is looking for additional legal talent to support its burgeoning caseload. Please send good, smart lawyers our way. As always, we thank you for your tax deductible donations and acknowledge that without you our work could not be done.
Campus Bullies: The Extreme Right Aren’t the Only Ones With an Anti-Semitism Problem
Jeff Robbins, Creators SyndicateA member of Tufts University’s Community Union Judiciary, Max Price, faced calls for his impeachment by the Tufts chapter of Students for Justice in Palestine (SJP) for simply being Jewish. This incident highlights the growing dangers of anti-Semitism disguised as progressivism on college campuses in the United States, with Jewish students facing harassment for their Zionism.
Read More
Courage was the Reason Campus Anti-Semites were Beaten
Jonathan S. Tobin, JNSMax Price, with the help of the Louis D. Brandeis Center for Human Rights Under Law, successfully fought back against the harassment campaign led by Tufts’ chapter of SJP. This demonstrates the importance of the Brandeis Center’s mission and the effectiveness of its strategy of legal intervention. Price’s experience also shows that Jewish college students must be prepared, with courage and information, to take up the fight against anti-Semitism themselves when the administration turns a blind eye.
Read More
UIUC announces the establishment of the Chancellor’s Advisory Council on Jewish and Campus Life in response to campus anti-Semitism.
UIUC Announces Formation of Jewish Advisory Council to Address Campus Anti-Semitism
Bayla Zohn, Brandeis Blog

This month, the University of Illinois-Urbana Champaign (UIUC) announced the establishment of the Chancellor’s Advisory Council on Jewish and Campus Life. UIUC had promised to create the Council in its Joint Statement on Anti-Semitism, which the University issued in November 2020 after the Brandeis Center and others filed a federal complaint on behalf of Jewish students alleging the University has fostered a hostile environment on its campus. An investigation of the complaint by the U.S. Education Department’s Office for Civil Rights is pending.
Read More

University of Texas Student Gov’t Passes IHRA Resolution
Aaron Bandler, JNSThe student government at the University of Texas at Austin has passed a resolution endorsing the adoption of the International Holocaust Remembrance Alliance Working Definition of Antisemitism. Although this is only a first step towards fighting anti-Semitism in all its forms, this action at another important university will pave the way for other American university administrations to adopt the IHRA definition, especially as they lag so far behind European universities in doing so.
Read More
Addressing Anti-Semitism Within and Through the Educational Systems in the United States
Kenneth L. Marcus, INSSKenneth L. Marcus writes about how universities and other educational institutions should approach anti-Semitism on their campuses. He explains what school and university administrators should be doing to protect their Jewish students, including but not limited to adopting the IHRA definition of anti-Semitism. Marcus also advocates for more comprehensive and systematic anti-Semitism education at both the elementary and secondary levels of education, helping students to recognize all forms of anti-Semitism.
Read More
Alyza Lewin on the Edwin Black Show
Samantha Crane, Brandeis BlogLDB President Alyza D. Lewin, Rabbi Abraham Cooper of the Simon Wiesenthal Center, and Malcolm Hoenlein of the Conference of Presidents of Major American Jewish Organizations went on the Edwin Black show to discuss anti-Semitism, campus hate and a general overview of where anti-Semitism stands today both on and off campus. Each one also discussed the impact of COVID-19 on anti-Semitism and the importance of understanding what anti-Semitism really is and how to effectively identify it.
Read More
LDB Center President, Alyza Lewin On the Edwin Black Show
Anti-Semites Should Not Define Anti-Semitism
Richard L. Cravatts, Times of Israel

A few anti-Semitic academic groups critical of the IHRA Definition have provided their own alternative definitions of anti-Semitism that exclude anti-Zionism. These definitions obscure anti-Semitism on the left and allow a double standard to be applied to Israel’s behavior. Perpetrators of anti-Israel agitation seek to deny the Jewish people their right to self-determination and this form of anti-Semitism must be addressed.
Read More

Palestinian Accuses College Dems of Silencing Him for Supporting IHRA
Aaron Bandler, Jewish Journal

Bassem Eid, a Palestinian human rights activist, had his comments blocked on an Instagram post by University of Minnesota (UMN) College Democrats because he expressed support for the IHRA definition. The conflict arose due to a campus-wide referendum at UMN to adopt the IHRA definition, which ultimately passed. Instead of listening to Palestinian voices, UMN College Democrats hypocritically silenced Eid while claiming to support Palestinians.
Read More

2021 Mayors Summit Against Anti-Semitism
Sarah Engelman and Bayla Zohn, Brandeis BlogThe first-ever Mayors Summit Against Anti-Semitism was hosted by Frankfurt am Main and the Combat Anti-Semitism Movement. Mayors and other officials from around the world participated in panels on Education and IHRA Adoption, Security and Law Enforcement, Healing in the Face of Trauma, and Interfaith and Cross-Communal Relations in the Digital Age. The event showcased the importance of international and interfaith unity in fighting against anti-Semitism. The summit was held virtually and its panels can be watched online.
Watch Here
Read More
Politically driven show trials move from campus to culture
Kenneth L. Marcus, Washington Examiner

In this article, Kenneth L. Marcus analyzes how politically driven show trials display disregard for due process, both on university campuses and throughout our culture. Marcus shows how this applies to a wide range of problems, both in Washington, D.C., and throughout the United States.
Read More

Kentucky Adopts IHRA Definition 
Toby Irenstein, Brandeis BlogKentucky recently joined the growing number of states adopting and advocating for the use of the IHRA definition. Although Kentucky’s does not yet have legislative power, its move towards adoption by passing a broad resolution in the house and senate condemning anti-Semitism indicates a shift in the greater governmental push towards combating anti-Semitism nationwide.
Read More

 

The Brandeis Center is Hiring!

LDB is recruiting for a Staff Attorney to join its legal team in the fight against anti-Semitism and anti-Zionism. Interested candidates should submit a cover letter, curriculum vitae, writing sample (less than 10 pages) and law school transcript to info@brandeiscenter.com.
Read More

The Louis D. Brandeis Center is a nonprofit organization supported by individuals, groups and foundations that share our concern about Jewish college students.  Contributions are tax-exempt under section 501(c)(3) of the Internal Revenue Code.  To support our efforts to combat campus anti-Semitism, please contact us at info@brandeiscenter.com
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The Academic Engagement Network Presents: Law, Jew-hatred, and Higher Education: A Conversation with Kenneth L. Marcus

Monday, April 19, at 12 PM EST

 Kenneth L. Marcus, the Founder and Chairman of the Louis D. Brandeis Center for Human Rights Under Law, and a former Assistant U.S. Secretary of Education for Civil Rights will discuss ways of recognizing and addressing antisemitism in higher education, as well as his own work in the field. An interactive Q and A will follow his talk.

For further background, see this article by Marcus, which was featured in “Contemporary Antisemitism in the United States,” a recently launched project of the Institute for National Security Studies (INSS) at Tel Aviv University:

Addressing Antisemitism Within and Through the Educational Systems in the United States

RSVP NOW
Kenneth L. Marcus is the Founder and Chairman of the Louis D. Brandeis Center for Human Rights Under Law, former Assistant U.S. Secretary of Education for Civil Rights, and author of The Definition of Anti-Semitism (Oxford University Press: 2015) and Jewish Identity and Civil Rights in America (Cambridge University Press: 2010). Marcus previously held the Lillie and Nathan Ackerman Chair in Equality and Justice in America at the City University of New York’s Bernard M. Baruch College School of Public Affairs.
___________________
Special thanks to Oren Gross, Irving Younger Professor of Law at the University of Minnesota Law School and Chair of AEN’s Section for Faculty in Law, and Dan Gordon, Professor of History at the University of Massachusetts, Amherst, and Chair of AEN’s Section for Faculty in the Northeast, for helping to organize this event!
PLEASE REGISTER HERE:
Join the discussion with Alyza D. Lewin, President of the Louis D. Brandeis Center for Human Rights Under Law, on Thursday, April 8 at 5 pm (EDT). She will be talking about the IHRA Definition and how anti-Semitism manifests on college campuses- topical subjects for both students and professionals alike.
Sponsored by CAMERA on Campus!

 

Register Here! 

Promotional Flyer and Registration Link

 

The Legal Fight Against Antisemitism on Campus (CLE Credits)

Hosted by StandWithUs, The Decalogue Society of Lawyers, and Chicago Loop Synagogue

Thursday, April 29, 3:15-4:45PM PST / 5:15-6:45PM CST / 6:15-7:45PM EST

If you’re seeking CLE Credits in Illinois, Washington DC, or New York DO NOT continue on this form. CLICK HERE to register.

If you seek CLE credits in California or wish to attend without receiving credits please fill out the form below.