Published in vtdigger on 2/20/24; op-ed article by Matt Vogel, executive director of UVM Hillel

Published in vtdigger on 2/20/24; op-ed article by Matt Vogel, executive director of UVM Hillel

In the wake of a landmark settlement with the federal government, there has been a remarkable evolution in visible support for Jewish students.

Jewish life at the University of Vermont has improved remarkably since April 3, 2023, when the U.S. Department of Education’s Office of Civil Rights resolved the investigation into antisemitism under a Title VI complaint from Jewish on Campus and the Brandeis Center for Civil Rights. In the wake of this landmark settlement — the first of its kind — there has been a remarkable evolution in visible support for Jewish students, updated policies, and improved systems and processes for bias reporting.

Since the resolution, Jewish life at UVM has improved in many tangible ways including:

Even as we have seen more students feeling comfortable disclosing antisemitic bias and harassment to our staff, we feel that comfort is indicative of a culture that encourages reporting rather than one that seemed to stifle Jewish students’ voices.

Jewish students also report that they are largely able to fully express their Jewish identity without fear of repercussion or social ostracization. There remain isolated incidents of challenging conversations among friend groups related to Israel and Gaza, both in person and on social media. However, UVM students are incredibly resilient and are able to approach the issues with nuance and depth that mirrors their academic pursuits on campus.

These leadership-level changes by the university have led to an increase in Jewish clubs and organizations and higher levels of participation in Hillel programs. Prior to the OCR resolution, there was Hillel and Chabad. Now there is a Jewish Student Union recognized by the University of Vermont and 11 additional Jewish and Israel-oriented student clubs on campus. We have seen an increase in Jewish parents reaching out to Hillel during their on-campus visits, and the Burack Hillel center at 439 College St. has seen an increase of nearly 40% in daily usage from students. 

In short, Jewish life at UVM is thriving. Even as we face rising levels of antisemitism around the country and flurries of activity on campus, the Title VI resolution and subsequent policy, systems, and process changes on campus have helped Jewish students feel better supported at UVM. In the wake of Oct. 7 and rising antisemitism around the world, Jewish students, their friends, and allies still need your tangible support, and here are five ways you can do just that including letters, baked goods, and donations. As Pirkei Avot reminds us, we are not obligated to complete the work, but neither are we free to desist from it. 

The Department of Education’s Office for Civil Rights opened a formal investigation into a complaint filed by the Brandeis Center and Jewish on Campus against the University of Vermont (UVM), where Jewish students have been subjected to severe and persistent anti-Semitic harassment and discrimination. Anti-Jewish incidents ranged from the exclusion of Jewish students from a campus sexual assault survivors’ group and a university recognized student book club, online harassment against Jewish students by a Teaching Assistant (TA), and the targeting of the UVM Hillel building. Jewish students have expressed fear about identifying publicly as Jewish, report hiding their Jewish identity and have considered transferring out of UVM due to the hostile environment toward Jews. UVM has allowed a hostile environment to proliferate on its campus in violation of Title VI of the Civil Rights Act of 1964.

Brandeis Center Commends Department of Education for Milestone Anti-Semitism Resolution.

Read the agreement here.

The Department of Education’s Office for Civil Rights opened a formal investigation into a complaint filed by the Brandeis Center and Jewish on Campus against the University of Vermont (UVM), where Jewish students have been subjected to severe and persistent anti-Semitic harassment and discrimination. Anti-Jewish incidents ranged from the exclusion of Jewish students from a campus sexual assault survivors’ group and a university recognized student book club, online harassment against Jewish students by a Teaching Assistant (TA), and the targeting of the UVM Hillel building. Jewish students have expressed fear about identifying publicly as Jewish, report hiding their Jewish identity and have considered transferring out of UVM due to the hostile environment toward Jews. UVM has allowed a hostile environment to proliferate on its campus in violation of Title VI of the Civil Rights Act of 1964.

Brandeis Center and Jewish on Campus call UVM Garimella’s “dismissive” response to federal investigation into anti-Semitism “astonishingly inadequate” and “offensive”.

Read the response here.

The Department of Education’s Office for Civil Rights opened a formal investigation into a complaint filed by the Brandeis Center and Jewish on Campus against the University of Vermont (UVM), where Jewish students have been subjected to severe and persistent anti-Semitic harassment and discrimination. Anti-Jewish incidents ranged from the exclusion of Jewish students from a campus sexual assault survivors’ group and a university recognized student book club, online harassment against Jewish students by a Teaching Assistant (TA), and the targeting of the UVM Hillel building. Jewish students have expressed fear about identifying publicly as Jewish, report hiding their Jewish identity and have considered transferring out of UVM due to the hostile environment toward Jews. UVM has allowed a hostile environment to proliferate on its campus in violation of Title VI of the Civil Rights Act of 1964.

Jewish organizations respond with grave alarm to UVM President’s denial of antisemitism allegations.

Read the response here.

The Department of Education’s Office for Civil Rights opened a formal investigation into a complaint filed by the Brandeis Center and Jewish on Campus against the University of Vermont (UVM), where Jewish students have been subjected to severe and persistent anti-Semitic harassment and discrimination. Anti-Jewish incidents ranged from the exclusion of Jewish students from a campus sexual assault survivors’ group and a university recognized student book club, online harassment against Jewish students by a Teaching Assistant (TA), and the targeting of the UVM Hillel building. Jewish students have expressed fear about identifying publicly as Jewish, report hiding their Jewish identity and have considered transferring out of UVM due to the hostile environment toward Jews. UVM has allowed a hostile environment to proliferate on its campus in violation of Title VI of the Civil Rights Act of 1964.

Jewish students share personal experiences of anti-Semitism at UVM with Jewish on Campus

Read the report here.

The Department of Education’s Office for Civil Rights opened a formal investigation into a complaint filed by the Brandeis Center and Jewish on Campus against the University of Vermont (UVM), where Jewish students have been subjected to severe and persistent anti-Semitic harassment and discrimination. Anti-Jewish incidents ranged from the exclusion of Jewish students from a campus sexual assault survivors’ group and a university recognized student book club, online harassment against Jewish students by a Teaching Assistant (TA), and the targeting of the UVM Hillel building. Jewish students have expressed fear about identifying publicly as Jewish, report hiding their Jewish identity and have considered transferring out of UVM due to the hostile environment toward Jews. UVM has allowed a hostile environment to proliferate on its campus in violation of Title VI of the Civil Rights Act of 1964.

U.S. Department of Education Opens Investigation into Anti-Semitism at UVM.

Read the press release here.

The Department of Education’s Office for Civil Rights opened a formal investigation into a complaint filed by the Brandeis Center and Jewish on Campus against the University of Vermont (UVM), where Jewish students have been subjected to severe and persistent anti-Semitic harassment and discrimination. Anti-Jewish incidents ranged from the exclusion of Jewish students from a campus sexual assault survivors’ group and a university recognized student book club, online harassment against Jewish students by a Teaching Assistant (TA), and the targeting of the UVM Hillel building. Jewish students have expressed fear about identifying publicly as Jewish, report hiding their Jewish identity and have considered transferring out of UVM due to the hostile environment toward Jews. UVM has allowed a hostile environment to proliferate on its campus in violation of Title VI of the Civil Rights Act of 1964.

In a formal complaint, the Brandeis Center and Jewish on Campus outline various civil rights violations against Jewish students at UVM.

Read the complaint here.

The U.S. Department of Education recently announced a milestone Resolution Agreement with the University of Vermont in a case involving anti-Semitic harassment. It was alleged that the University failed to respond adequately to anti-Zionist harassment and discrimination. The agreement requires the University to recognize and address anti-Zionist harassment as a form of national origin discrimination based on shared ancestry. Alyza D. Lewin, president of The Louis D. Brandeis Center for Human Rights Under Law, the organization that filed the University of Vermont complaint, will discuss how the case can serve as a model for global efforts to protect Jews from “new antisemitism”.

Click here to watch the full video.

Jewish students at the University of Vermont (“UVM”) have been subjected to a campaign of intimidation, harassment and discrimination targeting them on the basis of their Jewish ethnic identity. This has created a hostile environment on campus in which Jewish students are being excluded from university clubs and support groups.

Click here to read the full complaint against UVM.