Published by Politico on 11/28/23; Story by Bianca Quilantan

The 36-page lawsuit argues that UC Berkeley and its law school’s inaction on discrimination against Jewish students has led to a spread of antisemitism.

Jewish groups are suing the University of California system, UC Berkeley and its leaders over what they are calling a “longstanding, unchecked spread of anti-Semitism.”

The 36-page lawsuit, filed Tuesday by the Brandeis Center and Jewish Americans for Fairness in Education, argues that Berkeley and its law school’s “inaction” on discrimination against Jewish students has led to a spread of antisemitism, and violence and harassment against them. Demonstrations and incidents on campus following the Oct. 7 Hamas attacks on Israel serve as examples of the discrimination, according to the complaint.

The complaint is among the first high-profile lawsuits against a university in the aftermath of the protests that roiled campuses in response to the conflict in the Middle East.

Jewish groups are suing over policies enacted by at least 23 Berkeley Law student groups that exclude students from joining or bar guest speakers from presenting if they do not agree to disavow Israel or if they identify as Zionists. They argue that anti-Zionism is a form of antisemitism and say that the policies violate the 14th Amendment’s equal protection clause, the First Amendment right to freedom of religion, Title VI of the Civil Rights Act and more.

“Conditioning a Jew’s ability to participate in a student group on his or her renunciation of a core component of Jewish identity is no less pernicious than demanding the renunciation of some other core element of a student’s identity — whether based on race, ethnicity, gender, or sexual identity,” the lawsuit said. “No such imposition is required — or would be remotely tolerated — of other students.”

The groups are accusing Berkeley and the UC system of inaction against the policies that “betray” Jewish students and faculty. They argue that the student group policies violate a university policy that prohibits registered student groups, including law school groups, from imposing membership restrictions based on race, color, national origin and religion.

The Jewish groups want the court to intervene and require the university and university system to enforce their policies and prohibit discrimination against Jewish students, faculty and invited speakers. They say that Berkeley has suggested that the student group policies discriminate on the basis of viewpoint and not race, ethnicity or religion, but campus leaders have also acknowledged that the policies can be “deeply upsetting to some Jewish members.”

“By abdicating responsibility and failing to act as required by UC rules and U.S. law, the university has enabled the normalization of anti-Jewish hatred on campus,” the lawsuit said. “Jewish students feel compelled to hide their identities.”

Additionally, the groups say that the university has failed to address antisemitic incidents on campus following the Oct. 7 Hamas attacks. They said students’ celebrations of the Hamas attacks resulted in violence against Jewish students. A Jewish student draped in an Israeli flag was attacked by protesters who hit him in the head with a metal water bottle, according to the complaint, and some Jews have received “hate e-mails calling for their gassing and murder.” Jewish students have also said they are afraid to attend class because of the protests.

“Students stated that the school does so little to protect Jewish students, it feels as if the school were condoning anti-Semitism,” the complaint said. “They added that officials at the university display a ‘general disregard’ for Jewish students. … They have little confidence that UC will protect them from anti-Semitic mobs.”

Since Hamas’ October 7 attack on Israel, there have been record levels of anti-Semitism and Jewish hatred on college campuses across the nation. In a November 14 letter to the U.S. Department of Education’s Office of Civil Rights (OCR), U.S. Representatives Kevin Kiley and Burgess Owens urged the office to take a more proactive approach is combatting anti-Semitism. Owens’ involvement is significant, because he chairs the key House of Representatives subcommittee that oversees American higher education.

During the House Judiciary Committee hearing “Free Speech on College Campuses” on November 8, Brandeis Center Chairman Kenneth L. Marcus was asked about OCR’s actions, or lack thereof, and offered the following recommendations:

“There’s more that the Department can be doing, and it can do it tomorrow. The Department has sent out links for Jewish students to file complaints It has added language to its compliant forms. That’s fine. But there is no reason why the Department needs to wait for Jewish students to come to them. The Department has the authority to initiate self-directed investigations.

Anytime it opens the newspaper and sees that there is a problem at an institution that received Federal funds, and that’s every single day if they are reading the papers… These are things that can be done quickly that don’t require significant infusions of funds. They can be done with the current resources and that can be done with the authority that the Secretary of Education already has.”

Marcus first pioneered the use of Title VI of the Civil Rights Act of 1964 to combat anti-Semitism in 2004, when he served as the U.S. Dept. of Education OCR Assistant Secretary for Civil Rights. Since then, ten executive agencies, including the Department of Education, have adopted this framework – now known as the Marcus Doctrine. However, even with Title VI protections recently applied to Jewish students, college administrators lag behind in the promptness and enforcement of actions to keep Jewish students safe.

Threats to Jewish students on college campuses are at an all-time high and need to be addressed with decisive action by OCR. The need for new regulations that explicitly enforce the combination of the Marcus Doctrine and IHRA Definition – as done in 2019’s Executive Order 13899 on Combating Antisemitism – and not weaker instruments, such as Dear Colleague letters or acknowledgement of lesser anti-Semitism definitions, could not be more urgent.

Article published by Jewish Insider on 11/14/23; Story by Gabby Deutch

Top officials from the Department of Education met virtually with Jewish community leaders on Monday to discuss the agency’s actions to combat rising antisemitism on American college campuses. But several of the attendees left the meeting concerned that the department is not responding with the urgency they feel the antisemitism crisis deserves.

“​​We’ve repeatedly communicated that this crisis is unlike anything we’ve seen before, so it requires a response that is unlike what we’ve seen before, in terms of resources, guidance and — if necessary — direct pressure on schools to ensure their students are safe,” said Amy Spitalnick, CEO of the Jewish Council for Public Affairs. “It is entirely possible to both protect speech and address increasingly overt antisemitism.”

Monday’s meeting came two weeks after Education Secretary Miguel Cardona, Second Gentleman Doug Emhoff and Deborah Lipstadt, the U.S. special envoy to monitor and combat antisemitism, met with a small group of Jewish leaders and pledged to make a plan within two weeks to address the wave of antisemitism on campuses.

“They did not give us a plan to deal with an unprecedented surge in antisemitic activity,” said Ken Marcus, chairman of the Louis D. Brandeis Center for Human Rights Under Law. Instead, Marcus said, the Education Department leaders on the call — Deputy Secretary Cynthia Marten and Assistant Secretary for Civil Rights Catherine Lhamon — touted steps already taken by the Biden administration and expressed concern about the problem without offering many new approaches. 

“It’s notable when two such high officials of the Education Department are present,” Marcus continued. “But beyond that, I would say that the meeting was most notable for the absence of a significant plan for addressing this extraordinary problem.” 

Cardona kicked off Monday’s meeting with a brief message of support for Jewish students who have faced threats or harassment on campus.

“There were a lot of broad comments about how fighting antisemitism on campuses is a priority for the department, and they’re really committed,” said a lobbyist at a Jewish advocacy organization who attended the meeting.

Late last month, the White House spoke out against an “extremely disturbing pattern of antisemitic messages being conveyed on college campuses,” according to Andrew Bates, the White House deputy press secretary. “Delegitimizing the State of Israel while praising the Hamas terrorist murderers who burned innocent people alive, or targeting Jewish students, is the definition of unacceptable, and the definition of antisemitism.”

The comments were followed by a series of actions meant to combat antisemitism at American universities, which have seen Jewish students assaulted and threatened in recent weeks. The Education Department updated the complaint form for students reporting civil rights violations to now make it easier to identify anti-Jewish hate, and Lhamon wrote a “Dear Colleague” letter to American universities urging them to respond to rising antisemitism and Islamophobia.

But some Jewish advocates worry these actions are not enough.

“I think the set of tools and the mode of thinking that they have is not matched to the moment of crisis, and they need to shift,” said the lobbyist who asked for anonymity to speak candidly about a closed-door meeting. For instance, senior Education Department officials had pledged to make visits to universities to discuss antisemitism, according to guidance in the U.S. National Strategy to Counter Antisemitism that was released in May. Last week, Cardona and Emhoff visited Cornell, where an undergraduate was arrested last month for making violent threats against Jewish students. Earlier this month, Cardona and Neera Tanden, the White House’s domestic policy advisor, met with Jewish students at Towson University.

“We said, ‘Hey, you should be making some high-profile site visits for universities that are doing a terrible job,’” the lobbyist said, pointing to the Massachusetts Institute of Technology, where Jewish students reported being shut out of classes last week by pro-Palestine protesters. “Those university administrations need to be made to feel uncomfortable themselves.”

An Education Department spokesperson declined to comment when asked about the Monday meeting.

The Education Department officials pointed to a number of complaints recently filed with the department’s Office of Civil Rights alleging antisemitic discrimination at American universities under Title VI of the Civil Rights Act of 1964. But according to attendees on the call, the officials did not say whether the department will be able to expedite these complaints, which sometimes take years to resolve.

Lhamon “shared her strong commitment to using Title VI to hold university administrations accountable for responding swiftly and effectively to harassment of Jewish students creating a hostile environment,” said Adam Lehman, CEO of Hillel International. But “there was general agreement that the department and others will need to invest toward additional interventions that can even more quickly guide universities toward changes in policy and practice.”

Other organizations represented on the call included the Conference of Presidents of Major American Jewish Organizations, Jewish Federations of North America, the Anti-Defamation League, the American Jewish Committee, Bend the Arc and T’ruah.

Published by the New York Sun on 11/6/23. Story by Matthew Rice.

The chairman of the House Judiciary Committee, Congressman Jim Jordan, will hold a hearing later this month on the issue of antisemitism on America’s college and university campuses. Since Hamas attacked Israel on October 7, antisemitic hate crimes have skyrocketed around the globe.

The hearing, titled “Free Speech on College Campuses,” will “examine the current state of the First Amendment on the campuses of American colleges and universities,” according to a hearing notice posted by the committee. “The hearing will also examine the rise in antisemitism, anti-Israel sentiment, and violence towards students supporting Israel.” The hearing will take place on Wednesday.

Participants include two current college students and one recent graduate who are involved in free speech and Jewish issues — Jasmyn Jordan of the University of Iowa, Amanda Silberstein of Cornell University, and Connor Ogrydziak of the University of Buffalo. Committee members will also hear from the founder and chairman of the Louis D. Brandeis Center for Human Rights Under Law, Kenneth Marcus.

Many horror stories have emerged from America’s colleges and universities in recent weeks. At George Washington University, a student group projected the phrases “glory to our martyrs” and “free Palestine from the river to the sea” on the side of a university campus building, which the school’s administration later condemned.

At Cornell, a student, Patrick Dai, was arrested by federal law enforcement officials for posting antisemitic messages on a school online forum. He said he would “stab” and “slit the throat” of any Jewish men he sees on campus and also promised to rape and throw off a cliff any Jewish women. He also said he would “bring an assault rifle to campus and shoot all you pig jews.”

Nationwide, antisemitic incidents have spiked since the war began a month ago. The Anti-Defamation League reported on October 24 that there were 312 antisemitic incidents in America since the beginning of the October 7 war. “By comparison during the same period in 2022, ADL received preliminary reports of 64 incidents, including four that were Israel-related,” the ADL writes.

“When conflict erupts in Israel, antisemitic incidents soon follow in the U.S. and globally,” the chief executive of the Anti-Defamation League, Jonathan Greenblatt, says. “From white supremacists in California displaying antisemitic banners on highway overpasses to radical anti-Zionists harassing Jewish people because of their real or perceived support for the Jewish state, we are witnessing a disturbing rise in antisemitic activity here while the war rages overseas.”

The White House has condemned not only the dangerous rise in antisemitism at home and around the world but has called out antisemitic attacks on campuses at American universities explicitly.

“Just over the past week, we’ve seen protests and statements on college campuses that call for the annihilation of the State of Israel; for genocide against the Jewish people,” the deputy press secretary, Andrew Bates, told the Times of Israel. “Jewish students have even had to barricade themselves inside buildings.”

“Delegitimizing the State of Israel while praising the Hamas terrorist murderers who burned innocent people alive, or targeting Jewish students, is the definition of unacceptable — and the definition of antisemitism,” Mr. Bates said.

Published by JewishLink on 11/2/23; Story by Deborah Rubin

As Israel battles Hamas terrorists, a battle is raging in the United States with college campuses exploding with antisemitic threats and violence directed against Jewish students.

The alarming increase has resulted in physical assaults, including at Tulane and Columbia universities and the University of California-Berkeley, to threats posted at Cornell University to kill Jews to Montclair State University in New Jersey, which was forced to shut down the comments on its own Instagram account after it was filled with hateful rhetoric that a Muslim student who died had been thrown out of a window and murdered by Jews.

“This certainly did not happen in a vacuum,” said Denise Katz-Prober, director of legal initiatives at the Louis D. Brandeis Center for Human Rights Under Law. “The Brandeis Center has been warning for years that university administrators were not addressing the antisemitism and anti-Zionism on their campuses and when you sweep it under the rug this is what happens.”

Katz-Prober said her center has received an enormous amount of inquiries from parents and faculty from K-12th grade through college since the October 7 murder of 1,400 Israeli civilians by Hamas terrorists and Israel launching its offensive in Gaza.

“Frankly this was predictable,” she said, adding that university leaders failed to recognize that Jewish students have a shared connection to Israel, and that anti-Israel rhetoric is antisemitic, leading to Jewish students feeling unsafe and unsupported on their campuses.

“When Students for Justice in Palestine (SJP) and other groups are celebrating and even justifying Hamas’ atrocities when we know Hamas targeted innocent civilians, they are celebrating violence against Jews,” she noted. “And when university administrators do not forcefully condemn this they are fostering a hostile atmosphere on campus for Israeli and Jewish students and contributing to a very real fear for their safety.”

Katz-Prober added: “We need moral leadership. We need more clarity for university students. We need university administrators to condemn Hamas. There should be no moral equivalence between Hamas’ atrocities against civilians and Israel’s lawful response in self-defense.”

A 21-year-old Cornell student, Patrick Dai, was arrested on October 31 on federal charges for threatening to “shoot up” students at a Jewish dining hall, stab male Jewish students, rape female students and bring an assault rifle to campus and “shoot all you pig Jews.”

The university, where 22% of the student body is Jewish, has been the scene of extensive anti-Jewish and anti-Israel demonstrations and hate, so much so that a student interviewed last week by The Jewish Link was too scared to even let her first and middle initials be used as identification in the article.

At Montclair, the demand to shut down comments on its Instagram came from Hillel, said Rebekah Adelson, director of Hillel of Greater MetroWest, which includes Montclair. She termed the incident “a blood libel.”

After the Montclair freshman’s October 17 death, reportedly from suicide, rumors began circulating he was murdered by a gang of Jews for his support of Palestine.

The university subsequently put out a statement, explaining, ”There is absolutely no evidence whatsoever of any foul play or criminal actions.” It said the university’s police department had gathered extensive information, including eyewitness reports, surveillance video and statements from the deceased’s friends indicating he died alone.

At Columbia, a swastika was found in a restroom of the School of International and Public Affairs building. An Israeli student was assaulted after he confronted a woman taking down posters of Israeli hostages.

Jewish students at Cooper Union were barricaded in a library while a rowdy SJP rally took place.

New York Governor Kathy Hochul called on universities to step up and do more to protect Jewish and Israeli students, and especially called out the City University of New York for failing to do so as its campuses across the city. She said she planned additional steps to address campus hate speech.

New Jersey Attorney General Matthew Platkin called on schools to immediately report hate and bias crimes.

President Joe Biden has also spoken out against campus antisemitism; among the initiatives his administration is undertaking is a partnership between the departments of Justice and Homeland Security and campus law enforcement to monitor online hate speech.

The Brandeis Center was among 10 Jewish and civil rights groups that sent a letter to more than 500 university and college presidents demanding they “fulfill the moral and leadership responsibility entrusted to you as a university president, by speaking out now to voice your unequivocal condemnation of Hamas, its terrorist violence against Israel, and its declaration of war against the Jewish people everywhere, as well as your solidarity with and support for your Israeli and Jewish students, faculty and staff.”

The five-page letter was also signed by the Anti-Defamation League (ADL), American Jewish Committee, the Zionist Organization of America, Jewish Federations of North America, Hillel International, Combat Antisemitism Movement, Israel Campus Coalition, the Conference of Presidents of Major American Jewish Organizations and Jewish on Campus.

Additionally, the Brandeis Center and the ADL sent a subsequent letter to about 200 universities with an “urgent request” they investigate the activities of SJP on their campus for violating their university’s code of conduct and for potential violations of federal and state laws against materially supporting a foreign terrorist organization whose leaders have “explicitly endorsed” killing Jews.

It stated that SJP has voiced an “increasingly radical call for ‘dismantling’ Zionism on American campuses, on some campuses have issued pro-Hamas messaging and/or provided violent anti-Israel messaging channels,” adding, “SJP chapters are not advocating for Palestinian rights; they are celebrating terrorism.”

Hamas was officially designated a foreign terrorist organization by the State Department in 1997.

The letter said at its recent “Resistance Day” SJP provided its chapters with public relations materials and a toolkit instructing, “We must act as part of this movement.” At many rallies there were shouts of “We are Hamas” or “We echo Hamas.”

It also warned that if the universities don’t check the activities of SJP chapters, they could be violating their Jewish students’ rights to be free of harassment and discrimination on campus.

The more broadly distributed letter notes that universities must protect the physical safety of all students, including Jewish and Israeli students, as well as their right to freely express their ancestral and ethnic identity.

The U.S. Department of Education recently has clarified Title VI of the Civil Rights Act of 1964, which bans discrimination on the basis of race, color or national origin in federally funded programs or activities, to define a “hostile environment” as being when unwelcome conduct “is subjectively and objectively offensive and is so severe or pervasive that it limits or denies a person’s ability to participate in or benefit from” an educational program or activity.

The Office of Civil Rights has accelerated an update to its discrimination complaint form that will now include certain types of antisemitism and Islamophobia.

“Events that celebrate Hamas’ cold-blooded murder of Jews, are ‘subjectively and objectively offensive,’” read the letter.

Among the initiatives it insisted that universities undertake are: issue a public statement supporting Jewish and Israeli students affected by the tragedy; speak out forcefully against antisemitic hate speech; take appropriate security measures to ensure Jewish and Israeli students are safe in living spaces; use discriminatory incidents to educate the campus community about the oldest form of hatred, including contemporary forms of antisemitism that target Jewish shared ancestral and ethnic identity; and make sure diversity, equity and inclusion staff are trained in contemporary forms of antisemitism.

StandWithUs, an international nonprofit that works with young people and college students to support Israel and fight antisemitism, has also been sending letters to various universities through its Saidoff Legal Department and Center for Combating Antisemitism. One recent letter was sent to New York University President Linda G. Mills, in which the organization praised her condemnation of the Hamas attack, but expressed “deep concern” about three individuals caught on camera ripping down hostage posters who had been identified as NYU students, and urged action be taken for violations of the university’s code of conduct on destruction of property, university policy regarding freedom of speech and expression and regarding discrimination.

“Campus administrators have a legal obligation to ensure student safety, as well as to provide a discrimination-free environment for all students,” said StandWithUs co-founder and CEO Roz Rothstein in a statement to The Jewish Link.

“When administrators fail to take the necessary steps to fulfill these legal duties, students facing harassment or other forms of hostility based on their Jewish or Israeli identities should know that they are not alone,” she noted. “Best practices for students in the midst of an antisemitic or anti-Israel situation include documenting the incident (to the extent they can do so safely) and, if necessary, contacting campus law enforcement.”

To report harassment, threats or an incident: Contact stndwithus.com; the Louis D. Brandeis Center for Human Rights Under Law, brandeiscenter.com; or ReportCampusHate.org, an online initiative of Hillel International, Anti-Defamation League and the Secure Community Network. For physical assault and threats contact campus security or police.

Contact: Nicole Rosen

202-309-5724

New effort to provide pro bono legal services to Jewish students facing antisemitism

November 6, 2023 (Washington, D.C.) – Hillel International, ADL (the Anti-Defamation League), the Louis D. Brandeis Center for Human Rights Under Law, and Gibson, Dunn & Crutcher LLP today announced the Campus Antisemitism Legal Line (CALL), a free legal protection helpline for students who have experienced antisemitism. With antisemitism on campus reaching all-time highs since Oct. 7, this new resource comes at a critical moment for the Jewish community.

Any student, family, faculty, or staff member can go to the CALL website or text “CALLhelp” to 51555 to report incidents of antisemitic discrimination, intimidation, harassment, vandalism, or violence that may necessitate legal action. Lawyers will assess reports of antisemitic discrimination and hate, conduct in-depth information-gathering interviews, and provide pro bono representation for victims who choose to move forward with specific cases. CALL will also provide referrals to social services, mental health counseling services, and other relevant support services in their area.

A legal team from ADL, the Brandeis Center, Hillel International, and Gibson Dunn will guide overall strategy and coordinate volunteer lawyers from other leading firms including Gibson Dunn and Morgan, Lewis & Bockius LLP. CALL invites volunteer lawyers from other firms and companies, as well as other organizations, to join in this effort.

Supporting organizations include Alpha Epsilon Phi, Alpha Epsilon Pi, the American Jewish Committee, the Conference of Presidents of Major American Jewish Organizations, the Jewish Agency for Israel, Jewish on Campus, the Jewish Federations of North America, JGO: The Jewish Grad Organization (formerly JGSI), the Israel on Campus Coalition, the Israeli-American Council, Masa, Olami, the OU Jewish Learning Initiative on Campus, Sigma Alpha Mu, Sigma Delta Tau, and Zeta Beta Tau.

“Since the brutal terrorist attack on Israel on Oct. 7, there has been an alarming rise in antisemitism and hate directed toward Jewish college students,” said Adam Lehman, Hillel International President and CEO. “Alongside building flourishing Jewish campus communities and educating university presidents and leadership, this is an important tool for reducing campus antisemitism. Every student deserves to pursue their studies and live their full college experience in a safe and secure campus environment — and Jewish students are no exception.”

Hillel International’s recent survey of Jewish college students shows that more than half polled (56 percent) say they feel scared on campus. In addition, one-in-four Jewish students (25 percent) say there has been violence or acts of hate on their campus since the war began; and only half of those who say there has been hate or violence say they are satisfied with their university’s
response.

“We don’t need a cancel culture on campus. We need a consequences culture,” said Jonathan Greenblatt, ADL CEO and National Director. “No longer will anyone be able to harass Jewish students with impunity, and no longer will a university or school be able to just look the other way.”

While college campuses have become a hotbed of antisemitism, rising hatred against Jews goes beyond universities. Preliminary data from the ADL Center on Extremism indicates that from Oct. 7-23, reported incidents of harassment, vandalism, and assault increased by 388 percent over the same period last year.

“The frightening incidents we’re seeing on campus today did not start on Oct. 7. They are a direct result of far too many universities failing in their legal responsibility to promptly, publicly and forcefully address the anti-Semitism that has been simmering on their campus for years. This explosion of Jew hatred was foreseeable and preventable. It’s high time for universities to enforce the law and protect their Jewish students.” said Alyza D. Lewin, president of the Brandeis Center.

The Brandeis Center, which has filed and resolved numerous federal anti- discrimination complaints with the Department of Education, has heard from more Jewish students in the past three weeks than in the last year combined.

“We are honored to partner with the ADL, The Brandeis Center, and Hillel International to provide victims of antisemitism on campus with free and timely access to counsel,” said Barbara Becker, Gibson Dunn Chair and Managing Partner. “There is no place for antisemitism, racism, Islamophobia, or hate of any kind in a just and humane society. We believe it is our responsibility and privilege to provide free legal services to communities in need, and this collaboration will serve that mission and help keep students safe.”

To read a PDF of this press release, click here.

About ADL
ADL is the leading anti-hate organization in the world. Founded in 1913, its timeless mission is “to stop the defamation of the Jewish people and to secure justice and fair treatment to all.” Today, ADL continues to fight all forms of antisemitism and bias, using innovation and partnerships to drive impact. A global leader in combating antisemitism, countering extremism and battling bigotry wherever and whenever it happens, ADL works to protect democracy and ensure a just and inclusive society for all. More at www.adl.org.

About Hillel International
Founded in 1923, Hillel has been impacting the lives of Jewish college students for 100 years. Today, Hillel International is a global organization that welcomes students of all backgrounds and fosters an enduring commitment to Jewish life, learning, and Israel. As the largest Jewish student organization in the world, Hillel builds connections with emerging adults at more than 850 colleges and universities. During their formative college years, students are inspired to explore, experience, and create vibrant Jewish lives.

About the Louis D. Brandeis Center for Human Rights Under Law
The Louis D. Brandeis Center for Human Rights Under Law is an independent, unaffiliated, nonprofit corporation established to advance the civil and human rights of the Jewish people and promote justice for all. LDB engages in research, education, and legal advocacy to combat the resurgence of anti-Semitism on college and university campuses, in the workplace, and elsewhere. It empowers students by training them to understand their legal rights and educates administrators and employers on best practices to combat racism and anti- Semitism. The Brandeis Center is not affiliated with the Massachusetts university, the Kentucky law school, or any of the other institutions that share the name and honor the memory of the late U.S. Supreme Court justice. More at www.brandeiscenter.com.

About Gibson, Dunn & Crutcher LLP
Gibson, Dunn & Crutcher LLP is a leading international law firm. Consistently ranking among the world’s top law firms in industry surveys and major publications, Gibson Dunn is distinctively positioned in today’s global marketplace with more than 1,800 lawyers and 20 offices, including Abu Dhabi, Beijing, Brussels, Century City, Dallas, Denver, Dubai, Frankfurt, Hong Kong, Houston, London, Los Angeles, Munich, New York, Orange County, Palo Alto, Paris, San Francisco, Singapore, and Washington, D.C. For more information on Gibson Dunn, please visit our website.

Published October 30, 2023 by Jewish Insider. Story by Haley Cohen.

The university had previously acknowledged the three Israeli students were targeted by anti-Zionist Jewish faculty member

More than four months after Harvard University found that a professor at its John F. Kennedy School of Government discriminated against three Jewish Israeli graduate students, violating Title VI of the Civil Rights Act of 1964, the Louis D. Brandeis Center for Human Rights Under Law on Monday morning sent a legal warning to the university demanding immediate action.

“It’s extraordinary that Harvard on the one hand is willing to acknowledge that clients faced inappropriate discrimination and different treatment and yet is not taking meaningful action to address it. This is just the sort of thing you would expect from a university that is under immense pressure for the waves of antisemitism that its students are facing,” Kenneth Marcus, founder and chairman of the Brandeis Center and former U.S. assistant secretary of education for the Bush and Trump administrations, told JI. 

The letter, which was first obtained by Jewish Insider, comes as Harvard’s administration faces criticism from lawmakers and alumni over its mishandling of a surge of antisemitism at the school since Hamas’ deadly rampage in Israel on Oct. 7. In a letter to the university’s general counsel, the Brandeis Center said that the school’s failure to address the discrimination claim has exacerbated antisemitism at the university, pointing to a letter published earlier this month on social media by 31 student organizations claiming Israel is “entirely responsible” for Hamas terrorists’ murder of 1,400 Israelis.

“It isn’t a coincidence that you would see the extraordinary developments at Harvard since Oct. 7 in light of the weak administrative actions prior to that date,” Marcus said, noting that while the primary incident addressed in the case occurred prior to Hamas’ attacks, “Harvard’s inaction paved the way to what we’ve been seeing since then.” 

The Brandeis Center wrote, “This failure, on top of other failures of leadership, have set the stage for the worsening climate that we have seen for Jewish Harvard students since [Oct. 7]. Harvard’s failure to speak out against anti-Semitism masked as anti-Zionism has only emboldened the student groups who are now celebrating Hamas’ atrocities. The silence needs to end.”

Marcus told JI that “this is a great example of what happens when university administrators fail to address antisemitic incidents when they should. Things just get worse and worse as we’ve been seeing at Harvard, especially in the days since Oct. 7.” 

The incident involves alleged discrimination and harassment of Jewish Israeli students Amnon Shefler, Gilad Neumann and Matan Yaffe, which took place in professor Marshall Ganz’s “Organizing: People, Power, Change” course last spring. All three students have been called up for Israel Defense Forces reserve duty and were not available for comment.

According to the Brandeis Center, “the students decided to work together on a joint project that would examine ways to ‘to harness and unite a majority of diverse and moderate Israelis to strengthen Israel’s liberal and Jewish democracy.’”

“The students articulated their purpose as ‘organizing a growing majority of Israelis…that act in harmony, building on a shared ethos of Israel as a liberal-Jewish-democracy, being a cultural, economic and security lighthouse.’ Professor Ganz dismissed their project as illegitimate, demanded they change it, and subjected them to anti-Israel and anti-Semitic bias and discrimination when they refused,” the letter continues.

According to the complaint, Ganz told the students they could not use the term “Jewish democracy” to describe Israel – stating that using the words “Jewish” and “democracy” in regard to the Jewish state was akin to a project promoting white supremacy. When the students decided to stick with their project as designed, Ganz threatened them with academic consequences.

“Professor Ganz admitted he had never told students in any other class that they could not present their work, even when it centered on controversial topics. During the final class, two of Ganz’s teaching fellows taught a lesson on how to recruit support for Palestinians,” the letter said, noting that while the topic itself was not objectionable, “it led to students making hostile claims, inaccurate characterizations and false accusations against Israel and Israelis. Ganz refused to let the Israeli students provide a response or any counter-arguments to the wildly inaccurate data presented.”

The Brandeis Center’s initial complaint to the university was sent in March. In response, Harvard launched a third-party-investigation, which agreed with the Brandeis Center and concluded that “Ganz subjected the students to anti-Israel and antisemitic bias and discrimination on the basis of their identities as Jewish Israelis, silenced the speech of the Jewish Israeli students about a topic he viewed as illegitimate, treated the students differently and denigrated them on the basis of their Israeli national origin and Jewish ethnicity and ancestry, and prioritized others’ concerns over the Israeli students.”

Marcus said that the investigator made “fairly strong recommendations,” adding that he would have made “even stronger recommendations,” but was “happily surprised since investigators paid by colleges and universities seldom are as firm as this.” 

According to the Brandeis Center, the investigator concluded that Ganz’s conduct violated Title VI of the Civil Rights Act of 1964, which requires schools that receive federal funding to respond immediately to discrimination and/or harassment that “negatively affect[s] the ability and willingness of Jewish students to participate fully in the school’s education programs and activities.”

Harvard Kennedy School Dean Douglas Elmendorf pledged to address the problem, asking for time over the summer to do so, Marcus said, adding that ultimately, his plan was “an apology and unspecified personnel actions,” which Marcus called “deeply disappointing.” 

Four months later, the Brandeis Center said that “not only has there been no action to address the anti-Semitism, Harvard is now publicly touting Ganz, who continues to teach there, as a civil rights hero. The latest edition of the Harvard Gazette esteems Ganz’s early civil rights work, leaving out mention of the antisemitic conduct.”

“Harvard, it seems, has no genuine intent to address the anti-Semitism on its campus, choosing instead to publicly celebrate a professor who recently subjected Jewish and Israeli students to bias and discrimination,” the letter sent on Monday states.

In July, amid the White House’s rollout of a national strategy to combat antisemitism, the issue was addressed in the Knesset by American Jewish leaders and Israelis studying in the U.S.

One of the Israeli students who spoke at the hearing was Lt. Col. Amnon Shefler, the former deputy military secretary to Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu, who also served as the IDF international spokesperson and as a fighter pilot in the Israeli Air Force. Shefler was studying at Harvard while still in the military on leave and mentioned the Ganz case when describing the struggles he and other Israeli students faced in their classes.

The Brandeis Center is demanding that Harvard “fulfill the commitment it made to address Ganz’s discrimination, and eliminate the hostile environment that is snowballing on its campus, as it is required under Title VI.”

It specifically calls on Harvard “to commit to university-wide changes, including requiring all faculty and staff to undergo training on anti-Semitism, including understanding that expressing support for the Jewish homeland is a sincere and deeply felt expression of Jewish ethnic and ancestral identity as well as the Jewish religion. The training also must help faculty and staff recognize when anti-Semitism directed at Jewish ethnicity is a concerted strategy to marginalize Jewish students on campus and make them feel unwelcome.”

Earlier this month, the Wexner Foundation cut ties with Harvard over “the dismal failure of Harvard’s leadership to take a clear and unequivocal stand against the barbaric murders of innocent Israeli civilians by terrorists [on Oct.7].” More than 250 Israelis have graduated from the long-standing and prestigious Wexner Foundation Fellowship, which includes a period of study at Harvard’s Kennedy School. These alumni have often gone on to hold high-ranking positions in the Israeli civil service and in government, including Knesset members, Israel Defense Forces generals, top state prosecutors and others.

A letter from the foundation to the Harvard Board of Overseers severing ties said that many Israel fellows “feel abandoned” by the university.

Israeli billionaire Idan Ofer and his wife, Batia, also announced they are quitting Harvard’s Kennedy executive board in protest over how university leaders have responded to the massacre.

Washington, D.C. (October 30, 2023): In response to a complaint from the Louis D. Brandeis Center for Human Rights Under Law, made public for the first time today, Harvard University found that a professor at its Kennedy School discriminated against three Jewish Israeli graduate students in violation of Harvard and Kennedy School policies and federal civil rights guidance under Title VI of the Civil Rights Act of 1964. After more than four months, however, not only has Harvard failed to address the anti-Semitism, the school is now publicly touting the professor as a civil rights hero. The Brandeis Center today sent a strongly-wordedlegal warning to the University’s general counsel, demanding the school take the prompt action it is required under the law.

“This failure, on top of other failures of leadership, have set the stage for the worsening climate that we have seen for Jewish Harvard students since [Oct. 7],” wrote the Brandeis Center, referring to numerous events of late, including the support more than 30 Harvard student groups recently expressed for Hamas, rallies attended by students and faculty celebrating Hamas’ barbaric acts, the posting of Hamas paratrooper images to intimidate Jewish students, and the university’s own equating of Hamas terrorists and the IDF. “Harvard’s failure to speak out against anti-Semitism masked as anti-Zionism has only emboldened the student groups who are now celebrating Hamas’ atrocities. The silence needs to end.”

Part of the “silence” the Brandeis Center is referring to involves the discrimination and harassment of three Jewish Israeli students, Amnon Shefler, Gilad Neumann, and Matan Yaffe, which took place in Professor Marshall Ganz’s “Organizing: People, Power, Change,” course over this past spring.  The students decided to work together on a joint project that would examine ways to “to harness and unite a majority of diverse and moderate Israelis to strengthen Israel’s liberal and Jewish democracy” at a time of division and social strife within their country. The students articulated their purpose as “organizing a growing majority of Israelis…that act in harmony, building on a shared ethos of Israel as a liberal-Jewish-democracy, being a cultural, economic and security lighthouse.” 

Professor Ganz dismissed their project as illegitimate, demanded they change it, and subjected them to anti-Israel and anti-Semitic bias and discrimination when they refused. Specifically, Ganz told the students they could not use the term “Jewish democracy” as a descriptor for Israel.  Ganz demanded they eliminate “Jewish” and “democracy” from their project’s stated purpose, stating that an organizing project to promote Jewish democracy was akin to a project promoting white supremacy. 

When the students decided to stick with their project as designed, Ganz threatened them with consequences.  Professor Ganz admitted he had never told students in any other class that they could not present their work, even when it centered on controversial topics. During the final class, two of Ganz’s teaching fellows taught a lesson on how to recruit support for Palestinians. While the topic itself was not objectionable, it led to students making hostile claims, inaccurate characterizations and false accusations against Israel and Israelis. Ganz refused to let the Israeli students provide a response or any counter arguments to the wildly inaccurate data presented.  

After the Brandeis Center sent a complaint to the university, this past March, Harvard launched a third-party-investigation, which agreed with the Brandeis Center and concluded Ganz subjected the students to anti-Israel and anti-Semitic bias and discrimination on the basis of their identities as Jewish Israelis, silenced the speech of the Jewish Israeli students about a topic he viewed as illegitimate, treated the students differently and denigrated them on the basis of their Israeli national origin and Jewish ethnicity and ancestry, and prioritized others’ concerns over the Israeli students. The investigator also concluded that Ganz’s conduct interfered with and limited the students’ ability to participate in and benefit from Harvard Kennedy School’s educational program, in violation of Title VI of the Civil Rights Act of 1964.  

Title VI of the Civil Rights Act of 1964 requires schools that receive federal funding to respond immediately to discrimination and/or harassment that “negatively affect[s] the ability and willingness of Jewish students to participate fully in the school’s education programs and activities.” A university “must take prompt and effective steps reasonably calculated to end the harassment, eliminate any hostile environment, and prevent the harassment from recurring.”

While Harvard Kennedy School Dean Douglas Elmendorf promptly accepted the investigator’s findings as final and committed to addressing the harassment and discrimination, stating “[w]e need to ensure that the School fulfills these commitments and that the violations of policies that occurred this spring are addressed fully and do not recur,” four months later, not only has there been no action to address the anti-Semitism, Harvard is now publicly touting Ganz, who continues to teach there, as a civil rights hero.  The latest edition of the Harvard Gazette vaunts Ganz’s early civil rights work, making no mention of his recent dishonorable conduct.

“The professor is no civil rights champion when it comes to minorities he personally finds distasteful, namely, Jewish Israelis. He is in fact a civil rights violator, who undisputedly trampled the rights of members of his class without hesitation or apology, denigrating the Students’ identity and preventing them from participating fully in his class,” wrote the Brandeis Center.  “Harvard, it seems, has no genuine intent to address the anti-Semitism on its campus, choosing instead to publicly celebrate a professor who recently subjected Jewish and Israeli students to bias and discrimination.”

The Brandeis Center demands Harvard fulfill the commitment it made to address Ganz’s discrimination, and eliminate the hostile environment that is snowballing on its campus, as it is required under Title VI.  Specifically the Brandeis Center calls on Harvard to commit to university-wide changes, including requiring all faculty and staff to  undergo training on anti-Semitism, including  understanding that expressing support for the Jewish homeland is a sincere and deeply felt expression of Jewish ethnic and ancestral identity as well as the Jewish religion.  The training also must help faculty and staff recognize when anti-Semitism directed at Jewish ethnicity is a concerted strategy to marginalize Jewish students on campus and make them feel unwelcome.  The Brandeis Center also demands Harvard publicly acknowledge and renounce Ganz’s discrimination and harassment of Israeli Jews and take steps to ensure he and all professors treat Israeli and Jewish students with the same level of respect accorded others.

“Harvard leadership has allowed its campus to run amuck with anti-Semitism for far too long.  This outrageous, irresponsible and illegal failure of Harvard’s administration to address even undisputed anti-Semitism has paved the way for the problems they are now facing,” stated Kenneth L. Marcus, founder and chairman of the Brandeis Center and former U.S. Assistant Secretary of Education for the Bush and Trump Administrations.  “It is high time the university provides the leadership it is required under the law.”

To view a PDF of this press release, click here.

Published 10/14/23 by Deseret News; Story by Hanna Seariac

Jewish groups are working to stop this new tide of antisemitism.

While Harvard Divinity School student Shabbos Kestenbaum was observing the Sabbath and celebrating the sacred holiday Sukkot, he wasn’t expecting to hear that he should reach out to any of his friends or family in Israel as soon as he could.

But Hamas had begun brutally attacking Israeli civilians as the Saturday sun rose.

As Jewish students at Harvard reached out to loved ones in Israel and at least one Israeli student was called for emergency reserve service, other students on campus were preparing a joint statement, saying Israel was “entirely responsible for all unfolding violence.”

The Harvard College Palestine Solidarity Committee issued the statement that eventually more than 30 student organizations signed. The origins of the letter and how groups decided to sign the letter are unclear. The organization’s leaders did not respond to an interview request.

Since then, some student organizations have distanced themselves from the joint statement and one student resigned from the board of a signatory organization because she said she didn’t know her organization signed until it was public.

In an Instagram post, Harvard’s Palestine Solidarity Committee said it “staunchly opposes all violence against innocent life and laments all human suffering.” This clarification came days after the organization had drawn intense public backlash.

As Hamas inflicted terror on innocent civilians, including children, Kestenbaum said it was “deeply disturbing, at best,” to see his fellow classmates sign a statement like this.

Kestenbaum told me he’s an Orthodox Jew, a two-time Bernie Sanders voter and has been sympathetic to the Palestinian cause, but he thinks what happened doesn’t have anything to do with politics. “This is a matter of humanity versus depravity,” he said.

More than 350 Harvard faculty members signed a joint letter denouncing the student organizations’ joint statement. “In the context of the unfolding events, this statement can be seen as nothing less than condoning the mass murder of civilians based only on their nationality,” faculty wrote.

Boaz Barak, Harvard computer science professor and one of the letter’s lead authors, told me he decided to write the letter after hearing Jewish and Israeli students say “they felt isolated and not supported.”

Harvard visiting scholar Rabbi David Wolpe said that he and Barak were at Hillel — Harvard’s center for Jewish students — to show the students support. There, students spoke about how they felt unsafe on campus, and Rabbi Wolpe said Barak told him he was going to write a letter and workshop it with colleagues.

Some Jewish students on campus were shocked by the student groups’ joint statement, but Kestenbaum said it’s more complicated.

“I want to say that it came as a shock and that we would have expected just sympathy or empathy as a given,” Kestenbaum said. “But looking back, I see this as an inevitable culmination of years of intellectual decay.”

As student organizations on campuses across America, from Yale to Stanford, issue statements and op-eds expressing similar sentiments to the Harvard joint statement — blaming Israelis for Hamas’ attack — they have triggered rage and denouncement. But they’ve also revealed an underbelly of antisemitism at elite colleges.

Rabbi Wolpe said he doesn’t want to “paint all campuses with the same brush,” but he said there are some schools with this issue.

“Paradoxically, the more elite the university, the more likely Jews are going to have a hard time there,” Rabbi Wolpe said. “And the Ivy Leagues, unfortunately, are some of the least hospitable.”

It’s not just one anecdote or personal opinion — data shows antisemitism is resurgent on American campuses, just as it is in the U.S. overall.

Groups like the AMCHA Initiative — “amcha” is a Hebrew word meaning “your people” — and the Brandeis Center have pointed out not only the high volume of antisemitic incidents on college campuses, but also show that some elite colleges like Harvard have the highest number of incidents.

Nearly one-third of Jewish students said they experienced or saw antisemitism on campus, according to an ADL-Hillel survey.

In April 2022, for example, a University of Illinois student who was participating in a protest organized by Students for Justice in Palestine “admitted to police that he threw a rock at students gathered on an outdoor patio at Illini Hillel.” He was charged with a hate crime, which was later dismissed after he wrote an apology letter and did service work at Boston-based Jewish organizations.

Though antisemitism has been bubbling up for a while, now “the unavoidable fact is that there is something monstrous in U.S. college campuses and on U.S. streets,” Kenneth Marcus, founder and leader of the Brandeis Center, told me.

Marcus, who has served on the U.S. Commission on Civil Rights and been a pioneer in combatting antisemitism on college campuses, talked about when some student groups at University of California Berkeley School of Law amended their bylaws to say they wouldn’t invite speakers who support Zionism.

In response to this, Marcus, a Berkeley alum, penned an op-ed arguing this bylaw had the impact of excluding Jewish people. Law school Dean Erwin Chemerinsky reportedly called the bylaw antisemitic, though he also said Marcus’ op-ed was “inflammatory.”

At the heart of the issue is the question of whether or not anti-Zionism equates to antisemitism. Everyone I interviewed said the two were not inherently the same, but statements about Israel can cross over into antisemitism.

The U.S. Department of State’s working definition of antisemitism says that criticizing Israel, like criticizing other countries, is not antisemitic, but “claiming the existence of a State of Israel is a racist endeavor” is antisemitic.

“While it is possible to object to Israel, to criticize Israel and to be angry at Israel and not be antisemitic, the antisemitism comes in when you reject the legitimacy of Israel,” Rabbi Wolpe said. “And when you are wildly disproportionate in your criticism of Israel as opposed to other places.”

Labeling someone or something as antisemitic has to be done cautiously, Rabbi Wolpe said. “Not everyone who feels sympathy for the plight of the Palestinians is antisemitic.” Where it crosses into antisemitism is when Israeli “is singled out” or “delegitimized.”

“There have been times and places where one could have been opposed to the State of Israel without being antisemitic,” Marcus said. But, nowadays, “the hatred of Israel that we’re seeing in the anti-Zionist movement is simply a continuation of the age-old hatred of the Jewish people under the guise of political discourse.”

To understand how college campuses have ended up seeing a resurgence in antisemitism, it’s important to look at historical context.

In the 1900s, universities like StanfordColumbiaRutgersHarvard and other institutions put caps on the number of Jewish students who could attend. “Quotas” for Jewish students at elite universities would last through the ’50s and ’60s depending on the school. Administrators employed stereotypes in pursuit of these quotas.

Students faced antisemitism in other ways, too. At Emory University students “were forced to repeat courses or were failed solely because they were Jewish.”

Faculty also faced antisemitism. Shelly Tenenbaum wrote about how a Clark University president would discriminate against Jewish people who were candidates for faculty positions on campus. Though universities ceased these practices over time, in recent years antisemitism has arisen in other ways on campus.

Some of the most troubling incidents come from California schools. At San Francisco State University in 2002, 400 Jewish students staged a sit-in for “Peace in the Middle East” and an eyewitness professor said these students were met with antisemitic jeers and death threats.

A University of California Irvine Jewish student endured classmates employing “threatening language and hurtful ethnic slurs” in 2004, and that same year, a Jewish student had a rock thrown toward him. He was wearing a shirt that said “Everybody loves a Jewish boy.”

In 2002, Harvard University president Larry Summers commented on rising antisemitism during a speech at Memorial Church.

“Where anti-Semitism and views that are profoundly anti-Israeli have traditionally been the primary preserve of poorly educated right-wing populists, profoundly anti-Israel views are increasingly finding support in progressive intellectual communities,” he said.

Summers cited different examples, including Israeli scholars being “forced off the board of an international literature journal,” and his last example included Harvard. He said people at Harvard and other universities “have called for the University to single out Israel among all nations as the lone country where it is inappropriate for any part of the university’s endowment to be invested.”

Summers wasn’t alone in suggesting that anti-Israel sentiment has become closely associated with antisemitism.

Demographer Gary Tobin, in a 2005 brief from the U.S. Commission on Civil Rights, said understanding “the growth of intolerance on campus” comes down to seeing “anti-Israelism and anti-Semitism as part of a combined ideology.”

Tobin clarified this does not mean there’s no legitimate way to criticize Israel. Instead he said some anti-Israeli sentiment mirrored stereotypes and “brutal and conspiratorial charges levied against Jews throughout history.”

As Yair Rosenberg has written for The Atlantic, antisemitism often rears its ugly head through conspiracy, not simply overt epithets and signage. This is one of the ways antisemitism has become so pervasive on college campuses.

When Rosenberg testified in front of the Foreign Affairs Committee of the U.S. Congress, he told them antisemitism and anti-Jewish prejudice has more to do with “adherence to a conspiracy of Jewish control” than it does with “identity or background.”

In other words, antisemitism should be understood not only as a personal prejudice, but as a belief system where one scapegoats Jewish people. And one place where Tobin saw that same sort of sentiment manifest was on campuses.

“Anti-Semitism and anti-Israelism on campus have become entwined, so that anti-Israel rhetoric draws from traditional anti-Semitic stereotypes,” Tobin explained. “The ideology of anti-Israelism transfers these stereotypes of traditional anti-Semitism onto discussions about Israel.”

In 2021, Tablet Magazine reported on survey findings that showed “more-highly educated people in the United States tend to have greater antipathy toward Jews than less-educated people do.”

Leading up to the array of student organizations releasing statements blaming Israel for Hamas’ attack on them, 2022-2023 already saw a significant jump in anti-Israel incidents on college campuses, according to the Anti-Defamation League.

One of the incidents the ADL included was Harvard’s “Apartheid Wall” — a derogatory name for Israel’s West Bank Wall — which was part of the university’s “Apartheid Week.” Kestenbaum mentioned this as one of the instances where he said he saw antisemitism on campus.

Kestenbaum emphasized that “it is important for Palestinian perspectives to be brought on campus,” but he described “Apartheid Week” as “a veiled attempt at telling Jews at Harvard that they’re not welcome on this campus.” Other Jewish students on campus have expressed discomfort at the display, calling it “painful and offensive.”

As recently as this week, according to an account published in The Forward, a Stanford University instructor was suspended after telling Jewish and Israeli students to move with their backpacks into a corner. The teacher then reportedly said, “This is what Israel does to the Palestinians.”

The instructor asked, “How many people died in the Holocaust?” After a student said 6 million, the teacher replied, “Colonizers killed more than 6 million. Israel is a colonizer,” according to The Forward.

Though antisemitism has emerged as a major issue on campuses, both Marcus and Rabbi Wolpe believe strong leadership could improve the situation. Both pointed toward President Joe Biden’s remarks on Israel as an example of strong leadership administrators could emulate.

Marcus also drew attention to former U.S. senator and current University of Florida president Ben Sasse. After last week’s attack on Israel, in an emailed letter to Jewish alums of the university, Sasse wrote:

I will not tiptoe around this simple fact: What Hamas did is evil and there is no defense for terrorism. This shouldn’t be hard. Sadly, too many people in elite academia have been so weakened by their moral confusion, that, when they see videos of raped women, hear of a beheaded baby, or learn of a grandmother murdered in her home, the first reaction of some is to ‘provide context’ and try to blame the raped women, beheaded baby, or the murdered grandmother. In other grotesque cases, they express simple support for the terrorists.

Rabbi Wolpe said he believes it’s important for university administrators to speak up against the kind of violence Hamas perpetuated against Israel, and there were two important things he wanted people to know.

“The average student is not a political actor. The average student wants to study and learn and go and have a career, and have a family,” he said. “We overweigh sometimes those who are politically outspoken and think they represent all their fellow students. And that’s just not true.”

“It’s also really important that people understand antisemitism is a real and dangerous beast that is loose in our land,” Rabbi Wolpe said. “And we have to take it seriously.”

Washington, D.C. (October 12, 2023): The Anti-Defamation League, American Jewish Committee, Louis D. Brandeis Center for Human Rights Under Law, Conference of Presidents, Hillel, and numerous others today sent a strongly worded warning to more than 500 university presidents of specific actions they must take under the law to protect Jewish and Israeli students from the fallout of today’s Students for Justice in Palestine (SJP) “National Day of Resistance” taking place on campuses across the U.S.

To read this press release in PDF form, click here.