The Jerusalem Post

Three US Jewish teens on how they are picking colleges in a post-October 7 world

- • By JOSH LANCMAN, MADDIE TEITELMAN and JOSH JURY/JTA

US Jewish high school students are looking for more than just an active Greek life or Ivy prestige when they put together a short-list of colleges to apply to. As the JTA’s Jacob Gurvis reported recently, real and perceived antisemiti­sm on campus is a big factor for many teens deciding where to spend the next four years.

The Hamas attacks of October 7 and the subsequent war have made US colleges and universiti­es hotbeds of pro-Palestinia­n and anti-Zionist activism, which critics on and off campus have said often cross the line into antisemiti­sm.

Such incidents have inspired a new set of criteria for Jews applying to colleges. Are colleges “safe spaces” for Jewish students? Do they have the critical Jewish infrastruc­ture to make students feel they are not alone? Are there policies in place to ensure a healthy learning environmen­t for all students, and do the administra­tions enforce them?

JTA asked three seniors to share with us what their college applicatio­n rollercoas­ter has been like this year.

‘I need assurance that the schools will respond with action’

Josh Jury, 18, Homewood, Illinois

One of my top college choices is George Washington University. I love the lively city campus, the prestigiou­s internatio­nal relations programs, and, especially, the school’s incredible and active chapter of Hillel. As a Jewish teen, identifyin­g colleges with a functional Hillel has been an important criterion in my college selection process.

But when I heard that the university’s library was defaced with projection­s of antisemiti­c messages in October, I felt dismayed and disturbed. Just months prior I had toured the very building that was now utilized as a canvas for hate. In my eyes, the university’s initial response and condemnati­ons weren’t strong enough to evoke comfort for a Jewish teen.

With an uptick in antisemiti­sm on college campuses, I need assurance that the schools won’t just respond with statements, but with action. Belonging to an academic environmen­t that is safe for Jewish students is a college criterion that I can’t compromise.

I soon learned that the surging antisemiti­sm on campus was not exclusive to GWU, but rather an addition to a growing list of incidents at numerous other universiti­es in which I’d shown interest or toured. This includes Tulane, where extremist protesters assaulted Jewish students, and the University of Tampa, which became the target of a federal investigat­ion due to growing antisemiti­c incidents on campus.

I’ve always imagined myself going to college directly after high school, but the soaring antisemiti­sm and the inaction of universiti­es have led me to take another path – the Aardvark Gap Year in Israel. The gap year program offers an opportunit­y for me to grow independen­t, take on internship­s aligned with my passions, and gain college credits that could be utilized once I apply to schools next fall.

This past semester I saw the impacts of studying abroad in Israel firsthand. I was

enrolled in a high school study abroad program in Israel and loved the ability to be proudly and safely Jewish in an academic space. The day the Israel-Hamas war began, my classmates and I were woken by blaring sirens and rushed to a bomb shelter. Despite the grim news from southern Israel, it was the holiday of Simhat Torah and my teachers and counselors attempted to maintain a sense of normalcy around the holiday. Seeing the country I had spent two months in now torn by war was unimaginab­le, but I found strength in my school community. I returned to the States a week into the war and in the middle of my fall semester of senior year. My dream of studying abroad in a Jewish safe space was shattered as our program was forced to an end, but the inspiratio­n that got me there remained.

When I returned to the US amid the ongoing war in Israel, I was hurt seeing some of my prospectiv­e colleges failing to combat the hatred toward Jewish students. I hope in the time of my gap year, George Washington University and others will have a better grip on antisemiti­sm and take tangible action to protect Jewish students. And even if nothing changes, at least I can rely on my time studying in a Jewish space that will give me the resources and agency to feel confident on their campuses.

‘I could not apply somewhere where I would be unsafe’

Maddie Teitelman, 17, Portland, Oregon

Growing up in a suburb outside of Portland, Oregon, I was the only Jewish student in my classes until high school. I longed for the experience my dad had growing up on the East Coast surrounded by a large Jewish community, being involved with activities at his local JCC, and dining at kosher restaurant­s with family and friends. I imagined attending Jewish Student Union meetings or dinners at Hillel. By the time school started this year, I narrowed down my list of dream schools to Columbia, NYU, and Fordham. I chose Columbia and NYU because of their relatively large Jewish student population­s and Fordham because I knew a few alumni and current students.

As soon as the war broke out in Israel, I began monitoring the websites and social media pages of “my” schools. In the following weeks, Columbia and NYU repeatedly appeared on my news feed for inaction against student groups that praised Hamas and threatened Jewish students. It was heartbreak­ing, but I removed them from my list of schools. I could not apply somewhere where I would be unsafe, and ignored by administra­tors.

By the end of December, I applied to only six colleges: four West Coast schools, Fordham, and Hampshire College in Massachuse­tts, a school where over 40% of the student body is Jewish. Finding a school with a Jewish community had always been important to me, but now it felt vital. I routinely checked the news for instances of hate on the

campuses of those six and I found no notable incidents. I also monitored the social media accounts of each school’s Chabad, Hillel, or Jewish Student Union to see how the school’s Jewish students were coming together as a community. I was relieved to find that these groups were still hosting weekly Shabbat dinners and other gatherings because it felt like a sign that the students there felt safe to be proudly Jewish.

My bubby knew I had been looking at colleges on the East Coast and told me she would be concerned about my safety if I ended up far from home. Knowing that my bubby, a proudly Jewish woman, was concerned about my safety because I’m Jewish was heartbreak­ing. I knew then that because of the rise of antisemiti­sm across the nation I needed to be sure that I’d be safe and have my family and my support system close by. Though Hampshire is not completely off my list because of the strong Jewish community, I am carefully considerin­g whether or not I am okay with being so far away from everyone I know, especially when facing antisemiti­sm.

I haven’t decided where I’ll be going next year due to FAFSA (Free Applicatio­n for Federal Student Aid) delays and March dates for admissions decisions. I still look forward to my college experience and I know there are Jewish organizati­ons on each campus. I know I will find a community of Jewish peers, even if it isn’t in the setting I originally planned.

‘My list became about the strength and resilience of the campus Jewish community’

Josh Lancman, 18, West Orange, New Jersey

Early on in junior year, I worked out a process to touring colleges:

Email the rabbi (Chabad or Hillel) ahead of time to find a Jewish student to host me for the weekend. This never failed, and usually my host and I knew at least a few people in common.

Book a tour on Friday before Shabbat. Arrive early that day and ask the tour guide (likely not Jewish) about Jewish life on campus. (“Chabad” would usually be pronounced with a “ch” as in “chat” or “h” as in “hut,” and, when asked about antisemiti­sm, the tour guide would likely respond by saying that it didn’t exist on campus, even if that wasn’t true.)

Enjoy the weekend and become part of the campus Jewish community, if only temporaril­y.

Afterrepea­tingthisaf­ewtimes,antisemiti­sm became an important considerat­ion for me when determinin­g which colleges to apply to. Touring colleges as though I was already a student there prompted me to avoid going to schools where antisemiti­sm was an active issue, and where, I felt, I would plausibly be in danger just visiting for a few days. Hearing from a friend at one small liberal arts college how students would casually talk

about hating Jews made me cross that school off. For similar reasons, other similar colleges followed.

Back in March of last year, when anti-Israel protesters at Tufts disrupted a talk by Israeli and Palestinia­n peace activists, I quickly canceled my trip to that campus. My list shrunk to colleges I deemed safe for Jews.

Yet after October 7, no place, it seemed, was completely fine. My applicatio­n list became not about safety, but about the least unsafe. Rather than a lack of antisemiti­sm, the strength and resilience of each campus’s Jewish community in the face of hatred became my main reason for applying.

Cornell University, where my cousin arranged a visit of support from New York Gov. Kathy Hochul after a threat on the Center for Jewish Living, quickly shot to the top of my list. Although antisemiti­sm appears to be still prevalent, the Jewish community remains strong, with support from non-Jewish students in several university-wide Shabbat dinners, one of which I attended back in October.

My touring procedure, at first a way to have fun, experience the social life and save some money on hotel rooms, became a way to gauge my prospectiv­e community for the next four years, seeing who I could go to when, almost inevitably, I

 ?? (David Dee Delgado/Reuters) ?? DEMONSTRAT­ORS HOLD a banner at a protest on January 19 in solidarity with pro-Palestinia­n organizers where some were allegedly attacked with chemicals on the Columbia University campus in New York City.
(David Dee Delgado/Reuters) DEMONSTRAT­ORS HOLD a banner at a protest on January 19 in solidarity with pro-Palestinia­n organizers where some were allegedly attacked with chemicals on the Columbia University campus in New York City.

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