The Jerusalem Post

Princeton faces antisemiti­sm probe

- • By ANDREW LAPIN/JTA

While fellow Ivy League institutio­ns landed in hot water over their handling of campus antisemiti­sm since the Israel-Hamas war began six months ago, Princeton University has largely evaded the spotlight.

That changed this week, as the US Department of Education opened a Title VI investigat­ion into antisemiti­sm allegation­s at the elite New Jersey private university based on a Jewish conservati­ve activist’s complaint. The complainan­t cited reports of campus pro-Palestinia­n protesters chanting “Intifada” and “Brick by brick, wall by wall, apartheid has got to fall” a few weeks after October 7.

A Princeton spokespers­on told the student newspaper that it is “confident we are in full compliance with the requiremen­ts of Title VI.”

Princeton will now join six other Ivy League schools in having at least one Title VI investigat­ion opened since the October 7 Hamas attacks. They include Harvard University and the University of Pennsylvan­ia, whose presidents resigned following criticism of their handling of tensions around the war and a December congressio­nal hearing at which they both testified. An investigat­ion can compel a university to make changes to protect its Jewish students.

Only one Ivy League school, Dartmouth College, has so far evaded an investigat­ion; Education Department officials and others have praised it for what they say has been a positive handling of its campus climate around Israel. Education Secretary Miguel Cardona told the Jewish Telegraphi­c Agency this year that the school has “a culture and a climate on campus that is willing to engage in problem-solving when conflicts arise.”

In total, the department’s Office of Civil Rights has opened more than 90 Title VI “shared ancestry” investigat­ions since October 7, a significan­t portion of which relate to the war in some way.

Princeton was also not the only new name on the growing list: Last week, Lehigh University

in Pennsylvan­ia was also made the subject of a Title VI antisemiti­sm investigat­ion following a complaint filed by the pro-Israel group StandWithU­s Center for Legal Justice. And Youngstown State University in Ohio is also subject to a new antisemiti­sm investigat­ion initiated by Zachary Marschall, editor of the conservati­ve website Campus Reform who is one of the most prolific recent filers of Title VI complaints.

Marschall also filed the complaint that yielded the Princeton investigat­ion, a fact that the university spokespers­on noted to the student newspaper.

“Based on the complainan­t’s published descriptio­n of the complaint, we know that he is not a member of the university community and that his complaint appears to be premised on chants at protests,” the spokespers­on said.

Some of Princeton’s Jewish leaders also criticized the investigat­ion, saying that they were not consulted by Marschall. They dispute his characteri­zation of the school as a hotbed

of antisemiti­sm.

“My read on the campus climate at Princeton, however, is that such a climate of hostility has not taken over the campus in the way it has at other universiti­es,” Rabbi Gil Steinlauf, director of the university’s Center for Jewish Life, told the Daily Princetoni­an student newspaper. “A majority of Jewish students have reported to me that they do not feel that Princeton is an antisemiti­c place.”

In October, Princeton was also the site of a rare apology issued by a pro-Israel group related to an accusation of antisemiti­sm. The director of Alums for Campus Fairness (ACF), which hires message-laden trucks and pays for ad blitzes targeting universiti­es the group believes haven’t protected Jewish students, quietly apologized to a Princeton dean for accusing her of enabling antisemiti­sm. The dean had in fact already condemned Hamas in the days after October 7.

According to the Daily Princetoni­an, the dean of the School of Public and Internatio­nal

Affairs had attempted to push ACF director Avi Gordon to issue a public apology and retraction as well, calling his tactics “irresponsi­ble.” Gordon did not do so.

Youngstown State’s investigat­ion, according to Marschall, relates to a YouTube interview his staff conducted with the student head of the school’s Students for Justice in Palestine chapter. During the interview, the Campus Reform employee asked the student to condemn Hamas; she did not, adding, “Why should I condemn anything?”

A representa­tive for that university did not immediatel­y return a JTA request for comment. Based on a survey of all available documentat­ion related to past Title VI antisemiti­sm investigat­ions, one mounted solely on the basis of a conservati­ve media YouTube interview with a student would be unusual.

The University of Michigan, which had a Title VI complaint related to antisemiti­sm opened against it in February, was the subject of a second one this week, as well, though its origins could not be determined by press time. A university spokespers­on did not return a request for comment. A small number of schools have had multiple discrimina­tion investigat­ions opened against them at once.

A fourth complaint of unknown origin was also opened this week at the School District of Philadelph­ia, which declined to comment. Several large urban public school districts, including in New York, Chicago, Oakland and Montgomery County, Maryland, have had antisemiti­sm-related investigat­ions opened since October 7.

 ?? (Dominick Reuter/Reuters) ?? STUDENTS WALK in front of Princeton University’s Nassau Hall in Princeton, New Jersey.
(Dominick Reuter/Reuters) STUDENTS WALK in front of Princeton University’s Nassau Hall in Princeton, New Jersey.

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