The Jewish Chronicle

Report reveals widespread university antisemiti­sm

● CST investigat­ion is evidence of a ‘culture problem’ on campuses, says Lord John Mann

- BY LEE HARPIN POLITICAL EDITOR

► A NEW investigat­ion by the Community Security Trust has detailed widespread antisemiti­sm at British universiti­es.

A report by CST said that over the past two academic years there had been 123 antisemiti­c incidents perpetrate­d by students, academic staff, union officials and student society officers.

Thirty-nine university antisemiti­c incidents recorded by CST took place on campus, 33 took place off campus and 51 were online. CST recorded four instances of assault, seven in the category of damage and desecratio­n to Jewish property; five in the category of threats; and 107 incidents of abusive behaviour.

Fifteen of the incidents in the report were perpetrate­d by staff, including four at the University of Warwick, two at the University of Leeds and two at the University of Nottingham.

Nine university incidents were perpetrate­d by student union officers or were related to society members and events.

The responses of some universiti­es to complaints of antisemiti­sm were found by CST to be inconsiste­nt and, in the worst cases, increased the harm felt by Jewish students.

In one example, a Jewish student at the University­of Warwick was subjected to a disciplina­ry complaint by academic staff after he reported that a lecturer had made an antisemiti­c comment in a lecture. The complaint against the student was later dropped with no action taken.

CST Chief Executive Mark Gardner said: “University should be an excellent experience for young people, but CST’s detailed study shows that antisemiti­sm is a real problem for some Jewish students, mostly involving racism and ignorance from other young people, either verbally or via social media.

“The most serious cases occur where

Fifteen of the incidents were perpetrate­d by staff

universiti­es deny their students adequate protection, either from visiting hate speakers, or from their own politicall­y-biased academics pushing conspiracy theories, including about British Jews, antisemiti­sm and the Labour Party.”

Union of Jewish Students President James Harris said: “Amidst rising antisemiti­sm on campus over the last two academic years, it is evident that certain universiti­es have woefully disregarde­d their duty of care to Jewish students.”

CST recorded a total of 58 university antisemiti­c incidents in the 2018/2019 academic year and 65 university incidents in the 2019/2020 academic year.

This is a significan­t increase in incident totals – but it also reflects a sustained drive by CST’s campus team to encourage students to report antisemiti­c incidents.

“Jewish students are being failed by many universiti­es,” said Bradley Langer, Campaigns Officer for UJS.

“When antisemiti­sm does arise, students need to feel protected by their universiti­es, with proper investigat­ion launched and action taken. As this report shows, this is not currently the case at every university.”

Detailing incidents involving university staff, ‘Campus Antisemiti­sm in Britain 2018-2020’ features a case in which CST received a report from a Birmingham University student regarding a guest lecture in the Liberal Arts and Natural Sciences course.

The student reported that after asking who in the class was Jewish, the guest lecturer claimed that the Holocaust was very Jewish focused and that it should not be since other people were killed too.

A formal complaint was never made to the university, but it was informally reported to the course leader, who was in attendance at the lecture and who, according to the student, agreed to back their claims if a complaint was made.

The report also details how in November 2019, a Jewish student contacted CST about a lecture on Israel and Palestine by Goldie Osuri, an Associate Professor of Sociology at the University of Warwick.

According to the student, the lecturer told the students ,“the next time they say that the Labour Party is antisemiti­c, you know there are some people that are possibly antisemiti­c, but this idea that the Labour Party is antisemiti­c is very much an Israeli lobby kind of idea...”

In September, however, the university said that there were “insufficie­nt grounds” to progress a complaint against Ms Osuri over the statement.

The report stresses that for the majority of the estimated 8,500 Jewish students, with 67 Jewish societies in operation across campuses, there will not be any experience of antisemiti­sm during their time at university. But the C ST study suggests“anti semitism occurs frequently enough that it can sometimes present a significan­t challenge.”

The locations where C ST recorded five or more university anti semi tic incidents in the past two academic years were Coventry (14 incidents ,13 of which took place at the University of Warwick), Birmingham (13), Leeds (11), Nottingham (nine), Bristol (seven) and Leicester (five). Apart from Coventry and Leicester, these are the locations of the universiti­es with the largest Jewish student population­s.

While there were no incidents of extreme violence over the past two academic years, the report recorded four instances of assault, one each in Birmingham, Bristol, Leeds and Manchester.

The CST calls for universiti­es to adopt the IHRA definition of antisemiti­sm to ensure that there is a common, accepted and practical standard with which to measure antisemiti­sm and assess complaints. They also say universiti­es should allow third party organisati­ons such as CST or the UJS to submit complaints regarding anti semitism on behalf of students. This is common practice in reporting hate crime to police or other bodies.

Lord Mann, the government’ s adviser on antisemiti­sm, said: “All students should have the right to be who they want to be on campus. That is as true for Jewish students as anyone else. Those rights must not be dictated by fellow students, academic staff, students’ union officials, or others. CST’s report evidences a clear problem in university culture, and a lack of protection for Jewish students. I welcome CST’s recommenda­tions and expect all higher and further education institutio­ns to adopt the IH RA definition of anti semitism, as a statement of their values and a commitment to tackling antisemiti­sm.”

All students should have the right to be who they want to be’

 ?? PHOTO: WARWICK UNIVERSITY ?? Incidents: Warwick University
PHOTO: WARWICK UNIVERSITY Incidents: Warwick University

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