Los Angeles Times

Anti-Semitism, Mideast conflict, free speech collide

Revived federal complaint fuels campus dispute over criticizin­g Israel

- By Jaweed Kaleem and Teresa Watanabe jaweed.kaleem@latimes.com teresa.watanabe@latimes.com

As protests against Israel and the U.S. government’s alliance with it have roiled college campuses across the country — with demonstrat­ions in recent years shutting down speeches by pro-Israel speakers from the University of Minnesota to San Francisco State University — a few questions have repeatedly come up.

How much is Jewish identity tied to the modern nation of Israel? Is there a point at which criticism of Israel turns into hatred of Jewish people? If so, when is that line crossed? What is the difference between anti-Zionism and antiSemiti­sm?

Not surprising­ly, pro-Palestinia­n activists and pro-Israeli ones often give contrastin­g answers to the questions.

In addition to conflicts between Israelis and Palestinia­ns that have prevented peace in the Middle East, and a possible twostate solution, recent events have included the Trump administra­tion’s move of the U.S. Embassy from Tel Aviv to Jerusalem, which Palestinia­ns considered a major slight, and this week’s announceme­nt by the State Department that it has ordered Palestinia­n leadership to close its office in Washington.

The Trump administra­tion has now weighed in on the college issue, with the Department of Education’s civil rights office reopening a 2011 complaint against a New Jersey university about alleged bias against Jewish students.

In a recent letter to the Zionist Organizati­on of America, a conservati­ve group that has for years fought what it believes is widespread bias against Israel at colleges, the office said it would relaunch an investigat­ion about Rutgers that closed four years ago under the Obama administra­tion.

In the letter, the department said it would examine reports of discrimina­tion on campus against Jewish people as an ethnic group and for the first time defined what it counts as anti-Semitism.

The letter listed Holocaust denial — a widely agreed upon sign of antiJewish beliefs — alongside common pro-Palestinia­n activist refrains, such as saying that “the existence of a state of Israel is a racist endeavor.” Calling Israel racist was listed under “denying the Jewish people the right to self-determinat­ion.” Another example of anti-Semitism, according to the letter, included “applying double standards by requiring of [Israel] a behavior not expected or demanded of any other democratic nation.”

The definition, taken from the State Department and the Internatio­nal Holocaust Remembranc­e Alliance, has alarmed student activists and pro-Palestinia­n groups that fear the Trump administra­tion will launch more investigat­ions on colleges for their students and professors’ proPalesti­nian activities that criticize Israeli policies. Under Title VI of the Civil Rights Act, the department can investigat­e colleges and universiti­es that receive federal money for discrimina­tion against race, color or national origin and revoke funding.

“This is an attack on the 1st Amendment,” said Samer Alhato, a Palestinia­n American student at St. Xavier University in Chicago and member of Students for Justice in Palestine, a organizati­on behind protests criticizin­g Israel that has chapters on dozens of college campuses.

The group has supported the BDS movement — which pushes for boycotts, divestment and sanctions against companies deemed to have a role in Israeli human rights violations.

“It’s an attack on organizers and socially aware students. We’ve had many presidents who dogmatical­ly and materially support Israel with rhetoric or policies,” Alhato said. “The Trump administra­tion has taken it to another level.”

In an interview, the director and chief executive of the Anti-Defamation League took issue with the argument that the administra­tion was curtailing free speech.

“There is nothing wrong with being critical of any country,” said Jonathan Greenblatt of the ADL, which is not part of the case. “But when there are campaigns that demonize and delegitimi­ze the Jewish state, they often end up in actions that demonize and delegitimi­ze Jewish people.”

Morton Klein, the president of the New York-based Zionist Organizati­on of America, called the Department of Education’s move a “landmark decision that may bring some justice to the Jewish students who have been harassed and discrimina­ted against at many universiti­es.” His group filed the Rutgers complaint and has also filed others against Brooklyn College and and UC Irvine.

The Rutgers complaint stems from a free 2011 proPalesti­nian event where Jewish students were allegedly charged admission as a way to keep them out — an allegation disputed by the event’s organizers.

The Education Department under President Obama said it found insufficie­nt evidence to pursue the case. The Zionist group appealed in 2014 and, late last month, heard back from new leadership in the department that argued that previous lawyers who went over the case were wrong.

The letter was signed by Kenneth Marcus, the newly appointed assistant secretary for civil rights, who has long opposed pro-Palestinia­n activism. Marcus is the the former head of the of the Louis D. Brandeis Center for Human Rights Under Law, which its website says he founded in 2011 to “combat the resurgence of antiSemiti­sm in American higher education.” He held the same civil rights post in President George W. Bush’s administra­tion for two years.

The Department of Education did not reply to requests seeking an interview about the case. Klein shared a copy of the letter with The Times.

In a statement, Rutgers officials said they were not notified of the new investigat­ion but would cooperate. “There is no place for antiSemiti­sm or any form of religious intoleranc­e at Rutgers,” it said.

The fight over what constitute­s anti-Semitism has caused controvers­y across major universiti­es, including the University of Chicago, University of Michigan, Columbia University and the University of California. Many incidents have included protests attempting to block pro-Israel speakers on campus, such as a 2016 San Francisco State University speech by Jerusalem Mayor Nir Barkat. Other controvers­ies have centered on student government­s passing calls for universiti­es to divest endowments from certain companies that do business with the Israeli government. One targeted company is Caterpilla­r, whose bulldozers have been used to demolish Palestinia­n homes.

In 2016, UC regents unanimousl­y declared that anti-Semitism has “no place” on a college campus but rejected intense lobbying to call anti-Zionism a form of discrimina­tion. Instead, regents approved a report on intoleranc­e that decried only “anti-Semitic forms” of the political ideology, leaving it up for interpreta­tion which forms of Zionism are anti-Semitic and which aren’t. The move reflected the regents’ struggle to balance their desire to combat intoleranc­e with their commitment to protect free speech.

Some Israel supporters have organized to stamp out pro-Palestinia­n activities on campuses. Two years ago, casino tycoon Sheldon Adelson and others launched an effort to promote Israel on campuses and combat BDS. The Jewish Telegraphi­c Agency reports that it’s set to expand to 80 campuses in the U.S. and Canada.

A 2016 Pew Research Center poll found that 27% of millennial­s sympathize more with Palestinia­ns, up from 9% in 2006 — while their generation’s support for Israel has declined in the same period from 51% to 43%. African Americans and Latinos are supporting the Palestinia­n rights movements too, according to Pew. At the same time, the BDS movement has grown outside campuses, including in several historic Protestant church denominati­ons that manage multimilli­on-dollar investment funds.

Despite the increased support for Palestinia­n rights movements, pro-Palestinia­n activists believe the Education Department’s move will slow their groups’ growth.

“This can and will cause people to not speak out the way they want to, even on views that are becoming more common across the board,” said Rebecca Vilkomerso­n, the executive director of Jewish Voice for Peace, a left-wing group active on college campuses.

 ?? Susan Walsh Associated Press ?? KENNETH MARCUS, new civil rights official in Education Department.
Susan Walsh Associated Press KENNETH MARCUS, new civil rights official in Education Department.

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