The Bergen Record

Rutgers faces suit over ‘hostile’ situation

Bergen student cites antisemiti­sm at New Brunswick campus

- Deena Yellin NorthJerse­y.com Email: yellin@northjerse­y.com

A Jewish student from Bergen County has sued Rutgers University, alleging she was harassed in her dorm after she attended a pro-Israel event.

Rebecca “Rivka” Schafer, 19, said she suffered other instances of antisemiti­sm at Rutgers’ New Brunswick campus, where students set up an encampment in recent weeks to protest the military campaign in Gaza and the university’s ties to Israel.

The suit, filed Thursday in state Superior Court, seeks unspecifie­d monetary damages from Rutgers, which Schafer accuses of discrimina­tion and allowing a hostile environmen­t against Jewish students to fester.

“For years, Rutgers’ Jewish students have reported incidents and concerns to Rutgers; yet Rutgers continues to tolerate faculty members, guest speakers, groups, students and student organizati­ons that legitimize or endorse antisemiti­c expression and actions,” the lawsuit says.

According to the suit, Rivka was targeted by fellow students after she went to an event intended to rally support for Israel this spring. That came amid a nonbinding student referendum on whether Rutgers should divest its endowment from companies with ties to “the government of Israel’s human rights violations.”

Two days later, on March 28, Rivka found fliers with her photo posted throughout her dormitory, the lawsuit says. The picture was accompanie­d by the messages “Free Palestine” and “Free Gaza” and urged students to vote in favor of the Rutgers boycott, divestment and sanctions (BDS) student referendum proposal.

“The message to Rivka and her peers was clear,” the suit says. “Don’t support Israel, we know where you sleep.”

The goal was to “harass, intimidate and bully Jewish students, to create a hostile school environmen­t for Jewish students and to suppress the vote of Jewish students, including Schafer,” the complaint says.

The suit faults Rutgers President Jonathan Holloway for allowing the divestment vote to go forward. Holloway was warned by Jewish students that it would stoke antisemiti­sm, the lawsuit says.

It cites another incident that allegedly occurred a week after the Oct. 7 Hamas attack on Israel, in which 1,200 people were killed and another 250 taken hostage. At a meeting in the dorm, another student “expressed appreciati­on that there was a large death toll in Israel.” The comment earned appreciati­ve snaps from other participan­ts, who were “extremely aggressive” in their commentary about Israel, the lawsuit says.

“As a result of this conduct by her fellow dorm residents, Schafer left the meeting scared and shaking,” it says.

In an email Thursday, Rutgers spokeswoma­n Dory Devlin said the university doesn’t comment on pending litigation. But she pointed to a statement last week in which the school noted that two students had been charged with harassment for “the unauthoriz­ed use of a student’s image on posters placed in their residence hall.”

“At Rutgers we abhor antisemiti­sm and all forms of intoleranc­e based on religion, national origin, race, ethnicity, gender, sexual orientatio­n, ability, or political views,” Devlin added in Thursday’s statement. “When bias incidents are reported, we investigat­e them fully and take appropriat­e action, including working with local, state, and federal law enforcemen­t agencies when situations warrant to pursue thorough investigat­ions and ensure the safety of Rutgers community members.”

Rutgers has already come under fire for its decision to negotiate with student protesters, which the school says led to a peaceful end to the encampment but which critics called capitulati­on. Holloway this week was called to appear before a U.S. House Committee investigat­ing antisemiti­sm on campuses. He is scheduled to testify on May 23. On Thursday, two New Jersey congressme­n also questioned whether the school has acted too slowly to address the concerns of Jewish students. U.S. Reps. Donald Norcross and Josh Gottheimer, both Democrats, released a letter to the university demanding more informatio­n on how Rutgers responded to requests by a group of Jewish community members in December to improve safety. They contrasted that with Rutgers’ agreement with campus protesters last week.

“We fear that Rutgers appears to have incentiviz­ed people to act in a lawless and threatenin­g manner by appeasing the demands of violent and hateful agitators while ignoring an analogous set of requests made peacefully to the university” by another group, the congressme­n said.

Schafer’s lawsuit says that during the encampment on May 2, the freshman was taunted by other students, who said, “Hitler would have loved you.” And on May 3, it alleges, Rutgers prevented Rivka and other Jewish students from hosting an end-of-the-year barbecue on campus while allowing the encampment­s to continue.

This is not the first time a Jewish Rutgers student is suing the university over antisemiti­sm. In January, Rutgers law student Yoel Ackerman brought a lawsuit saying he had been subjected to discrimina­tion due to antisemiti­sm and that school leaders failed to protect him.

 ?? ANNE-MARIE CARUSO/NORTHJERSE­Y.COM ?? A pro-Palestinia­n encampment at Rutgers University in New Brunswick that began on April 29 was dispersing on May 2 after campus officials ordered the students to clear out. One organizer told protesters they secured several “wins” after meeting with school officials. Rutgers police were on site, but were a distance from the encampment.
ANNE-MARIE CARUSO/NORTHJERSE­Y.COM A pro-Palestinia­n encampment at Rutgers University in New Brunswick that began on April 29 was dispersing on May 2 after campus officials ordered the students to clear out. One organizer told protesters they secured several “wins” after meeting with school officials. Rutgers police were on site, but were a distance from the encampment.

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