The Jerusalem Post

Trump announces executive order to fight antisemiti­sm

- • By OMRI NAHMIAS in Washington and MAAYAN HOFFMAN

US President Donald Trump announced the signing of an executive order on Wednesday that calls on government department­s enforcing Title VI of the Civil Rights Act of 1964 to adopt the Internatio­nal Holocaust Remembranc­e Alliance (IHRA) definition of antisemiti­sm.

Specifical­ly, the order is aimed at federally funded universiti­es and colleges, and will require the Department of Education, when reviewing whether there has been a violation of Title VI, to consider this widely accepted definition of antisemiti­sm as part of its assessment of whether an incident or activity may be antisemiti­c. As such, according to an explanatio­n of the order provided by the Anti-Defamation League, criticism of Israel could be considered antisemiti­c if it becomes “intentiona­l,

unlawful, discrimina­tory intimidati­on and harassment against Jews.”

The IHRA defines antisemiti­sm as “a certain perception of Jews, which may be expressed as hatred toward Jews. Rhetorical and physical manifestat­ions of antisemiti­sm are directed toward Jewish or non-Jewish individual­s and/ or their property, toward Jewish community institutio­ns and religious facilities.”

Title VI prohibits discrimina­tion on the basis of race, color or national origin in programs and activities receiving federal financial assistance. The department could cut federal funding for institutio­ns that fail to remedy

antisemiti­c incidents that fall under the title.

A senior administra­tion official told The Jerusalem Post on Tuesday that antisemiti­sm on campuses is often hidden in an anti-Israel agenda. If campuses that receive money from the government adopt the IHRA definition of antisemiti­sm in cases of discrimina­tion, students who will feel that they are being bullied on college campuses would be able to complain to their institutio­n’s administra­tion, who would then need to decide if the incident is considered antisemiti­c.

“We began to focus on this issue in the late winter/spring of this year when we were alarmed, frankly, at a rise in antisemiti­c rhetoric, including unfortunat­ely from leading political figures,” the official said. “We looked at the data, and we saw that there’d been a rise in antisemiti­c incidents, and we began a policy process to figure out physically what we could do on the subject.”

A second official explained to the Post that the policy of the executive branch is to enforce Title VI in order to prohibit discrimina­tion rooted in antisemiti­sm “as vigorously as against all other forms of discrimina­tion,” noting that this will be language used in the order.

For many years, the Department of Education has said that Title VI is meant to protect students of all religions: Christians, Muslims, Jews, Sikhs, Buddhists and others.

The majority of the Jewish community celebrated Trump’s announceme­nt.

Republican Jewish Coalition national chairman Norm Coleman, a former senator, called the move “truly historic” and said that “President Trump has extended to Jewish students very strong, meaningful legal protection from antisemiti­c discrimina­tion.”

Coleman added that Trump is not only the most pro-Israel president in American history, but with this order, “President Trump has shown himself to be the most pro-Jewish president, as well.”

Danny Danon, Israel’s ambassador to the United Nations, said, “This is the right move in the fight to tackle antisemiti­sm head-on.

“In the face of hatred, one must not remain silent, but respond strongly,” Danon continued. “This will target the BDS [Boycott, Divestment and Sanctions movement] that has grown in recent years. If academic institutio­ns do not act against this antisemiti­c movement, they will pay a heavy price.”

According to the American Jewish Committee’s most recent survey on antisemiti­sm in the US, nearly half of Jewish young people between the ages of 18 and 29 have been victims of antisemiti­c acts over the past five years. More than onethird said they had experience­d antisemiti­sm on an American college campus themselves or know someone who has.

“To date, though, responses to antisemiti­sm on many campuses have often fallen short, leaving Jewish students vulnerable,” the AJC said in a statement. “Existing federal policy has not been fully enforced and today’s order merely gives Jews what other groups have long enjoyed – the right not to be subject to a hostile environmen­t on campus. There is nothing inconsiste­nt with protecting freedom of expression and providing Jews the same protection­s accorded other minorities.”

THE ADL, too, said that “in a climate of rising antisemiti­sm, this executive order provides valuable guidance on antisemiti­sm, giving law enforcemen­t and campus officials an important additional tool to help identify and fight this pernicious hate.

“It also reaffirms protection of Jews under Title VI without infringing on First Amendment rights,” the ADL statement continued. “These are all important steps forward.”

The Orthodox Union applauded the order and said it hopes that now “those who seek to use our academic institutio­ns as places to stoke anti-Jewish sentiment are now on notice: There will be consequenc­es for their racism.”

Foreign Minister Israel Katz urged “more countries to adopt similar measures.”

Christian supporters of Israel and Trump also praised the order.

The leadership of Christians United for Israel put out a lengthy statement and noted that “one cannot defeat that which they are unwilling to define.” The organizati­on thanked both Trump and his son-in-law, and special adviser, Jared Kushner for their “tireless efforts to shepherd this order forward.”

Dr. Mike Evans, a member of the president’s faith advisory team, explained that the core issue in the Palestinia­n peace process and in Iran’s “terror obsession” with Israel is antisemiti­sm, which he said is “also very much alive in America.”

“Jews in Israel are not killed over land; they are killed because they are Jews,” Evans stressed.

But not all Jewish organizati­ons or activists celebrated the announceme­nt.

Jewish Democratic Council of America executive director Halie Soifer instead attacked the president and said “he is partially responsibl­e” for the rise in antisemiti­sm in American, and therefore “just three days after President Trump characteri­zed Jews as money-hungry ‘killers,’ President Trump has zero credibilit­y to take meaningful action to combat the scourge of antisemiti­sm.”

Soifer said that “if President Trump truly wanted to combat antisemiti­sm, he would accept responsibi­lity for his role in perpetuati­ng antisemiti­c conspiracy theories and emboldenin­g white nationalis­m.”

“We said it before and we’ll say it again – Donald Trump is the biggest threat to American Jews,” she continued.

Taking the criticism one step further, J Street’s president, Jeremy Ben-Ami, added: “This executive order, like the stalled congressio­nal legislatio­n it is based on, appears designed less to combat antisemiti­sm than to have a chilling effect on free speech and to crack down on campus critics of Israel.”

He explained that the expert who drafted the definition of antisemiti­sm that is being adopted by this executive order, Kenneth S. Stern, has opposed its applicatio­n on college campuses. Stern wrote in a New York Times op-ed that “if this bill becomes law… students and faculty members will be scared into silence, and administra­tors will err on the side of suppressin­g or censuring speech.” •

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