The Jewish Chronicle

Students shun Scots campuses

‘Toxic’ atmosphere over Mid-east leads students to curtail their degrees

- BY MARCUS DYSCH

ANTI-ISRAEL INCIDENTS at Scottish universiti­es have contribute­d to Jewish students quitting their courses in despair, it was claimed this week.

Attacks have created a “toxic atmosphere” in which Jewish students no longer feel comfortabl­e, a delegation of community representa­tives told senior Edinburgh University officials.

Among those who felt the need to leave was a former Edinburgh Jewish Society chair who dropped out of his course to study abroad, partly because of the fall-out from an incident in which Ishmael Khaldi, the Israeli Foreign Ministry’s most senior Muslim diplomat, was mobbed as he spoke at the university in February last year.

That incident also allegedly affected a Jewish postgradua­te student so severely that she was forced to seek an extension for her dissertati­on before cancelling an option to continue studying in Scotland. She also left for a different course elsewhere in Europe.

In the most recent incident at Edinburgh, in October, an address by Israeli ambassador Daniel Taub was disrupted by chanting students waving Palestinia­n flags.

The JC understand­s that the stress of responding to anti-Israel attacks and campaigns has divided the university’s JSoc, with some members so apprehensi­ve about the issue that a separate group has now been formed solely to handle matters relating to Israel.

One source said JSoc had been “decimated by these events” with Jewish students left “arguing with each other” and “scared” to defend Israel on campus.

The claims emerged after representa­tives of the Jewish community met university officers last week to discuss their concerns.

Members of Scottish Jewish Student Chaplaincy and the Scottish Council of Jewish Communitie­s told the university bosses that Jewish students had felt it necessary to “hide their Jewish identity due to the hostile atmosphere at Edinburgh” and were now seeking “secure and safe” space on campus.

SCoJeC also reported a rise in the number of enquiries from parents and potential students in the US and Europe about the safety of Jewish stu- dents at Scottish universiti­es. In the past three years, the number of queries about campus antisemiti­sm had risen five-fold, SCoJeC said.

The delegation claimed the university was “failing in its duty of care” to Jewish students and had given “free licence” for disruptive groups to “repeat their abusive behaviour”.

While other academic institutio­ns had taken on board the community’s concerns, Edinburgh had shown no urgency to tackle the problem, the group claimed.

“The university needs to be aware of the internatio­nal damage that is being done not only to Edinburgh’s reputation, but also to that of other Scottish universiti­es and to the wider nation,” a community spokesman said.

An Edinburgh University spokesman said: “We welcomed the opportunit­y to meet those who had raised concerns about this matter. We work closely and collaborat­ively with students to foster good relations and we want all of our students to feel safe and supported.”

Following the Khaldi incident last year, the university attempted to restore calm by inviting JSoc members to a discussion with members of the Students for Justice in Palestine group, which operates on the campus.

Students at University College London’s students’ union are due to vote from today in a referendum on whether to “condemn the inhumane situation in Gaza”. The proposed motion calls on the university to ban products from Israeli settlement­s and to avoid “complicity in any way with the occupation of Palestine”.

Birmingham University’s Guild of Students confirmed it is investigat­ing a complaint received after an anti-Israel demonstrat­ion by students last week. It is claimed a number of Guild officers took part in the rally, possibly breaching the organisati­on’s own rules on officer impartiali­ty.

 ??  ?? Diplomat Ishmael Khaldi, centre in blue shirt, at his disrupted Edinburgh University address last February
Diplomat Ishmael Khaldi, centre in blue shirt, at his disrupted Edinburgh University address last February

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