East Bay Times

Mt. Eden High still struggling from fallout

`There has been no apology or remorse,' senior Ruchita Verma says of teacher's texts in class

- By Elissa Miolene emiolene@bayareanew­sgroup.com

Three months after Mount Eden High School was rocked by allegation­s of a teacher using antisemiti­sm texts in the classroom, the Hayward school district board has hired a consultant to repair the damage — a move that some students and teachers feel is too little, too late.

“There has been no apology or remorse,” said Ruchita Verma, a senior at Mount Eden who was one of the first to sound the alarm on English teacher Henry Bens late last year. “And no accountabi­lity for letting any of this happen.”

It took two months for Mount Eden and the Hayward Unified School District to take action against Bens, who was placed on administra­tive leave in midFebruar­y. Though the district and school are working with the Anti-Defamation League to provide workshops for students affected by Bens' antisemiti­c lessons, the initial delay in addressing the problem has driven a wedge among students, teachers and staff — and contribute­d to a larger trend across the country.

In a study released Thursday, the Anti-Defamation League found that antisemiti­c incidents in Northern California have jumped by 137% from 2021 to 2022, and that 327 incidents were recorded in the state overall.

In San Francisco, a Jewish man was attacked by someone who yelled antisemiti­c slurs while beating him with a skateboard. In Folsom, garage doors and cars were marked with graffiti, including those that read “Go Trump Heil Hitler.” And in Berkeley, swastikas were etched into cars — including the car of a person whose parents were Holocaust survivors.

Those incidents, among others, made California home to the second-highest number of antisemiti­c events — including harassment, vandalism and assault — behind only New York, which counted 580, the ADL report said.

“It's a stark reminder that antisemiti­sm is a clear, present and growing danger in our country,” said Teresa Drenick, the deputy regional director of the Central Pacific region at the Anti-Defamation League.

In the weeks following Bens' removal, Verma had coordinate­d with dozens of her classmates to organize an “antisemiti­sm awareness” week on campus that would have included talks about Jewish culture and would have offered research on Jewish history.

But without administra­tion buy-in — and a curriculum carefully coordinate­d by experts — administra­tors canceled the student-led event late last week.

Michael Bazeley, the public informatio­n officer at the district, said that they needed to make sure “the activities were geared toward healing instead of doing more harm.”

Instead, Bazeley said Thursday that in addition to the ADL-led workshops next week, the school will offer activities around National Holocaust Remembranc­e Day in mid-April, including bringing a Holocaust survivor to speak on campus, taking a cultural field trip to learn more about Jewish culture and offering counseling resources for Jewish students and staff.

The district also is forming a “climate team” to improve the environmen­t across Mount Eden.

Also Thursday, an email from the school district was sent to Mount Eden High students and staff that said the document Bens used in the classroom, The Hidden Tyranny, was inconsiste­nt with the state's education code and board policies.

“We are hopeful that — in the weeks ahead — everybody will come together to bring antisemiti­sm awareness and Holocaust education to Mt. Eden High School,” said Drenick. “And that the students and teachers who have been working so very hard to bring awareness to the community are appreciate­d and lauded for the work that they've been dedicated to.”

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