Houston Chronicle Sunday

Demand Justice for Jewish Students

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New report shows skyrocketi­ng attacks on students’ Jewish identity—rooted in anti-Zionism, a modern disguise for classic antisemiti­sm. It’s time to fight back.

Despite rising campus attacks on Israel, most Jewish students still support the Jewish state. But antiZionis­t hatred in the classroom and public square forces many students to hide their Jewish identity. Greater enforcemen­t of Title VI anti-discrimina­tion laws promises a cure to this injustice.

What are the facts?

According to a new report by AMCHA Initiative, bullying and intimidati­on of Jewish students on university campuses tripled in the last year, while attempts to censor Zionism increased sixfold. Calls to reject Jewish identity trips to Israel increased nearly 20-fold. Reminiscen­t of Jewish persecutio­n in 1930s Nazi Germany, some 50% of U.S. Jewish students say they hide their Jewish identity, according to a 2021 poll by the Brandeis Center for Human Rights.

While discrimina­tion against most ethnic minorities is strictly censured on campus, university administra­tors have generally failed to protect Jewish students from attacks against them. Fortunatel­y, a spate of complaints recently filed with the U.S. Department of Education Office of Civil Rights (OCR) now demand redress under Title VI anti-discrimina­tion statutes. Currently, George Washington University, City University of New York, University of Vermont, University of Illinois and University of Southern California are among schools facing OCR investigat­ion for alleged antisemiti­sm violations.

Not surprising­ly, the AMCHA report implicated pro-Palestinia­n groups, such as Students for Justice in Palestine (SJP) for responsibi­lity in targeting Jewish students. Indeed, the report found that anti-Zionist groups like SJP were the largest overall contributo­rs to attacks on Jewish identity. Despite their pattern of stoking antisemiti­c hate, to date only a single chapter of SJP has been permanentl­y shut down on a U.S. campus—at New York’s private Fordham University. The ban was upheld in court.

AMCHA’s report also noted the contributi­on of nominally Jewish anti-Zionist groups and individual­s to the assault on Jewish identity. One such group is Jewish Voice for Peace (JVP), which uses its spurious Jewish identity as cover for antisemiti­sm.

Bad enough that Jewish students are targeted for persecutio­n by their peers, but even worse when university faculty support the persecutio­n. No wonder, according to AMCHA, that universiti­es with faculty who support the BDS movement were three to seven times more likely to suffer attacks on Jewish identity. In fact, AMCHA found that “twenty percent of threats to Jewish identity took place at events supported by academic faculty.” Sadly, without federal interventi­on, there’s little hope universiti­es will stop antisemiti­c attacks. Tragically, Jewish students who feel their Jewish identity is threatened can seldom rely on their schools’ harassment policies to protect them. These policies usually forbid harassment based on one’s ethnicity or religion, but in most cases, university administra­tors do not recognize hostility toward Israel and its supporters as a religious or ethnic issue.

This approach by university administra­tors ignores the definition of antisemiti­sm establishe­d by the Internatio­nal Holocaust Remembranc­e Alliance (IHRA), which is recognized worldwide and includes discrimina­tion and demonizati­on based on anti-Israel hate.

Fortunatel­y, Title VI of the Civil Rights Act of 1964 may offer powerful recourse for Jewish students under attack. Because the statute prohibits discrimina­tion based on ethnic identity, recent complaints to the OCR emphasize the integral connection between Zionism and Jews’ historic relationsh­ip to their ancestral home, the land of Israel. Indeed, Zionism is not a political opinion—it is a fundamenta­l feature of Jewish ethnic identity. Likewise, the Jews are not simply a religious group, but rather are a people who also share language, culture, ancestry and a powerful territoria­l heritage.

While violations of Title VI do not carry criminal penalties, their costs can be massive. First, recipients of federal government funding—which represents millions, even tens of millions of dollars for most universiti­es—can be refused or revoked. Second, the OCR can require that causes of violations be remedied—ensuring Jewish students will no longer suffer attacks by students or faculty for their Zionist beliefs. Third, the reputation­al damage caused by civil rights violations can wreak untold damage on university fundraisin­g and student recruitmen­t efforts.

Attacks against Jewish students represent an assault on the American social fabric and our democracy. Higher-education administra­tors should be ordered by their regents to shut down all forms of antisemiti­sm, especially in the form of discrimina­tory, demonizing anti-Zionism. Schools that fail to suppress these acts of hate should be prosecuted aggressive­ly under Title VI of the Civil Rights Act. Punishment must be costly, painful and swift. Jewish students deserve better than the current hostile environmen­t on campus. They deserve justice.

This message has been published and paid for by

Facts and Logic About the Middle East P.O. Box 3460, Berkeley, CA 94703 James Sinkinson, President Gerardo Joffe (z”l), Founder

FLAME is a tax-exempt, nonprofit 501(c)(3) organizati­on. Its purpose is the research and publicatio­n of facts regarding developmen­ts in the Middle East and exposing false propaganda that might harm the United States, Israel and other allies in the region. Your tax-deductible contributi­ons are welcome.

Antisemiti­c attacks on campus must be prosecuted

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