San Antonio Express-News (Sunday)

Ivy League schools face antisemiti­sm, Islamophob­ia probes

- By Collin Binkley

WASHINGTON — The federal government has opened civil rights investigat­ions into seven schools and universiti­es over allegation­s of antisemiti­sm or Islamophob­ia since the outbreak of the Israel-Hamas war.

The list includes three Ivy League institutio­ns — Columbia, Cornell and the University of Pennsylvan­ia — along with Wellesley College in Massachuse­tts, Lafayette College in Pennsylvan­ia and Cooper Union for the Advancemen­t of Science and Art in New York. It also includes one K-12 system, the Maize Unified School District in Kansas.

The Education Department announced the inquiries on Thursday, calling it part of the Biden administra­tion’s effort to take “aggressive action” against discrimina­tion. Schools found to have violated civil rights law can face penalties up to a total loss of federal money, although the vast majority of cases end in voluntary settlement­s.

Schools have a legal duty to act “when students are targeted because they are — or are perceived to be — Jewish, Muslim, Arab, Sikh or any other ethnicity or shared ancestry,” Education Secretary Miguel Cardona said in a written statement.

Five of the investigat­ions are in response to allegation­s of antisemiti­c harassment, while two are in response to allegation­s of antiMuslim harassment, the department said. The agency did not disclose which schools faced which accusation­s. Details were not released.

Penn and Wellesley were accused of antisemiti­sm in federal complaints filed last week by the Brandeis Center, a Jewish legal advocacy group.

In a Nov. 9 letter to the Education Department, the center says Penn professors have made antisemiti­c statements in class and on social media. It said many Jewish students are afraid to be on campus during pro-Palestinia­n rallies, and that the university has done little to support them.

Penn officials said they’re cooperatin­g with the investigat­ion.

University President Liz Magill “has made clear antisemiti­sm is vile and pernicious and has no place at Penn,” the school said. “The university will continue to vigilantly combat antisemiti­sm and all forms of hate.”

A separate letter from the Brandeis Center said Wellesley has failed to address antisemiti­sm. It cites an email some dorm advisers sent to residents saying “there should be no space, no considerat­ion, and no support for Zionism” at Wellesley. Advisers later apologized for the message.

Wellesley, a private women’s college, said the federal investigat­ion is in response to the Brandeis complaint. A statement from Wellesley denied any wrongdoing, saying it “responded quickly and decisively” to the incident.

The complaint against Lafayette alleges the school failed to respond to antisemiti­c harassment, according to a campus message from the university’s president, Nicole Hurd. She said someone raised a poster with antisemiti­c language during a demonstrat­ion but it was “quickly addressed.”

The schools are being investigat­ed for possible discrimina­tion based on shared ancestry or ethnic characteri­stics, which violates the Civil Rights Act of 1964. The federal law requires schools to protect students from discrimina­tion and respond to harassment that creates a hostile environmen­t. Anyone can file a complaint alleging such discrimina­tion.

Emotions over the IsraelHama­s war have been running high on many campuses around the U.S. At Columbia, for one, tensions have been escalating amid dueling demonstrat­ions by proIsrael activists and by Palestinia­n students and their allies.

At Cornell, a student was arrested last month after posting threatenin­g statements against Jewish people. Some Jewish students at Cooper Union say the school failed to protect them during an October pro-Palestine demonstrat­ion that left Jewish students sheltering in a campus library.

Palestinia­n and Muslim students have also reported increased harassment on campuses across the country. At Columbia, students protested this week after the school suspended two proPalesti­nian groups that have come under scrutiny on U.S. campuses.

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