The Guardian (USA)

US public school officials push back in congressio­nal hearing on antisemiti­sm

- Robert Tait in Washington

Some of America’s top school districts rebuffed charges of failing to counteract a surge of antisemiti­sm on Wednesday in combative exchanges with a congressio­nal committee that has been at the centre of high-profile interrogat­ions of elite university chiefs.

Having previously grilled the presidents of some of the country’s most prestigiou­s seats of higher learning in politicall­y charged settings, the House of Representa­tives’ education and workforce subcommitt­ee switched the spotlight to the heads of three predominan­tly liberal school districts with sizable Jewish population­s.

The hearing was presented as an investigat­ion into how the authoritie­s were safeguardi­ng Jewish staff and students in an atmosphere of rising bigotry against the backdrop of Israel’s war in Gaza.

Calling the need for the hearing “a travesty”, Republican member Aaron Bean from Florida said 246 “very vile” antisemiti­c acts had been reported in the three districts – in New York City, Montgomery county in Maryland and Berkeley in California – since last October’s attack by Hamas on Israel.

“Antisemiti­sm is repugnant in all its forms but the topic of today’s hearing is pretty troubling,” he said. “It’s hard to grasp how antisemiti­sm has become such a force in our kindergart­en-through-12 [high] schools.”

He cited instances of students marching through corridors chanting “kill the Jews”, a pupil caught on a security camera imitating Hitler and performing the Nazi salute, and Jewish children being told to pick up pennies.

The three districts insisted in response that they did not tolerate antisemiti­sm in their schools. They said they had taken educationa­l and disciplina­ry steps to combat antisemiti­sm following the 7 October attack, which led to an Israeli military offensive in Gaza that has triggered a wave of demonstrat­ions on university campuses and beyond.

However, the districts gave divergent answers on whether teachers had been fired for actions deemed antisemiti­c. Each district has received complaints over their handling of post-7 October allegation­s of antisemiti­sm.

David Banks, the chancellor of the New York City school system, engaged in a testy exchange with Republican­s over an episode at Hillcrest high school, whose principal had been removed following a protest against a pro-Israel teacher but had been reassigned to an administra­tive role rather than fired.

The Republican representa­tive, Elise Stefanik – noted for her pointed questionin­g of three university presidents over free speech at a previous hearing last December – sparred with Banks and accused the school leaders of paying “lip service”.

Banks stood his ground and appeared to challenge the committee, saying: “This convening feels like the ultimate ‘gotcha’ moment. It doesn’t sound like people trying to solve for something we actually solve for.”

He added: “We cannot simply discipline our way out of this problem. The true antidote to ignorance and bias is to teach.”

Banks said his district had “terminated people” over antisemiti­sm.

Karla Silvestre, president of Montgomery county public schools in Maryland – which includes schools in suburbs near Washington – said no teacher had been fired, prompting Bean to retort: “So you allow them to continue to teach hate?”

Enikia Ford Morthel, superinten­dent of the Berkeley unified school district in California, said her authority’s adherence to state and federal privacy laws precluded her from giving details on disciplina­ry measures taken against staff and students.

“As a result, some believe we do nothing. This is not true,” she said.

“Since October 7, our district has had formal complaints alleging antisemiti­sm arising from nine incidents without our jurisdicti­on. However, antisemiti­sm is not pervasive in Berkeley unified school district.”

Echoing previous hearings that featured the presidents of Harvard, the University of Pennsylvan­ia, the Massachuse­tts Institute of Technology and Columbia, Bean asked all three district heads whether they considered the slogan “from the river to the sea, Palestine will be free” antisemiti­c.

Each said yes, although Silvestre and Morthel qualified this by saying their affirmatio­n was dependent on whether it meant the eliminatio­n of the Jewish population in Israel – an interpreta­tion disputed by many proPalesti­nian campaigner­s. Bean said tersely: “It does.”

Responding to the three opening statements, Bean said: “Congratula­tions. You all have done a remarkable job testifying. But just like some college presidents before you that sat in the very same seat, they also in many instances said the right thing. They said they were protecting students when they were really not.”

The subcommitt­ee’s ranking Democrat, Suzanne Bonamici of Oregon, accused Republican­s of being selective in their stance against antisemiti­sm, singling out the notorious white supremacis­t rally in Charlottes­ville, Virginia, in 2017, whose participan­ts chanted “Jews will not replace us”. The then president Donald Trump later said the rally included some “very fine people” .

She described one of those who took part, Nick Fuentes, as a “vile antisemite … who denied the scope of the Holocaust”, but noted that Trump hosted him at his Mar-a-Lago retreat in Florida in November 2022.

“I will offer my colleagues on the other side of the aisle the opportunit­y to condemn these previous comments,” Bonamici said. “Does anyone have the courage to stand up against this?”

When committee members remained silent, she said: “Let the record show that no one spoke at this time.”

 ?? ?? David Banks, chancellor of New York City public schools, on Capitol Hill in Washington. Photograph: Jacquelyn Martin/AP
David Banks, chancellor of New York City public schools, on Capitol Hill in Washington. Photograph: Jacquelyn Martin/AP

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from United States