By: Eli Verschleiser
What is it about Brooklyn College that makes it such a hotbed of anti-Zionism and flashpoint in the political war against Israel?
What is it about Brooklyn College that makes it such a hotbed of anti-Zionism and flashpoint in the political war against Israel?
This “middle-class Ivy League”
school in Midwood, where my parents and wife Dr. Shani Verschleiser attended,
is part of the City University of New York system and has high populations of
Jews and Muslims, but so do other schools. We don’t seem to hear nearly as much
about the activities of Students for Justice in Palestine and other groups
devoted to the destruction of Israel as we know it at big city public or
private colleges as much as we do at Brooklyn. In the New York area, it
particularly stands out.
Per the conservative Los
Angeles-based David Horowitz Freedom Center, which tracks campus anti-Israel
activity, Brooklyn College is one of the top 10 schools in the nation for
anti-Israel activity, alongside such peers as San Diego State, University of California
at Irvine, Vassar College and the University of Tennessee at Knoxville.
According to the center’s website,
stopthejewhatredoncampus.org, Brooklyn College “is home to one of the most
active and extreme SJP chapters in the nation. Brooklyn College SJP has posted
articles and videos online defending terrorism including an advertisement
titled “The Third Intifada” on its Facebook page.” Antics have included a
“die-in” to dramatize Palestinian victims, trampling on Israeli flags and
mock-up military checkpoints to illustrated West Bank life for Arabs.
The campus is a battleground for
the insidious Boycott, Divestment and Sanctions movement. According to Amcha
Initiative, another group that rose from outrage over the demonization of
Israel on our college campuses, last year, more than 300 incidents of
anti-Semitism occurred at 109 schools in 28 states.
SJP and other anti-Zionist student
groups are a major source of anti-Semitic rhetoric and behavior at many
schools.” The Israel on Campus Coalition (ICC) counted 649 anti-Israel events
at colleges in the U.S.
This shows how we are losing the
battle of social media which allows today's youth to be educated with lies and
deception. Israel and Jewish organizations are doing a lot to provide Jewish
students with balanced information, including free Birthright Israel trips.
They must continue their efforts and do more to show Israel’s hard work to make
peace, its contributions to the world and the stubbornness of the Palestinians
in resisting productive talks.
Several high-profile Israel-bashing
events, some coordinated with faculty, have been held at the campus. And four
Jewish students recently fought a long battle for justice after they were
inexplicably thrown out of a SJP event in February 2013, simply for holding
pro-Israel fact sheets they had yet to distribute. It took just over a year and
the assistance of the The Louis D. Brandeis Center for Human Rights Under Law
before President Karen Gould apologized to the students, acknowledging that a
college official violated the students’ civil rights by ejecting them. The
college then added insult to injury by incorrectly telling the press the
students had been disruptive to defend his actions.
But things haven’t improved much in
the interim. In February of this year, a group of rowdy protestors stormed into
a Faculty Council meeting and started chanting anti-Zionist nonsense at the
professors. The meeting had to be adjourned, and The Jewish Week reported that
some felt threatened by the incident.
This is not to say that students
shouldn’t be free to voice criticism of Israel under their First Amendment
rights. No country is perfect, and people are entitled to opinions even if they
are misinformed or biased.
But increasingly anti-Zionist
protestors all over North America have tried to silence and intimidate the
other side, disrupting events, shouting down speakers, targeting students in
their dorms with “eviction notices” and striving to make it difficult to
express pride in the Jewish state (which, last time I checked, was also
protected by the Constitution.)
A recent survey by the Cohen Center at Brandeis University found one quarter of North American
Jewish students "describe hostility toward Israel on campus by their peers
as a 'fairly' or 'very big' problem".
The Zionist Organization of America
and the Brandeis Center for Human Rights have been advising Jewish students
about their rights and how to protect them from infringement, whether it’s from
peers or misguided or overzealous college administrators, faculty or security
guards.
This atmosphere of bias and
intimidation is especially poignant at a time when colleges are increasingly
going on about trigger warnings, safe spaces and open bathrooms to ensure that
no one’s feelings are hurt, and that counseling is available if they are.
Aren’t Israel supporters entitled
to the same protection and concern?
There may be no easy answer as to
why Brooklyn College has become such a battleground. Maybe the situation just
builds on itself.
Fortunately, the college has a
top-notch Hillel organization with ample facilities just off campus for
pro-Israel students to safely and comfortably hold their events. There is no
shortage of pro-Israel organizations and activities run by proud and tough
Jews, including a sizable share of Israelis, who aren’t going anywhere and
aren’t about to hide their blue and white flags for anyone.
The Hillel director, Nadya Drucker,
her staff and board work closely with the administration to share concerns.
Hopefully the new president, Michelle J. Anderson, understands the need for
open dialogue and exchange of ideas, without intimidation, between students.
But bad decisions like the one in
2013, taking sides against the Israel supporters at an event, can have a
lasting negative impact, suggesting to SJP and others that they have free reign
and friends in high places.
In keeping with its role as an
academic haven for thousands of Jewish students and other Israel supporters,
the administration must disabuse them of this notion. Just as it’s crucial to
stand firm against terrorists, so must we do the same with their supporters.
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