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Berkeley Unified accused of failing to protect students against antisemitism – The Mercury News

Posted By on March 5, 2024

BERKELEY A federal complaint was filed against the Berkeley Unified School District on Wednesday, alleging the district failed to protect students and hold teachers accountable as antisemitic and anti-Israel rhetoric was spread across district campuses.

The complaint was filed on behalf of Jewish and Israeli students and parents by the Louis D. Brandeis Center for Human Rights Under Law, a firm fighting for Jewish civil rights, and the Anti-Defamation League, a national organization combating antisemitism.

The 41-page complaint, filed with the U.S. Department of Educations Office for Civil Rights, alleges Jewish and Israeli students have been subjected to an onslaught of antisemitic and anti-Israeli hate since shortly after an attack in Israeli was led by Hamas on Oct. 7.

Educators from across the district were accused of indoctrinating students by showing them pro-Hamas videos, antisemitic and anti-Israeli imagery and asking young students to write messages against hate on sticky notes including one that read stop bombing babies. One of the images showeda fist punching through a Star of David while holding a Palestinian flag.

The lawsuit claims the messaging has emboldened students to harass Jewish and Israeli students. According to the complaint, students at Martin Luther King Jr. Middle School were encouraged by faculty to participate in an Oct. 18 walkout in support of Palestinians and were heard shouting F the Jews, Kill the Jews, KKK, Kill Israel, I hate those people, and From the river to the sea, Palestine will be free, a phrase some say advocates for the elimination of Israel, while others argue is a call for Palestinian liberation.

District staff are also accused of flouting district policy by excusing absences after allowing students to walk out of class for unauthorized protests. According to the district website, student absences are only excused if the student is ill or if theres a death in the immediate family. District leadership is also accused of permitting educators to push their historical, religious, political, economic, or social bias on students in violation of the districts Controversial Issues policy.

The eruption of anti-Semitism in Berkeleys elementary and high schools is like nothing Ive ever seen before, Kenneth L. Marcus, chairman of the Brandeis Center and the former U.S. Assistant Secretary of Education for the George W. Bush and Donald Trump administrations, said in a press release Wednesday. It is dangerous enough to see faculty fanning the flames of anti-Semitism on college campuses, but to see teachers inciting hate in the youngest of grades while Berkeley administrators sit idly by as it continues to escalate by the day is reprehensible.

Superintendent Enikia Ford Morthelsaid in an email statement that the district stands against all forms of hate, a message she said gets widely and frequently shared in classrooms. Ford Morthel said the district has not yet received official notification of the lawsuit but plans to fully cooperate with the Office of Civil Rights investigation.

Students and parents are also encouraged to report instances of bullying and harassment, which Ford Morthel said will be investigated vigorously, adding that a focused conversation was recently had regarding concerns of antisemitism on campus. Further details on who was in that conversation were not provided.

We believe that classrooms must be places of joy, empathy, curiosity, love and rigor where all students feel safe, seen, heard, and valued. We work to make these spaces responsive and humanizing for our diverse students, Ford Morthel said. We remain committed to engaging with our community to ensure that BUSD is a district that lives up to its values of excellence, engagement, equity, and enrichment.

Rather than addressing issues in classes, the complaint also alleges students were removed from their classrooms, disrupting their school schedules while educators were permitted to continue teaching what the organizations argue are antisemitic viewpoints.

The Berkeley Federation of Teachers, the union representing educators in the district, did not immediately respond to a request for comment.The district also did not respond to questions about how many complaints of antisemitism have been filed since October.

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Berkeley Unified accused of failing to protect students against antisemitism - The Mercury News

France’s left-wing Jews, though united through faith, face new political divisions – Le Monde

Posted By on March 5, 2024

The anecdote is revealing. After canceling his participation in a debate organized in Paris by Tsedek! around the Holocaust film The Zone of Interest, Nazi Historian Johann Chapoutot confessed to having confused this collective of left-wing Jews with another, Golem. It has to be said that their activists have many things in common: They are Jewish, left wing and firmly committed to opposing all forms of racism. Indeed, they marched in the same processions against the recent immigration law, which tightens requirements for foreigners.

But the two groups' analyses of the period since October 7 are markedly different, between the anti-Zionists (Tsedek!, but also the French Jewish Union for Peace, UJFP) and movements such as Golem, set up to combat anti-Semitism in France: They share neither the same reading of anti-Semitism nor the same vision of the Israeli-Palestinian conflict.

October 7 was a double trauma for many left-wing Jews in France: The shock of the Hamas attacks was compounded by the feeling of being betrayed by their own political camp. A minority within a French Jewish population that is "turning right-wing," many left-wing Jews can "no longer recognize themselves in La France Insoumise [far left] since [party leader Jean-Luc] Mlenchon and others downplayed the importance of the October 7 attacks," said Michel Wieviorka, sociologist and director of studies at the Ecole des Hautes Etudes en Sciences Sociales.

Simon*, a 33-year-old Arab-Jewish with Tunisian roots, said: "I felt like my political party had abandoned me. I was revolted by this refusal to name these acts as barbaric and anti-Semitic, and to pass them off as resistance." This feeling of loneliness pursued them again on November 12, during the march against anti-Semitism organized by the government, which brought together more than 182,000 people. The absence of part of their political camp hurt them, and the presence of the far right outraged them.

It was then that Golem made its first appearance. Created the day before the protest, this movement owes its name to a creature from Jewish mythology, believed to defend Jews against pogroms. The collective made a name for itself at the time of the protest by attempting to remove members of the far-right Rassemblement National party.

Simon, enthusiastic, decided to join Golem: "It was the only right reaction for me. I'd wandered around in a lot of 'left-wing circles' before, and I was always squabbling over the issue of anti-Semitism. Golem was created to make a left-wing Jewish voice heard. It's something I'd been waiting for for so long." Since then, Simon has taken part in his first activist actions, such as pasting posters against anti-Semitism outside the headquarters of La France Insoumise.

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France's left-wing Jews, though united through faith, face new political divisions - Le Monde

NYC Mayor Eric Adams Calls for Tech’s Role in Combating Anti-Semitism at Mind the Tech Conference – BNN Breaking

Posted By on March 5, 2024

At the recent Mind the Tech conference in New York, hosted by Calcalist and Bank Leumi, Mayor Eric Adams delivered a compelling message that resonated deeply with attendees. Emphasizing the power of technology in shaping societal norms, Adams highlighted the pressing issue of anti-Semitism being normalized through digital platforms. The mayor's call to action for tech leaders to pivot their focus towards societal benefits, beyond mere profit, garnered a standing ovation, underlining the urgency and significance of his message.

During his speech, Mayor Adams pointed out how technology, a tool designed to bring people together, has inadvertently contributed to the spread of anti-Semitic sentiments. "Technology has normalized anti-Semitism, it needs to be re-examined," Adams stated, urging the tech community to take a stand against this disturbing trend. By leveraging their expertise and influence, tech leaders are positioned to implement changes that could significantly mitigate the spread of hate speech and discrimination online.

The response from the audience, comprised of tech professionals, entrepreneurs, and innovators, was overwhelmingly positive. Adams' assertion that "No one can do that better than the people in this room" not only acknowledged the capability of the tech community to effect change but also served as a rallying cry for action. The standing ovation that followed his remarks was a clear indication of the community's readiness to support initiatives aimed at combating anti-Semitism and fostering a more inclusive digital environment.

In a heartfelt response to the audience's enthusiasm, Mayor Adams reminded attendees of his ongoing commitment to public service. "You don't stand for me, I stand for you," he declared, reinforcing his dedication to the well-being of New Yorkers and beyond. Drawing from his background as a police officer, Adams underscored the importance of responding to the call to serve, especially when it involves tackling issues as significant as anti-Semitism through technology.

Mayor Eric Adams' address at the Mind the Tech conference serves as a critical reminder of the ethical responsibilities that come with technological advancement. As New York City and the world grapple with the challenges of digital age discrimination, Adams' call to action represents a pivotal moment for the tech community to re-evaluate its role in society. The enthusiastic reception of his message signals a promising shift towards leveraging technology for the greater good, highlighting the potential for meaningful change when innovation is guided by empathy and social responsibility.

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NYC Mayor Eric Adams Calls for Tech's Role in Combating Anti-Semitism at Mind the Tech Conference - BNN Breaking

Two More Ivy Leagues Face Legal Action Over Rampant Anti-Semitism – Yated.com

Posted By on March 5, 2024

Columbia, Barnard Exposed as Cesspools of Bigotry

Columbia and Barnard universities have joined an ignominious list of elite Ivy League schools facing lawsuits for enabling anti-Semitic discrimination to flourish, and for fostering a climate of explosive hostility against Jewish students after the Oct. 7 Hamas slaughter fest.

One shouldnt be shocked at this point in time, but reading through the court documents, its hard not to react to the vast reach of virulent anti-Semitism infecting academia.

In court documents, Jewish students in these scandal-ridden institutions describe their campus environments in startlingly similar terms; as having deteriorated into cesspools of anti-Semitic bigotry, in the words of one lawsuit, marked by brazen hate speech and intolerable bullying and abuse of Jewish students.

Columbia University was hit last week with a one-two punchtwo separate lawsuits representing different Jewish students brought by influential Manhattan firms.

A 114-page lawsuit by the firm Kasowitz Benson Torres alleged that Columbia, one of the worst centers of anti-Semitism in the United States, has continuously trampled the civil rights of Jewish students, and that a sizable group of faculty members openly justify heinous crimes against Jews.

Since October 7, 2023, when Hamas terrorists invaded Israel and slaughtered, tortured, burned, and mutilated 1,200 people including infants, children, and the elderly antisemitism at Columbia has been particularly severe and pervasive, the lawsuit attests.

Columbia faculty members and students routinely extol HamassOctober 7atrocities as awesome and a great feat, the brief goes on to allege. More than100 faculty members signed a letter to this effect, defending Hamas Oct. 7 massacre as a military action (as opposed to depraved terrorism.)

Fourth In a String of Lawsuits Citing Title VI

The Kasowitz action against Columbia is the fourth in a string of lawsuits the firm has brought against campus anti-Semitism since the Oct. 7 barbaric massacres in Israel.

The firm represented Jewish students in a lawsuit against NYU in December over rampant civil rights violations. It also targeted UPenn and Harvard on behalf of Jewish students, alleging the schools are hotbeds of anti-Jewish hatred and harassment and shamelessly discriminate against their Jewish students. [See Sidebar]

According to attorney Marc Kasowitz, the skyrocketing anti-Semitic discrimination confronting Jewish students at Harvard is playing out in a range of equally deplorable scenarios at MIT, Stanford and Yale. The Kasowitz Benson Torres team will be representing Jewish students in lawsuits brought against these schools as well, the firm has announced.

These institutions, for decades have permitted acts of anti-Semitic hatred and discrimination to fester on their campuses, constituting egregious civil rights violations, commented Kasowitz. They are acutely aware of this but adopt a policy of indifference, belittling or dismissing the complaints of Jewish students which emboldens the perpetrators.

With regard to the lawsuit against Columbia and Barnard, the attorney noted that Columbia continues to capitulate to pro-Hamas students and faculty, placing Columbias Jewish and Israeli community at risk. He described Columbia University as a school where hate and the promotion of violence is not just allowed but taught.

Our lawsuit seeks to protect Jewish students by exposing and expunging the anti-Semitic virus that permeates Columbias campus and classrooms, he said.

As the war has continued in the Middle East, pro-Arab Columbia and Barnard students have exploited the opportunity to escalate protests and demonstrations. During the protests, the lawsuit alleges, Jewish students have been subjected to Jew-baiting and anti-Semitic abuse including obscene epithets, calls for Jews to be destroyed, and chants of Jews will not defeat us.

School administrators silence on the rampant hate has created a vacuum that has been filled with anti-Semitism, the lawsuit says.

What is most striking about all of this is Columbias abject failure and deliberate refusal to lift a finger to stop and deter this outrageous anti-Semitic conduct and discipline the students and faculty who perpetrate it, the brief notes.

Students Traumatized

It documents one example after another of blatantly anti-Semitic hate speech and other vile anti-Semitic behavior that is allowed to dominate Columbias campus without consequences.

One example included in the 114-page lawsuit detailed a November rally in which pro-Palestinian marchers shouted death to Jews during the anniversary of Kristallnacht, the 1938 Nazi pogrom that murdered over a hundred Jews, burned thousands of shuls across Germany and Austria, and marked a terrifying escalation in Hitlers war against the Jews.

Columbiarefuses to act to protect its Jewish students, who are routinely tormented with repulsive epithets, intimidation and discrimination by other students and faculty, Kasowitz partnerMark Resslersaid. We have spoken to dozens of students who are traumatized, the attorney said. They are suffering enormous emotional distress.

Some of them have seen their grades plummet. Some of them cower in their dormitory or apartment or have hunkered down at home with their parents, he said.

Judicial intervention is required to forceColumbiato comply with Title VI, enforce its conduct codes in a neutral manner and protect Jewish students from outrageous abuse, Ressler said. Its an intolerable situation. And its a situation that can be remedied.

Booted For Being an Observant Jew

In a separate lawsuit, religious Jewish student Macky Forrest is suing Columbia University for allegedly forcing her out of an elite program at the School of Social Work after she requested a schedule accommodation due to Shabbos observance.

In the wake of soaring anti-Semitism on Columbias campus, Forrest, a student with a stellar academic record, also requested permission to attend some classes over Zoom.

The Ivy League university dismissed her concerns and unleashed a retaliatory campaign against her, Forrest contends in the lawsuit. She is represented by the Lawfare Project, an organization dedicated to protecting the civil rights of Jewish people worldwide through legal action, and by the Manhattan firm of Eiseman Levine Lehrhaupt & Kakoyiannis.

The lawsuit described Columbia University as having devolved into a cauldron of anti-Semitism that forced Forrest to circumvent the campus. She persisted in seeking an alternative to crossing the Columbia campus where gangs of pro-Palestinian routinely stage walkouts, block certain buildings and harass visibly Jewish students.

At that point, the lawsuit recounts, Forrests program director, already hostile after an altercation over Shabbos observance, began to fabricate complaints against her. This effectively forced her out of a highly specialized Social Work program in which she had excelled, a few months prior to graduation.

In a phone interview with Yated, Lawfare director of litigation Ziporah Reich said the university fabricated false pretexts for kicking a straight-A student out of a program out of sheer prejudice, and denied her safety accommodations which is indefensible.

Reich said the right to an education where a student feels physically safe is a fundamental non-negotiable right protected by law. The attorney cited Title VI Civil Rights legislation that prohibits any school or organization taking federal money from discriminating against any individual on the basis of color, race or country of origin.

The universitys failure to provide Mackenzie (Macky) with a basic accommodation to ensure her safety is not only shameful, but a dereliction of the universitys moral and legal responsibilities, noted Reich. Such negligence demands accountability.

Suicide Weekend? Not on Shabbos

Reich said that Forrest, who is from Florida, specifically came to Columbia in August 2022 to enroll in its unique dialectical behavioral therapy (DBT) program, with the goal of earning a much sought-after degree. With her exceptional academic credentials, she was immediately accepted.

Things began falling apart when the issue of Sabbath observance came up, Reich told Yated.

During an initial encounter following her acceptance, Forrest told the head of the program she would need a Sabbath accommodation for its required Suicide Weekend devoted to dealing with suicidal patients. The program head told her that would be problematic.

Schools routinely make accommodations for students religious observance, Reich said in the phone interview. It is the law, its not a matter of choice on the administrations part. If an exam is scheduled on the Sabbath, federal and state law says they are required to provide a way for students to make it up.

In Forrests case, she was told that well talk about it when the time comes, so she dropped the issue and enrolled in the DBT program, meeting with patients as required and continuing to receive all As in her coursework.

However, Reich said, as the suicide weekend approached, Forrest again brought up the Shabbos issue. She said she came under incredible pressure by the university to violate Shabbos or get a rabbi to give her an exemption.

Officials finally relented but reportedly acted disgruntled and angry about it, Reich recounted. Matters deteriorated after the October 7 massacres by Hamas, when anti-Semitic hostility on Columbias campus exploded.

There were anti-Israel protests creating mob-like scenes in violation of school policy, noted Reich. They were blocking entrances to the library and assaulting Jewish students and calling for violence against Jewish students on campus. One student suffered a broken bone. My client became terrified of walking on that campus so she asked the administration for an accommodation to take classes by Zoom, something routinely granted to students.

In Forrests case, however, the request was denied and her fears were mocked as groundless. Reich said that soon after, faculty members began their campaign to remove her from the DBT program. Ultimately, she was told, If you continue to stay in the program you will fail.

The vitriolic and anti-Semitic environment at Columbia to which Jewish students like Macky have been subjected, said Reich, is indescribable.

Title VI: Powerful Tool?

The multiple lawsuits against Ivy League schools filed in recent weeks by Jewish students have all cited Title VI of the Civil Rights Act of 1964. This law may now become the most powerful legal tool to force universities to protect their students from anti-Semitic bullying and discrimination on their campuses.

The ultimate Title VI threat is that the university will lose federal funding, Kenneth Marcus, the chairman of the Louis D. Brandeis Center for Human Rights. That is very rare. But it would be a massive blow to universities, which receive vast sums from the Education Department and other agencies, he told Bloomberg News.

Title VI bars all federally funded programs, institutions and activities from intentionally creating a discriminatory or hostile environment for any students because of their race, color or national origin. It covers public and private campuses at all educational levels.

A December 2019 executive order; a September 2023 White House statement; and Education Department letters issued in May and November 2023 all make clear that Title VI bars any and all expression and practice of anti-Semitism, according to the IHRA (International Holocaust Remembrance Alliance) definition of the term.

This law is now being used by Jewish students facing the worst anti-Semitism on campuses since before World War II. Their many lawsuits seeking protection from anti-Semitic discrimination and Jew-baiting on college campuses will test the governments political will to enforce this 60 year-old Civil Rights law.

***

Columbia Gets Scathing Letter from House Committee

The House Committee on Education and the Workforce has intensified its investigation of antisemitism in higher educationto include Columbiaand Barnard, along with Harvard, UPenn and MIT.

Committee Chair Virginia Foxx, R-N.C., sent a scathing letter to Columbia University last week, providing examples of how an environment of pervasive anti-Semitism has been documented at Columbia for more than two decades before the October 7, 2023, terrorist attack.

The 16-page letter was addressed to Columbia University President Minouche Shafik, Columbia Trustees David Greenwald and Claire Shipman; Barnard College President Laura Rosenbury; and Barnard Trustees Chair Cheryl Milstein.

Columbia has consistently allowed anti-Israel groups to violate university policies and shown its commitments on antisemitism to be hollow, Rep. Foxx wrote. She requisitioned all reports of anti-Semitic incidents and related communications made to the Columbia administration since Jan. 1, 2021.

In addition, Rep. Foxx detailed a list of 25 specific items of information Columbia officials must provide. These include communications related to funding and financial supportspecifically foreign donations for the multiple pro-Palestinian student groups inciting the anti-Semitic rabble-rousing.

Rep. Foxx is also seeking documents showing the annual total amount of foreign donations to Columbia, listed by country, since Jan. 1, 2021, as well as all documents showing donations and funding specifically from oil-rich Qatar since that date.

The letter to Columbia officials zeroed in on numerous incidents of anti-Semitic assaults, harassment, and vandalism at Columbia over the past several months, demanding all communications concerning specific incidents of Jewish students being beaten or targeted by demonstrators.

The letter also noted how numerous Columbia faculty have made anti-Semitic remarks and statements of support for Palestinian terrorism both prior to and after the October 7, 2023, terrorist attack.

Some of the worst examples, the letter said, included Professor Joseph Massad penning an article after the Oct. 7 attack comparing the Palestinian resistance to Europeans resisting the Nazi occupation.

Massad also referred to Israel in his classes as cruel bloodthirsty colonizers, and maligned the Israeli military as baby-killing Jewish volunteers and a genocidal cult.

The letter also cited how Hamid Dabashi, Columbias professor of Iranian studies, had made numerous virulently anti-Semitic statements dating back years, including demonizing Israel as a racist, apartheid state.

Foxxs letter sharply challenged Columbia president Shafiks declaration that our first priority has been to make sure everyone connected to Columbia is safe and we will not tolerate anti-Semitic actions and are moving forcefully against anti-Semitic threats as they are reported.

The wealth of documented information cited in Foxxs letter exposed Shafiks pretentions as ludicrous.

***

Alumni: Harvard Has Despicably Failed Ten alumni of Harvard University joined a lawsuit alleging that the once-prestigious institution has despicably failed to address anti-Semitism and other forms of hatred on campus, resulting in a devaluation of their degrees, the Jerusalem Post reports.

The 21-page lawsuit, filed in a Massachusetts court last Tuesday, seeks a court order to force Harvard to take concrete and affirmative steps to end anti-Semitism on its campus.

Additionally, it asks the court to require that Harvard hold leaders and faculty members accountable for allowing anti-Semitism to fester. The plaintiffs are also seeking an unspecified amount of restitution for the perceived loss in value of their diplomas.

Their lawsuit focuses on Harvards handling of the eruption of anti-Semitism on its campus after the Oct. 7 Hamas attack on Israel. It alleges that Harvard has allowed Jewish hatred to evolve for years but that events since the Oct. 7 attacks have caused a disastrous transformation of the universitys reputation.

The plaintiffs allege that recent administrations have wreaked havoc at Harvard, eroding its academic standards and propagandizing the student body with harmful ideologies. Various businesses will no longer hire Harvard graduates and large-scale donors have rescinded their support for the institution, the lawsuit says.

Regrettably, I am suing Harvard today because the university has failed to live up to its own standard of excellence. Students and faculty demanding the destruction of Israel and the death of Jews are allowed to march on campus, threaten students, and disrupt classes on the pretense of freedom of speech, Dr. Alan Bauer, a plaintiff, said in a statement provided by his attorneys.

Yet, the university disinvited a distinguished speaker because of her unpopular views, cancelled the men soccer teams season due to vulgar comments, and rescinded the admission of ten students due to online activity that the university found offensive.

Freedom of speech did not prevail in these instances; it is only applied when Jews are being attacked, Bauer noted. Harvards leadership has failed to adequately address the spasm of Jew-hatred on campus, and we, all Harvard alumni, are suing in order to get the university pointed back in the direction of being the leader in education and not the national disgrace it is today.

Bauer went on to draw parallels with the Holocaust. Before the Holocaust, antisemitism was deeply rooted in academic spheres and universities, mirroring the present-day environment, the statement went on. We are seeking justice for current students afraid to speak out for themselves and for those who endured silent suffering during the Holocaust. In memory of my relatives and the six million Jews who perished, we are determined not to remain silent.

This suit represents a commitment to ensuring that history never repeats itself, said Tammie Purow, another plaintiff.

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Two More Ivy Leagues Face Legal Action Over Rampant Anti-Semitism - Yated.com

Eruption of antisemitism in California K-12 prompts pro bono legal helpline – Washington Examiner

Posted By on March 5, 2024

Three leading Jewish organizations launched a pro bono antisemitism helpline on Thursday to assist California parents of children experiencing anti-Jewish harassment in K-12 schools.

The pilot helpline comes after a complaint was filed on Wednesday against Berkeley, Californias K-12 system detailing a number of reports from parents and students exposing antisemitic behavior conducted by peers and teachers. The Brandeis Center, the Anti-Defamation League, and StandwithUs partnered to launch the program.

Students chanted, Kill the Jews, F the Jews, F Israel, KKK, Kill Israel, I hate those people, and From the River to the Sea, Palestine will be free, as teachers watched without intervention at events organized by faculty using Berkeley Unified School District resources, the complaint states.

The eruption of anti-Semitism in Berkeleys elementary and high schools is like nothing Ive ever seen before, Kenneth L. Marcus, chairman of the Brandeis Center, said in a Wednesday press release.

It is dangerous enough to see faculty fanning the flames of anti-Semitism on college campuses, but to see teachers inciting hate in the youngest of grades while Berkeley administrators sit idly by as it continues to escalate by the day is reprehensible, he added. Where is the accountability? Where are the people who are supposed to protect and educate students?

According to the complaint, Berkeley teachers organized walkouts and activities denigrating Israelis and calling for the elimination of Jews, actively engaged in antisemitic bullying, and emboldened pupils to bully Jewish students all while the school district ignored these reports.

One teacher allegedly showed his class violent pro-Hamas videos and displayed a number of anti-Israel images all over his classroom, including one image of a fist holding a Palestinian flag punching through a Star of David. Other images celebrated the Oct. 7 Hamas massacre and condone violence against civilians. The principal allegedly told parents that the antisemitic materials would be removed, but the complaint stated the images remain on classroom walls.

Another teacher reportedly went on a number of anti-Israel tirades and regularly expressed antisemitic stereotypes. She required students to write an assignment on Israel being considered an apartheid state and was hostile toward dissenting opinions.

A second-grade teacher wrote stop bombing babies on a sticky note, resulting in a number of students following suit, and the group displayed the notes on the door of the only Jewish teacher in the school. The assignment was to write messages of anti-hate.

The complaint listed a number of examples of how teachers had emboldened their students to harass Jewish peers. After giving a presentation on his Jewish ancestry, one student had his project vandalized as a classmate crossed out the word Jewish and scrawled free Palestine in its place.

Another Jewish student was allegedly told, You have a big nose because you are a stupid Jew, and I dont like your people. That same student was also told that his Jewish traditions are dumb and that theyre not welcome. Another student was called a midget Jew, and after a mistake was made by some students in a lab experiment, one peer reportedly called out, Of course it was the Jews.

The Berkeley Unified School District has received a number of complaints of anti-semitism following the Oct. 7 massacre, including a letter signed by 1,370 Berkeley community members to the Berkeley Superintendent and the Board of Education. These concerns, the Jewish organizations say, have been ignored.

Jewish students offended by these conversations were moved to other classes or the health center or library, which made the students feel isolated, marginalized, [and] ostracized, according to the press release.

BUSD Superintendent Enikia Ford Morthel told the Washington Examiner that the school district has not yet received official notification of the recent federal complaint but will work with the Office of Civil Rights in support of a thorough investigation.

Berkeley Unified stands against all forms of hate, she said. This is a message we share widely and frequently in our school community. We believe that classrooms must be places of joy, empathy, curiosity, love, and rigor where all students feel safe, seen, heard, and valued We remain committed to engaging with our community to ensure that BUSD is a district that lives up to its values of excellence, engagement, equity, and enrichment.

We stay in communication and work in collaboration with various members of our diverse community and have recently had focused conversations on these specific concerns, she added.

Californians can report incidents of antisemitic discrimination, intimidation, harassment, vandalism or violence to the Legal Protection K-12 Helpline, where lawyers will investigate the incident and may provide pro bono representation on behalf of victims.

Rep. David Kustoff (R-TN), one of just two Jewish Republicans in Congress, shared his thoughts on the incidents with the Washington Examiner.

Since Hamas barbaric attack on Israel, we have seen a nearly 400% uptick in antisemitic incidents throughout the United States. This hate has no place in our national discourse, and it is imperative leaders voice their strong opposition to such horrifying and targeted acts of violence and discrimination, he said.

Kustoff continued, I am pleased the House of Representatives passed my bipartisan resolution to condemn and denounce antisemitism in the U.S. and around the world. Jewish students and families across the country deserve to feel safe in school and in their communities, and we must do everything we can to ensure they are protected.

Marci Miller, senior education counsel for the Brandeis Center who is overseeing this complaint, told the Washington Examiner, Harassment and bullying by teachers is especially harmful to students due to the imbalance of power and the resulting loss of trust in the school system. It also sends other students the message that it is ok to bully their Jewish peers. The very people who are supposed to be protecting and educating the students are using their power to harm them.

Some teachers claim that they are exercising their free speech rights when they make harmful comments to students, but the right to free speech does not protect K-12 teachers when they use their platform to indoctrinate students or harass them, she added.

Although we have received more complaints of anti-Semitic bullying and harassment from families who live in more liberal areas of the country and state, this is not a political issue, she said. The reported incidents involve violations of law and school policies, not expressions of political opinions.

In the first three months after Oct. 7, the ADL recorded 256 antisemitic incidents in U.S. K-12 schools, representing greater than a 140% increase from the same time period the previous year.

The Education Department is investigating complaints the Brandeis Center filed against Wellesley, SUNY New Paltz, the University of Southern California (USC), Brooklyn College, and the University of Illinois. The Brandeis Center also recently filed federal complaints against American University and the University of California for antisemitism on UC Berkeleys campus.

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Eruption of antisemitism in California K-12 prompts pro bono legal helpline - Washington Examiner

UConn Announces Pop-Up Courses On Anti-Semitism and Islamophobia – Patch

Posted By on March 5, 2024

UConn continues to expand it pop-up offerings. (Chris Dehnel/Patch )

STORRS, CT Two University of Connecticut has announced two pop-up courses on anti-semitism and Islamophobia.

The courses will be offered in an online, asynchronous format starting March 4, meaning that students can access the lessons online at their convenience rather than being locked into a specific date and time.

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As with its previous pop-up courses, UConn is offering the one-credit classes free for students who are enrolled in at least 12 credits.

Registrations are currently being taken through March 10, and students are "welcome and encouraged to enroll in both courses if they feel their workload allows." No prerequisites are required for the courses, which run through April 26.

The course Confronting Anti-Muslim Racism, which is being offered for the first time, was created at the request of UConns Muslim and Palestinian student leaders, officials said.

The course will be run by by Asif Majid, an assistant professor of theater studies and human rights, and David Embrick, an associate professor of sociology and Africana studies, with additional faculty from various schools, colleges and disciplines also contributing to the modules.

The course's discussions will include recognizing the difference between anti-Muslim hatred (racism) and Islamophobia (fear of Muslims and Islam); the history of Islam and the cultural, racial, and gendered ways that the history informs todays anti-Muslim racism; and the U.S. governments and publics policing and racialization of Muslim communities.

Students will also assess their own assumptions about Muslims and their politics and perspectives; learn about how the "racialization" of Muslims has affected health outcomes, social movements, college experiences, political agency, and cultural production; and identify resources and courses at UConn to help address and disrupt anti-Muslim racism.

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UConn Announces Pop-Up Courses On Anti-Semitism and Islamophobia - Patch

Berkeley Public Schools Hit With Federal Complaint Over ‘Severe and Persistent’ Anti-Semitic Bullying – Washington Free Beacon

Posted By on March 5, 2024

(Scott Olson/Getty Images)

A public school district in Berkeley, California, was hit with a federal complaint on Wednesday alleging it has failed to stem an escalating series of anti-Semitic incidents that include hallway chants of "kill the Jews" and anti-Semitic teacher rants in support of the Hamas terror group.

The Berkeley Unified School District (BUSD) "knowingly allowed its K-12 campuses to become viciously hostile environments for Jewish and Israeli students," according to a copy of the complaint, filed with the Education Departments Office of Civil Rights and obtained by the Washington Free Beacon.

Parents who have signed onto the complaint say anti-Semitic incidents in the schools have "positively surged" since Hamas conducted its unprecedented Oct. 7 terror attack on Israel.

"At BUSD, a virulent wave of anti-Semitism swept through its schools immediately following the massacre," the complaint alleges. "Jewish and Israeli students have since been subjected to nonstop anti-Semitic bullying and harassment by their teachers and peers, in hallways, in classrooms, and in school yards."

The complaint, filed by the Anti-Defamation League (ADL) and the Louis D. Brandeis Center for Human Rights Under Law, follows a flurry of similar federal filings against many of Americas top universities, including Harvard, MIT, and University of Pennsylvania, among others. Like its college counterparts, the Berkeley school district stands accused of becoming a dangerous place for Jews and Israelis.

"Reported incidents of anti-Semitism include school walkouts praising Hamas with students shouting 'f the Jews' and KKK," according to the complaint. "Teachers use class time to propagandize that the Hamas massacre was admirable resistance. Following their teachers lead, students bully their Jewish peers and deride their physical appearance."

Berkeley Unified did not respond to a request for comment.

Parents have reported this behavior to school administrators, the complaint says, but the district "has done nothing to address, much less curtail, the hostile environment that has plagued BUSD for over four months."

The ADL and Brandeis Center are asking the federal government to open a formal probe into the school district to determine if the Jewish populations civil rights are being violated.

Anti-Semitism is allegedly "normalized throughout BUSD. And teachers have responded with threats."

In one case, a teacher approached a parent who had complained and said, "I know who you are, I know who your fing wife is and I know where you live," according to testimony included in the federal filing.

Perhaps taking a cue from their instructors, students have harassed their Jewish classmates, telling them, "it is excellent what Hamas did to Israel" and "you have a big nose because you are a stupid Jew," according to incidents relayed in the complaint.

"While Berkeley Unified School District plasters its buildings with 'United Against Hate' posters, Jewish hate is ignored," said Berkeley Unified parent Ilana Pearlman.

In the wake of Hamass attack on Israel, Berkeley Unified teachers and administrators have allegedly staged walkouts "denigrating Israelis and calling for the elimination of Jews."

"Teachers, staff, and administrators," the complaint states, "have participated in and encouraged students to join walkouts, depriving Jewish and Israeli students of a safe place to learn and all students of instruction." In some cases, these events have taken place during school hours.

In another case cited in the complaint, an unnamed art teacher "spent significant class time imposing his anti-Semitic views on students by showing them violent pro-Hamas videos, projecting anti-Israel and anti-Semitic images during class." This includes an image of a fist holding a Palestinian flag punching through a Star of David.

The complaint outlines other similar incidents, including anti-Semitic harassment, that has left Jewish students shaken and scared about going to school each day.

"The Berkeley public school district is just one of many districts in California and other states that are experiencing an extreme wave of anti-Israel and anti-Semitic language and incidents in the classroom and the schoolyard," said Rachel Lerman, vice chair and general counsel for the Brandeis Center. "Since October 7, there have been continual anti-Israel rallies, taking kids off campus without parent permission, where students are provided with signs and permitted to call for the extermination of Zionists and Jews. Students feel free to engage in anti-Semitic speech and bully their Jewish classmates because a number of their teachers tolerate and even encourage it. Meanwhile the administration does nothing in the face of widespread parent complaints."

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Berkeley Public Schools Hit With Federal Complaint Over 'Severe and Persistent' Anti-Semitic Bullying - Washington Free Beacon

Holocaust museum gets trove of intimate stories of loss and survival – The Washington Post

Posted By on March 5, 2024

Erzsebet Barsony and her son, Ervin Fenyes, had been packed in a cattle car for three days en route to the Auschwitz-Birkenau concentration camp in Poland. It was July 12, 1944, and very hot. They had no food or water, only their clothes.

The police had taken Erzsebets wedding ring and Ervins shoes back in Budapest, where they were rounded up. She was 35. He was 15. He stood over 6 feet tall and played the violin. She kept telling him to sit down in the jammed car so he would take up less room.

When they arrived, they were immediately separated, as were tens of thousands who went through the same ordeal. I was standing there with my emotions numbed, she recalled. Suddenly, Ervin appeared at her side. He had left his place to say goodbye. Tearfully, he hugged and kissed her, and told her not to worry. Mom, youll see, well meet again.

When she told this story in her apartment in Budapest about 60 years later, Erzsebet Barsony was a frail, white-haired woman of 96. Her interviewers said she spent most of her time in her rocking chair with her cat, Mici, in her lap, sitting beneath a photograph of Ervin in a black frame.

She died shortly afterward, in 2005. Now her account and thousands of other personal histories and photographs have been added to the collection of the U.S. Holocaust Memorial Museum in Washington, museum officials said.

Late last year, the museum finalized the acquisition of the archive of Centropa, a nonprofit founded in Vienna and Budapest in 2000 to gather and preserve the life stories of elderly Jews, mostly in Central and Eastern Europe, the officials said.

The Centropa archive includes 25,000 digitized family photographs and documents, and 45,000 pages of interviews in 11 languages. More than 1,200 people were interviewed in 20 countries.

Not specifically a Holocaust project, the archive portrays local Jewish life before, during and after the World War II murder by Nazi Germany and its allies of about 6 million Jews.

This brings to the fore voices, perspectives, experiences that are not always at the center of the discussion when it comes to Holocaust history, Zachary Paul Levine, director of the Holocaust Museums Archival and Curatorial Affairs Division, said in a recent interview.

Its an incredible amount of information a major addition to the museums collection of records of the Holocaust, he said.

The museum declined to say what it paid for the archive, but Levine said the amount covered the value of the material and some of the work that went into gathering it.

He said the museum plans to have the archive available on its website this spring. It is also available on Centropas website.

That website gets about 250,000 visitors per year. The Holocaust museums website gets about 36 million.

Many of the Centropa stories, like most from the Holocaust, are heartbreaking. In addition to her son, Erzsebet Barsony lost her husband and her parents as well as her older brother, his wife and their 6-year-old son. She barely survived.

I got home with nothing but the clothes on me, she remembered. Strangers lived in my house. My only desire was to die.

Katarina Lofflerova, who survived Auschwitz and also lost her husband and her parents, recalled encountering a former classmate in their hometown of Bratislava, then in Czechoslovakia, after the war.

Lofflerova, who was 94 when she was interviewed, remembered that her former classmate, as a Nazi operative helping to round up Jews, had pointed a machine gun at her and threatened to shoot when she asked for a drink of water for her ailing mother.

When she spotted him after the war, he tried to elude her. But she chased him down. He gave her a strange smile.

You dirty, lowest of killers, she said to him. Villainous trash.

Then she slapped him and knocked off his glasses, which broke when they hit the ground.

He didnt say a word, just stood there, like a petrified statue, she said. But as she walked away, she began to cry. Even though she had seen awful things in the camps, she felt remorse that she had struck another living being, she said.

She recalled another incident after the war when she applied for permission to attend a funeral in Austria. A government official came to her home and reviewed a form she had filled out.

She had put marks beside the names of her parents. What were the marks for, the official asked. To point out that her parents had died in Auschwitz, she said.

Anybody can say that, he replied. Maybe in the meantime, theyre living in America and things are going great there for them.

She was furious. She stood up and said, Get out! Her parents were martyrs, she told him. Get out!

The official looked terrified. He thought I might beat him up or I dont know what, she recalled. He hurried out of the apartment, leaving his hat. She picked it up and threw it after him.

Survivor Anna Lanota recalled being holed up in a house in Warsaws Old Town neighborhood, printing the Polish resistance newspaper on Aug. 26, 1944. The bloody Warsaw Uprising against Nazi Germanys occupation was underway.

She was pregnant and was still recovering from a bullet wound in a foot, accidentally inflicted by a comrade. She carried a gun and had a fake ID. She was 29.

She had studied psychology in college and had worked with mentally disabled children. She read Adolf Hitlers antisemitic manifesto, Mein Kampf, and couldnt comprehend it. We thought he was a bit crazy, she recalled.

Her husband, Edward, a member of the resistance whom the Germans were after, was in another room. They had been married about two years. He called her Hania.

The Nazis, who had occupied Poland since 1939, had been pounding Old Town for days trying to crush the uprising.

Right at the start my husband said to me, There wont be victory here, only defeat, she told her interviewer in 2004 when she was almost 90. But it didnt occur to us not to fight. To fight the Germans was happiness.

As she worked on the newspaper, a bomb with a time-delay fuse crashed into the house.

Hania! her husband called out.

Im here, she said.

A comrade grabbed her and threw her through a hole in the wall out onto the street as the bomb exploded, killing him and her husband, and wounding her.

She was taken to a basement hospital and patched up. She and others in her group escaped through the sewers as rats skittered by and the Germans dropped grenades through the manholes.

Several months later, her daughter, Malgorzata, was born.

Centropa the Central Europe Center for Research and Documentation was established by Edward Serotta, 74, an American author, photographer and filmmaker now based in Vienna.

He had relocated from Atlanta to Budapest in his 30s to pursue journalism. He said he became fascinated by the stories told by elderly Jews, many of whom had lived through World War I, World War II, the Holocaust and Communism.

He said he wound up spending more and more time on projects, interviewing survivors in their kitchens and living rooms, hearing stories and looking at yellowed photographs. He said he thought: Who collects stuff like this?

He decided he would. He assembled interviewers who helped identify candidates and then would visit them and record their oral histories. The recordings were transcribed, and old family photos were copied and digitized.

The project was funded by foundations and several European governments. It became a lifelong endeavor. But as time passed, he said, I wanted to make sure, at my age, that there would be a permanent home, that this archive and stories would live in perpetuity.

He had trouble getting other people interested, because the archive was unusual. I went to one library and museum after another and just couldnt find the interest, he said.

Meanwhile, Levine started working at the Holocaust Museum in June 2020. He and Serotta had met when Levine was a graduate student living in Budapest. Levine had used the Centropa archive and did some editing for the project.

He heard that Serotta was trying to find a permanent home for the archive and that the museum was discussing it.

Fairly quickly, the stars started to align, where we could have the conversation about adding this material to the collection, Levine said.

Levine said his grandparents, who were Holocaust survivors from Poland, used to say: Theres nothing back there. Its all gone.

But these communities didnt stop, he said. They put pieces together so they could have a life.

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Holocaust museum gets trove of intimate stories of loss and survival - The Washington Post

Protesters dog Israeli speaker at LA Holocaust Museum after UC Berkeley event canceled – The Times of Israel

Posted By on March 5, 2024

LOS ANGELES (JTA) As a member of the Israeli military who frequently speaks on Israels behalf, Ran Bar-Yoshafat is used to being heckled by anti-Israel protesters, especially on college campuses.

But he says what happened to him at the University of California, Berkeley this week where a planned appearance was canceled because of a protest that turned violent was on a different level.

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Theyre giving [a] prize to the violent side, and basically shutting down the person who wants to speak, Bar-Yoshafat told the Jewish Telegraphic Agency. I didnt get a chance to even say, Hello, my name is Ran.

Bar-Yoshafats scheduled appearance on Thursday at Los Angeles Holocaust museum, three days after the Berkeley incident, took place without interruption although several dozen protesters amassed outside and later clashed with pro-Israel demonstrators who arrived.

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Protesters dog Israeli speaker at LA Holocaust Museum after UC Berkeley event canceled - The Times of Israel

Kol Israel panel to discuss Holocaust, antisemitism with children – Cleveland Jewish News

Posted By on March 5, 2024

Kol Israel Foundation will host a panel discussion about Talking to Children About the Holocaust and Modern-Day Antisemitism at 7 p.m. March 14 at Bnai Jeshurun Congregation at 27501 Fairmount Blvd. in Pepper Pike.

Panelists will address the importance of sharing family history, age-appropriate talking points, discussing painful topics without traumatizing children and connecting family Holocaust experiences to current events, according to a news release. A Q&A session will follow the panel discussion.

Panelists are Rabbi Matt Cohen, grandson of a Holocaust survivor, the spiritual leader of Temple Emanu El in Orange and Kol Israel Foundation board member; Wendy Firestone, a retired school psychologist who recently founded Cogmotion Learning in Beachwood and whose Belgian-born mother was a hidden child during the Shoah; and Susan Ratner, a social worker and preschool director who spent decades helping parents navigate the challenges of raising children and whose relatives survived the Holocaust by hiding in the Black Forest.

Nina Light, the granddaughter of concentration camp survivors and Kol Israel Foundations program manager, will be the moderator.

The event is free, but registration is required. To register, email nlight@kifcle.org.

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Kol Israel panel to discuss Holocaust, antisemitism with children - Cleveland Jewish News


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