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Anti-Semitism on the Rise on College Campuses
by Brian DeBose
The Washington Times
Published November 26, 2005
WASHINGTON -- A panel
of Jewish academics recently presented evidence to the U.S. Commission on
Civil Rights that anti-Semitic programs on college campuses are increasing.
The commission heard testimony from Gary A. Tobin and Susan Tuchman,
director of the Zionist Organization of America, that Jewish students at the
University of California at Irvine, Columbia University and other campuses
have recently experienced hostility and intimidation.
"We would argue that anti-Semitism in the form of anti-Israelism
are not a Jewish problem but an American problem, and both are thriving on
college campuses," said Mr. Tobin, who recently wrote a book based on
findings procured through polls and on-site inquiries at the Institute for
Jewish and Community Research.
The book details incidents of harassment and discrimination on campus
and in anti-Semitic college newspaper articles and cartoons over the past
few years.
Mr. Tobin said the recent rise in anti-Semitic literature and program
speaking engagements is related to the war in the Middle East and the
"political discourse" that the Israeli-Palestinian conflict is the cause of
it.
He said the source is leftist ideologues masking their anti-Jewish views
through both Israeli policy critiques and race politics.
He said there is a widespread belief that Jews are primarily white:
"Placing this in the politics of race this ideology has currency on college
campuses because it paints Jews as racists; so, anyone who supports Israel
is racist, therefore anti-Semitism becomes acceptable because it is
combating racism."
The commission said it has heard from Jewish students asserting that the
incidents have interfered with their ability to participate in campus
activities and is looking to see if it can recommend actions to curb such
speech and literature without violating First Amendment rights to free
speech.
The Department of Education's Office for Civil Rights (OCR) recently
announced it would investigate claims of anti-Semitic harassment under its
jurisdiction to enforce Title VI of the 1964 Civil Rights Act, as part of a
rule change to protect Jewish students from discrimination, intimidation and
harassment.
The commission expressed an interest in issuing a pamphlet or brochure
to universities informing students of the legal shift.
Miss Tuchman recommended in addition that the commission issue a report
recognizing the problem on college campuses with prescribed remedies to
curtail such speech and discrimination and voice those concerns to the OCR.
Mr. Tobin said college campuses have all the tools they need in the form
of oversight committees, editorial boards at college newspapers, but he said
it is the stakeholders who have the most sway in forcing colleges to deal
with the matter.
"Federal, state and local governments, from which universities get the
bulk of their funding, and alumni have a moral and fiscal responsibility to
address this issue, and they are the best equipped because they hold the
purse strings," he said.
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