University of Penn professors in Israel speak out on US campus
antisemitism
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[January 05, 2024]
By Steven Scheer
JERUSALEM (Reuters) -Until three months ago, University of Pennsylvania
psychology professor Michael Kahana said he had never felt the need to
wear a yarmulke, or Jewish skullcap, to his classes.
"It started Oct. 7. I now feel that if I don't wear a yarmulke then my
students might not feel that they can," said Kahana, one of the
organisers of some 30 Penn faculty on a solidarity mission to Israel
this week.
The aim was mainly to build bridges with the Israeli academic community.
Faculty met with Penn alumni, political and hospital leaders and hostage
families and toured sites in Israel where Palestinian Hamas fighters
attacked on Oct. 7.
Penn and other U.S. colleges have simmered with tension over the Hamas
attack and Israel's subsequent offensive in Gaza. For months,
pro-Palestinian and pro-Israel students have clashed at protests and
university administrators have faced criticism for their responses to
allegations of antisemitism and Islamophobia.
Penn's leadership came under fire from the school's large Jewish
community starting in September when the school hosted a Palestinian
literary festival featuring some outspoken pro-Palestinian speakers
described as antisemitic by critics.
Outrage mounted on Dec. 5 when then-president Liz Magill declined to
give a U.S. congressional committee a definitive "yes" or "no" answer to
the question of whether calling for genocide of Jews violated the school
code of conduct.
Magill and the university's former board chair resigned later that
month.
Kahana said he did not believe Magill was antisemitic. He said the
problem runs far deeper than one person. During their visit to Israel,
Kahana and many of his Penn colleagues voiced dismay at fellow Penn
professors for not condemning Hamas.
In its cross-border rampage from Gaza on Oct. 7, Hamas killed 1,200
Israelis and abducted 240 by Israel's count. Palestinian health
officials say more than 22,000 people have since been killed in Israel's
counterattack in Hamas-run Gaza.
"It was deeply painful that after Oct. 7 so many of my colleagues saw it
perfectly fit to condemn Israel ... they didn't see it fit to say
anything about the atrocities of Hamas," Kahana said at a dinner with
Hebrew University faculty and students. "Why couldn't they express
sympathy after Oct. 7?"
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Idit Ohel, mother of 22-year-old hostage Alon Ohel, speaks to the
delegation of faculty and representatives from the University of
Pennsylvania, as they visit a plaza, in support of the families of
hostages kidnapped on the October 7 attack by Palestinian Islamist
group Hamas, amid the ongoing conflict between Israel and Hamas, in
Tel Aviv, Israel, January 4, 2024. REUTERS/Alexandre Meneghini
Claire Finkelstein, director of Penn's Center for Ethics and Law,
said anti-Israel sentiment on college campuses predates the Oct. 7
attack on Israel. She cited the pro-Palestinian BDS movement - or
boycott, divestment, sanctions - founded in 2005.
Critics of the movement say it is discriminatory and aims to
economically hobble and undermine the Jewish state.
"There's a very, very strong sentiment on campus that is
pro-Palestinian and anti-Israel," Finkelstein said of Penn. "For
many of us who are supportive of Israel, that has been very painful,
and many of us feel that it is based on a fundamental lack of
understanding of the situation on the ground here."
She blamed some antisemitism on U.S. secondary education, where
European history and the Holocaust are taught less and conflicts are
portrayed as between oppressors and oppressed.
"It's never too late for an educational institution to educate and
that's what this is all about," she said.
The Penn faculty said Jewish students have been horrified by
demonstrations with chants of "From the River to the Sea" - which
critics interpret as a call for the elimination of Israel - and
claims that Israel's actions against Gaza are genocidal.
A U.S. House of Representatives committee has opened an
investigation into Penn, as well as Harvard and MIT, whose
presidents testified alongside Magill at the Dec. 5 hearing on
antisemitism.
This week Harvard president Claudine Gay said she would resign from
her position, ending a six-month tenure marred by allegations of
plagiarism and backlash over her congressional testimony about
antisemitism on campus.
(Reporting by Steven Scheer; Additional reporting by Gabriella
Borter; Editing by Howard Goller)
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