UCLA Must End Harassment and Bullying of Jewish Students
|
|
UCLA Must End Harassment and Bullying of Jewish Students
|
In
an attempt to target, harass and intimidate pro-Israel Jewish students
at UCLA, Students for Justice in Palestine (SJP) recently demanded that
candidates for student government positions sign a statement pledging they will not go on any trip to Israel sponsored by three Jewish organizations.
Notably,
SJP has targeted only Israel and three Jewish organizations that
sponsor trips to Israel. Not a single church or mosque that pays for or
sponsors Israel trips was singled out.
This
is an outrageous and impermissible violation of students' right to free
expression, their right to free association, and their fundamental
right to travel and move freely. SJP cannot be permitted to infringe on
any student's personal liberties and freedoms, or to bully students into
not associating with certain Jewish groups that are dedicated to
building love and support for Israel.
SJP's motive is clear: to stack the deck with anti-Israel activists. Last February,
SJP tried to get the student government to endorse an anti-Israel
divestment resolution. The effort failed. SJP is now trying a different
way to achieve the same goal, by manipulating the composition of the
student government so that it is filled with anti-Israel activists who
support SJP's hateful agenda.
Since the student government rejected SJP's divestment resolution, members of SJP have engaged in what a UCLA student leader has
described in the UCLA newspaper as "hate speech against the Jewish
community" and a campaign of "cyberbullying toward both the Jewish
community and council members that voted against the resolution."
Students
who opposed the anti-Israel divestment resolution reported feeling
uncomfortable even walking on campus because of the hate mail they
received. This is outrageous. Students must feel safe on campus.
SJP
is the only university-funded student organization at UCLA whose very
mission targets an ethnic minority for hatred and vilification and whose
activities routinely harass, intimidate, threaten and seek to silence
members of that ethnic minority on campus.
SJP's
discrimination tactics and attempts to prevent pro-Israel Jewish
students from having equal access to positions in student government
violate both the UCLA Principles of Community and itsStudent Conduct Code.
UCLA Chancellor Gene Block and President Janet Napolitano recently
expressed concern about SJP's tactics, without mentioning the group by
name. That is a significant first step, but more must be done.
First,
the UCLA leadership should publicly condemn the SJP by name and
strongly denounce the group's effort to delegitimize educational trips
to Israel by some organizations but not others, so that pro-Israel
Jewish students will be excluded from the student government and a
pro-Israel viewpoint will be eliminated from discussions.
Second,
UCLA should severely sanction the SJP for violating UCLA's rules
against harassment and discrimination. The sanction should include a
requirement that the SJP publicly apologize to fellow students,
particularly pro-Israel Jewish students, for targeting, disrespecting
and hurting them.
Anti-Jewish
harassment, intimidation and bullying are the hallmark of SJP. This
group needs to finally get the message that their misconduct will no
longer be tolerated, and there will be tangible consequences when they
violate university rules and harm fellow students.
When Vassar's SJP chapter published a vile Nazi cartoon,
Vassar President Catharine Hill condemned it as "racist" and
"anti-Semitic," committed to a full university investigation and a
review of SJP's status on campus, and demanded the SJP take
responsibility for its actions.
When
SJP at Northeastern University slipped mock eviction notices under
hundreds of dorm rooms earlier this spring, the group was immediately suspended.
The
UC Board of Regents, President Napolitano and Chancellor Block must
likewise act swiftly and decisively to show the entire UC community that
student freedom, safety and well-being are their number one priority.
Susan Tuchman, co-author of this op-ed, is Director of the Zionist Organization of America's Center for Law and Justice.
Tammi
Rossman-Benjamin is a lecturer at the University of California, Santa
Cruz and the co-founder of AMCHA Initiative, an organization that
combats antisemitism at institutions of higher education.
No comments:
Post a Comment