Students on campuses today talk about “safe spaces” for minorities. Jewish students who are routinely singled out for judgment — and sometimes violence – talk about coping and thriving in uncertain times

FLAMES OF HATRED Though swastikas and other expressions of traditional anti-Semitism are making a resurgence on college campuses experts say it’s the rise of anti-Israel activism that is truly fanning the flames. Schools with very active chapters of the anti-Israel group Students for Justice in Palestine (SJP) tend to see an increase in BDS activity and anti-Israel hate (Photos: Amir Levy)
I t’s never been easier for secular Jewish students to get a taste of Yiddishkeit at college. Take Rutgers University for example. A drive down College Avenue in New Brunswick New Jersey reveals a gleaming new Hillel building a sprawling Chabad House and the Allen and Joan Bildner Center for the Study of Jewish Life which sponsors visiting professors and hosts lectures and programming for the community at large.
But while kosher meals and learning opportunities abound Jewish students at universities across the country describe a campus environment that can turn hostile. Anti-Israel activities on many campuses today are loud and hateful and Jewish students are singled out for harassment and sometimes violence.
Since January 2017 the AMCHA Initiative an organization that tracks and investigates anti-Semitic incidents on campuses has recorded more than 200 incidents of anti-Semitism and there were more than 600 in 2016 alone. Another survey on campus anti-Semitism this one by the Kantor Center for the Study of Contemporary European Jewry at Tel Aviv University recently found that anti-Jewish incidents are up 45 percent at US institutions of higher learning. A related survey released in late April by the Anti-Defamation League shows that anti-Semitic incidents were up 86 percent in the United States overall at the start of 2017.
Create a free account to keep reading.