Current:Home > ContactTradeEdge-Clashes over Israel-Hamas war shatter students’ sense of safety on US college campuses -AssetVision
TradeEdge-Clashes over Israel-Hamas war shatter students’ sense of safety on US college campuses
Johnathan Walker View
Date:2025-04-08 06:42:08
NEW ORLEANS (AP) — As a Jewish student,TradeEdge Eden Roth, always has felt safe and welcome at Tulane University, where more than 40% of the students are Jewish. That has been tested by the aftermath of last month’s invasion of Israel by Hamas.
Graffiti appeared on the New Orleans campus with the message “from the river to the sea,” a rallying cry for pro-Palestinian activists. Then came a clash between dueling demonstrations, where a melee led to three arrests and left a Jewish student with a broken nose.
“I think that the shift of experience with Jews on campus was extremely shocking,” said Roth, who was in Israel last summer for a study-abroad program. “A lot of students come to Tulane because of the Jewish population — feeling like they’re supported, like a majority rather than a minority. And I think that’s definitely shifted.”
Tulane isn’t alone. On other campuses, long-simmering tensions are erupting in violence and shattering the sense of safety that makes colleges hubs of free discourse. Students on both sides are witnessing acts of hate, leaving many fearing for their safety even as they walk to classrooms.
Threats and clashes have sometimes come from within, including at Cornell, where a student is accused of posting online threats against Jewish students. A University of Massachusetts student was arrested after allegedly punching a Jewish student and spitting on an Israeli flag at a demonstration. At Stanford, an Arab Muslim student was hit by a car in a case being investigated as a hate crime.
The unease is felt acutely at Tulane, where 43% of students are Jewish, the highest percentage among colleges that are not explicitly Jewish.
“To see it on Tulane’s campus is definitely scary,” said Jacob Starr, a Jewish student from Massachusetts.
Within the student Jewish community, there is a range of perspectives on the conflict. The latest war began with an attack on Oct. 7 by Hamas militants who targeted towns, farming communities and a music festival near the Gaza border, killing more than 1,400 people. Israel has responded with weeks of attacks in Gaza, which have killed more than 10,000 people, most of them Palestinian civilians.
Emma Sackheim, a Jewish student from Los Angeles who attends Tulane’s law school, said she grew up as a supporter of the Jewish state but now considers herself an opponent of Zionism. Sackheim says she knows students who oppose Israel’s policies “but don’t feel comfortable to publicly say anything.”
“I was standing on the Palestinian side,” she said when asked about the Oct. 26 demonstration, which took place along a public New Orleans street that runs through campus.
Still, she said Tulane is where she feels most comfortable as a Jew. “I know that I have so many options of community,” she said.
On campuses around the U.S., students on both sides say they have been subjected to taunts and rhetoric that oppose their very existence since the invasion and the subsequent Israeli assault on Hamas in northern Gaza.
They see it in campus rallies, on anonymous message boards frequented by college students, and on graffiti scrawled on dorms and buildings. In one case under police investigation as a possible hate crime, “Free Palestine” was found written this week on a window of Boston University’s Hillel center.
Colleges have been scrambling to restore a sense of security for Jewish and Arab students — and stressing messages of inclusion for diverse student bodies. But untangling what’s protected as political speech and what crosses into threatening language can be daunting task.
Tulane’s president, Michael Fitts, has described an increased police presence and other security measures on campus. In messages to the campus community, he has lamented the loss of innocent Israeli and Palestinian lives and said the university was reaching out to Jewish and Muslim student groups and religious organizations.
He has faced criticism from people on both sides seeking more forceful statements.
Islam Elrabieey, for example, seeks condemnation of Israel’s actions.
“To condemn Hamas is a good thing,” said Elrabieey, a native of Egypt and a visiting scholar in Tulane’s Middle East and North African Studies program. “But at the same time, if you didn’t condemn Israel for committing war crimes, this is a double standard.”
As places that encourage intellectual debate, it isn’t surprising that colleges have seen heated conflict, said Jonathan Fansmith, a senior vice president for the American Council on Education, an association of university presidents. But when different factions disagree about what crosses the line between free speech and abuse, it puts colleges in a difficult place, he said.
“Everyone should be incredibly sympathetic to Jewish students who feel under threat, and the alarming rise in antisemitic actions is something college universities take very seriously,” Fansmith said. “But they have a requirement, a responsibility under the law as well, to balance the free speech rights of people who may disagree, who may have critiques that they find disagreeable or dislike. And finding that line is very, very difficult.”
After facing criticism for trying to remain too neutral on the war, Harvard University’s president on Thursday condemned the phrase “from the river to the sea,” saying it has historical meanings that imply to many the eradication of Jews from Israel. Pro-Palestinian activists around the world chanted the phrase in the aftermath of the Hamas raid.
Meanwhile, Roth said that some Tulane Jewish students have been rattled enough to make them think twice about visiting the Mintz Center, the headquarters for the Tulane Hillel organization.
“I don’t feel completely safe, but I feel like we have no other choice but to embrace who we are in these times,” Roth said in an interview at the building. “I know a lot of my friends are nervous to wear their Star of David necklaces, to wear a kippah or even come into this building. But I think it’s critical that we do not let fear consume us.”
Lea Jackson, a freshman from New Jersey who describes herself as a modern Orthodox Jew, said she is concerned that supporters of a Palestinian state are nervous expressing their views because of the large numbers of Jewish students on campus.
The Hamas raid may have made some people more reluctant to speak even as others become more outspoken, said Jackson, who said she recently spent a “gap year” in Israel and has friends and family there.
“But it’s a lot harder to to have a civil conversation,” Jackson said, “when emotions and tension are so high and so many people are so personally connected to this.”
___
The Associated Press education team receives support from the Carnegie Corporation of New York. The AP is solely responsible for all content.
veryGood! (8)
Related
- Are Instagram, Facebook and WhatsApp down? Meta says most issues resolved after outages
- 'After Sappho' brings women in history to life to claim their stories
- After tragic loss, Marc Maron finds joy amidst grief with 'From Bleak to Dark'
- Can you place your trust in 'The Traitors'?
- Costco membership growth 'robust,' even amid fee increase: What to know about earnings release
- The New Black Film Canon is your starting point for great Black filmmaking
- The New Black Film Canon is your starting point for great Black filmmaking
- Sheryl Lee Ralph explains why she almost left showbiz — and what kept her going
- Could your smelly farts help science?
- A daytime TV departure: Ryan Seacrest is leaving 'Live with Kelly and Ryan'
Ranking
- This was the average Social Security benefit in 2004, and here's what it is now
- The lessons of Wayne Shorter, engine of imagination
- Raquel Welch, actress and Hollywood sex symbol, dead at 82
- In the 'Last Dance,' Magic Mike leaves his thong-and-dance routine behind
- Finally, good retirement news! Southwest pilots' plan is a bright spot, experts say
- 'Top Gun: Maverick' puts Tom Cruise back in the cockpit
- Jimmy Kimmel expects no slaps hosting the Oscars; just snarky (not mean) jokes
- Robert Blake, the actor acquitted in wife's killing, dies at 89
Recommendation
Macy's says employee who allegedly hid $150 million in expenses had no major 'impact'
'Imagining Freedom' will give $125 million to art projects focused on incarceration
Classic rock guitar virtuoso Jeff Beck dies at 78
U.S. prosecutors ask for 25 more years in prison for R. Kelly
Highlights from Trump’s interview with Time magazine
'All Quiet' wins 7 BAFTAs, including best film, at U.K. film awards ceremony
Reneé Rapp wants to burn out by 30 — and it's all going perfectly to plan
Whatever she touches 'turns to gold' — can Dede Gardner do it again at the Oscars?