by Asaf Romirowsky
The new Act would enhance the Education Department's ability to identify, investigate, and punish all forms of anti-Semitism, including anti-Zionism and anti-Israel harassment.
Originally published under the title "Anti-Semitism Only on Our Terms."
Anti-Zionism is rampant on university campuses in the United States.
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The
US Senate has unanimously passed the Anti-Semitism Awareness Act,
introduced by US Senators Tim Scott (R-SC) and Bob Casey (D-PA). If
approved by the House, the bill will give the US Department of Education
the statutory tools to examine anti-Semitic incidents in the broadest
and effective way possible.
The
Anti-Semitism Awareness Act will mirror the State Department's Special
Envoy to Monitor and Combat Anti-Semitism's definition of anti-Semitism,
including critical language to define where anti-Israel bias crosses
the line into anti-Semitism. The new Act would enhance the Education
Department's ability to identify, investigate, and punish all forms of
anti-Semitism, including anti-Zionism and anti-Israel harassment.
When
asked about the Act, Senator Casey channeled Natan Sharansky's "3D"
definition of anti-Semitism and listed the following examples of where
the bill's tools would be helpful:
- Calling for, aiding, or justifying the killing or harming of Jews,
- Accusing the Jews as a people, or Israel as a state, of inventing or exaggerating the Holocaust,
- Demonizing Israel by blaming it for all interreligious or political tensions,
- Judging Israel by a double standard that one would not apply to any other democratic nation.
Because
of the bill's potential impact on anti-Israel activities, we have seen a
steady flow of hysteria and condemnation, in particular from the far
left. Israel boycott groups like Jewish Voice for Peace (JVP) claim that
the bill's "overly broad language has the potential to define any
criticism of Israeli policy as anti-Semitic," and that it would prevent
"frank discussions of the impact of Zionism, campus disagreements about
the future of Israel/Palestine, and in fact, much of what falls under
Jewish studies in all facets, including courses."
Anti-Semitism is becoming more socially acceptable in the guise of anti-Zionism.
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The
irony is that JVP in particular, which supports and advocates for
boycott, divestment and sanction (BDS) against Israel, is only willing
to have "frank discussions" through its own prism, which sees Israel as
the source of all evil in the Middle East and something to be abolished.
University
administrators like Chancellor Howard Gillman and Dean Erwin
Chemerinsky from the University of California, Irvine also took issue
with the bill, despite living on a campus with one of the country's most
hostile educational environments for Jewish students.
Earlier
this year at Irvine, a Jewish student emerging from a Holocaust-related
event was chased by a mob of "anti-Israel" protesters and was forced to
barricade herself in a school building as her pursuers banged on the
doors and windows and chanted "Long live the Intifada!" She had to be
rescued by the police.
In
2010, following the shouting down of then-Israeli Ambassador Michael
Oren, Dean Chemerinsky wrote that he has not seen "the slightest
indication of anti-Semitism" at UC Irvine, nor "heard one complaint
about an anti-Semitic incident on campus."
Dean Erwin Chemerinsky is willfully blind to anti-Semitism at UC-Irvine.
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Despite
being a distinguished constitutional scholar, Dean Chemerinsky
mischaracterized the proposed Anti-Semitism Awareness Act, claiming that
the bill would "require the Education Department, when deciding whether
to investigate incidents on campus, to consider the State Department's
definition of anti-Semitism."
That
is not what the bill says. Rather, under the proposed legislation, the
Department of Education would consider the State Department definition –
adopted in 2010 – when deciding whether severe, persistent, and
pervasive harassment and intimidation (that federal civil rights
statutes are designed to prevent) were motivated by anti-Jewish animus.
That distinction is critical. On its face, the proposed legislation
would not in any way encourage or permit the government to investigate
or take action against protected speech-based and expressive activities.
In academia, only Jews are seen as unworthy of having a sovereign state.
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In
fact, Irvine provides the strongest evidence that the Anti-Semitism
Awareness Act is needed now more than ever. It is dismaying, but not
surprising, that these two administrators and groups like JVP would
rather misrepresent the text and constitutional soundness of the
proposed legislation than address the culture of anti-Semitic hate that
has arisen around the country, particularly at universities.
Academia
has unconsciously revealed that Jews and Israelis are the canaries in
the coal mine. If universities are indicators of social trends, then
anti-Semitism is becoming more acceptable in the guise of anti-Zionism.
Only Jews are seen as unworthy of having a sovereign state, thanks to
various sins past and present.
Such
attitudes are quite common on university campuses, and are protected by
"academic freedom." Yet it is also another reason for the growing gap
between academia and the public; on moral issues, like defending
democracy against jihadi terror, Americans and its elected officials are
learning that universities are choosing their own way to define racism
which may not always align with reality.
Asaf Romirowsky is the executive director of Scholars for Peace in the Middle East and a fellow at the Middle East Forum.
Source: http://www.meforum.org/6487/anti-semitism-awareness-act
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Copyright - Original materials copyright (c) by the authors.
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