CALIFORNIA FOCUS
FOR RELEASE: TUESDAY, MAY 19, 2015, OR THEREAFTER
BY THOMAS D. ELIAS
“ARE ANTI-SEMITISM, OUT-OF-STATE TUITION LINKED?”
There is no doubt dependence on the
higher tuition paid by out-of-state and foreign students has become established
policy at the University of California. Now some believe this may be leading to
the unintended consequence of an upsurge of anti-Semitism on campuses like
Berkeley, Davis, UCLA and Riverside.
The
university says no. “I don’t think there’s any link,” maintains Dianne Klein,
media relations director for UC’s central office. “There’s been no huge influx
of students from countries where anti-Semitism is official policy.”
No?
Between 2001 and 2013, the number of UC graduate students from Iran – where a
mantra in public schools reportedly has students daily reciting “Death to
America, Death to Israel!” – rose from six to 113. Plus, last fall’s enrollees
included 74 undergraduates from Saudi Arabia, 53 from Turkey and 51 from
Pakistan, to name a few countries where anti-Semitism is common.
There is no doubt that as the number
of foreign students at UC has risen, with administrators exploiting the $23,000
annual difference between out-of-state tuition and what California residents
pay, the so-called BDS movement (boycott, divest and sanction) against Israel
has become more active on many campuses. Student governments at Berkeley, UCLA
and Davis all have voted to demand that university regents and faculty boycott
Israel, divest from companies doing business there and set up economic
sanctions against it. There was a similar vote at Stanford University this
spring.
No one asks their nationality at
demonstrations, but almost invariably, campus BDS leaders have Muslim-oriented
names.
So far, no university governing board
has bought into their demands.
Students conducting anti-Israel
rallies and demonstrations deny anti-Semitism, although their efforts have
included checkpoints on some campuses where camouflage-clad students toting
mockup machine guns stopped and frisked anyone they thought looked Jewish.
And outright anti-Semitism has
followed quickly after heated debates over the anti-Israel student senate
votes. At UCLA, student government members questioned the ability of a Jewish
student to serve impartially on a judicial board and voted her down. Later,
they were shamed into reversing that vote.
At Davis, vandals defaced a Jewish
fraternity house with swastikas and other anti-Semitic graffiti shortly after
the BDS debate. A few weeks after the debate at Stanford, swastikas were
swabbed onto the Sigma Alpha Epsilon fraternity house, not a Jewish one, and
two other residences.
Stanford also saw a minority student
coalition question a student government candidate about being Jewish, then
choose not to endorse her, all the while denying anti-Semitism.
Imagine the reaction if anyone set up
checkpoints blocking and frisking black, Latino or Asian students or if elected
student officials questioned Baptists or Muslims about their ability to be
objective and fair. The outcry would be enormous, but it was muted after these
outright examples of anti-Semitism.
Ironically, this all comes after a Pew
Research Center study found 63 percent of Americans view the Jewish religion
favorably, the highest rating for any religion. Protestant Christianity in that
survey got a 61 percent favorable rating and the Mormon faith 46 percent
positive.
But the on-campus scene has grown
serious enough that UC President Janet Napolitano felt impelled to issue the
first formal statement ever by a UC president condemning anti-Semitism.
“Anti-Semitic incidents…will not be tolerated,” she said. “They deserve our
condemnation.”
It all makes some wonder whether the
upsurge of campus anti-Semitism is linked to greater numbers of students from
strongly anti-Israel countries, including Malaysia, which sent 164
undergraduates to UC last fall.
“We’ve had a real concern that the
influx of students from countries where anti-Semitism is rampant will spill
over into action toward Jewish students,” said Tammy Rossman-Benjamin a UC
Santa Cruz lecturer and founder of the Amcha Initiative, a non-profit
organization that documents and combats campus anti-Semitism.
The pro-Israel organization Stand With
Us reports most on-campus anti-Israel activity is organized by Students for
Justice in Palestine, a national group with local chapters. “It is coordinated
nationally and we think the funding comes from abroad,” said Roz Rothstein, CEO
of Stand With Us.
Christians United for Israel, composed
mostly of evangelicals, calls what’s happening “a dark movement,” that “bullies
and intimidates Jewish students.”
No doubt some of this activity would
have hit California campuses even without their need for foreign tuition money.
From all appearances, though, one unintended consequence is that the phenomenon
is more intense than it otherwise would be.
-30-
Email
Thomas Elias at tdelias@aol.com. His book, "The Burzynski Breakthrough,
The Most Promising Cancer Treatment and the Government’s Campaign to Squelch
It," is now available in a soft cover fourth edition. For more Elias
columns, visit www.californiafocus.net
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