Open letter to Cornell University board chair, president, and provost
search
Opinion

Open letter to Cornell University board chair, president, and provost

The Cornell antisemitism task force, part of the school’s Alums for Campus Fairness chapter, of which I am a member, sent this open letter to the administration at Cornell, setting forth steps to root out antisemitism and keep Jewish students safe on college campuses. 

November 7, 2023

Dear Chair Kayser, President Pollack, and Provost Kotlikoff:

We want to begin by thanking you for taking the Jewish concerns seriously by finally issuing more appropriate statements and laying out some concrete steps to address them. We know how committed you are to keeping the campus safe and maintaining Cornell as a special place for learning. We believe that this is possible, but not without some fundamental changes which we will briefly describe below:

1. Establishing safe and appropriate manners of protest.

The university owes a duty of care to all students. In practice this means that, though rallies are permissible, they need to be held at appropriate times, in appropriate places and in an appropriate manner. That is, not marching throughout campus wearing masks and shouting threatening messages so that they interrupt, block and intimidate other students. If students or staff harass, threaten or intimidate other students, there needs to be harsh, immediate and appropriate administrative and/or criminal punishment, as the case may be. There also needs to be adequate police presence to assure that all sides are kept safe. This was not the case at the rallies so far on campus. If necessary, the city, county and state police should be called in to keep anyone physically, psychologically and emotionally safe.

2. Guaranteeing all students freedom from harassment and intimidation. 

Cornell, along with all other universities, has created “safe spaces” for microaggressions. This is all well and good, but you must take this idea and expand it to create physically safe spaces for Jewish students who are actually faced with REAL “macro” not micro- aggressions in hate speech calling for their deaths and the demise of the Jewish State with chants of “No Justice No Peace” and “From the River to the Sea.” Any act of harassment and intimidation as well as violations of the Student Code of Conduct (as detailed in #6 below) needs to be investigated immediately and then strongly punished by expulsion and/or criminal prosecution. And, most importantly, the “teeth” behind this policy needs to be made known unequivocally throughout the campus community.

3. Controlling professors’  antisemitism, bullying and propaganda.   

Though professors have First Amendment rights to free speech at Cornell’s NYS colleges (but not at the private ones) and “academic freedom” at both, this should only extend so far. In protecting these rights and freedoms, the administration must ensure that professors in their courses, classroom instruction, on campus and in online speech do not violate Cornell’s ethical and bullying policies; do not engage in harassment or intimidation which many are doing by singling out Israeli or Jewish students by making them feel uncomfortable at best and often threatened at worst, which is a violation of Article VI of the civil rights law.

For example, an English teacher this week asked students how they felt about the situation in the Middle East. When most indicated that they felt for the Israelis, she then gave the students information on how many Palestinians were killed and then asked them to go around again to share their feelings after knowing this, which made the Jewish students very uncomfortable.

4. Prohibiting professors from using the university’s name and leveraging its prestige. 

Professors have rights to advocate for their political positions. However, what they cannot do so without the permission of the university to use the name/insignia of the university in their political letters, petitions and policy statements. This needs to be prohibited as, frankly, very few of the professors who do that have enough prestige on their own for anyone to care what they say. It is their affiliation with the university that does this and which the university should prohibit. Moreover, while they can do it as individuals, professors have no right to advance political causes in their capacity as university employees when, for most of them, the venomous and dangerous propaganda they spew has NOTHING to do with either their academic pursuits or areas of expertise.

5. Retooling the Diversity, Equity and Inclusion (DEI) department.

The DEI departments need to be retooled so that: (i) Diversity includes diversity of thought and religion, not only physical characteristics or various orientations.  Also, the subjective and impossible to properly quantify concepts of “occupier vs occupied and oppressor vs oppressed” needs to be removed from consideration as a result. (ii) Equity means that Jewish students are treated the same as other maligned minorities, despite our perceived success or “whiteness” (even though more than half of Israel’s Jewish citizens are not Caucasian but Mizrahi/Sephardi or of other races), and when we constitute only about 2.5% of the U.S. population yet are victims of 55% of the hate crimes, and (iii) Inclusion is expanded so that Jewish people are also considered as part of a persecuted group and antisemitism (as per the IHRA definition referenced in #7 below) is not permitted in the academic environment. Those who run the DEI departments need to understand all of this and also need to be held accountable for their intentional or unintentional bias against Jewish students.

6. Defunding and deauthorizing campus groups who violate the student code of conduct.

Many of the student organizations that promote anti-Israel bias are not legitimate student organizations as they outwardly glorify violence, antisemitism, murder, terrorism and hate. Their rallies and slogans of “From the River to the Sea” are, in fact, a call for ethnic cleansing and eradication of Jews and of the State of Israel and are clearly in violation of the student code of conduct. Their words, physical intimidation, tearing down of posters; graffiti, vandalism and blocking public walkways and areas with demonstrations while shouting hateful speech are ALL violations of the below enumerated sections of the student code of conduct (the “code”).

Many of these pro-Palestinian groups engage in conduct that results in “emotional or psychological harm to a person” in violation of subsection IV.B. of the code (assault and endangerment); “threatening behavior, unreasonably loud or belligerent behavior and obstruction of pedestrian traffic” in violation of subsection IV.E. (disorderly conduct); “disruption of the lawful exercise of others’ freedom of speech” (e.g. by removing hostage posters) and peaceful assembly (e.g. shouting at students in pro-Israel rallies and shouting down pro-Israel speakers) in violation of subsection IV.F (disruption of university activities) and subjecting a group to uninvited and unwelcome behaviors that are abusive, threatening, intimidating and create a hostile environment” (e.g. shouting “Death to Jews”) in violation of subsection IV.J. (harassment).

7. Involving all the stakeholders in fighting antisemitism.

As other minority communities are rightly involved in calling out and defining bias, so should Jewish people as to antisemitism.

IHRA Definition: The International Holocaust Remembrance Alliance (IHRA) working definition of antisemitism is the most widely agreed upon definition of antisemitism. Cornell should adopt this definition, which includes, inter alia, (i) calling for the harming of Jews in the name of a radical ideology, (ii) making demonizing and stereotyping allegations about Jews, (iii) denying the Jewish people the right of self-determination (e.g. claiming Israel is a racist or apartheid state), (iv) holding Jews collectively responsible for the actions of Israel, and (v) the double standard of requiring Israel to behave in a way that is not expected of any other democratic nation (e.g., demanding a ceasefire when 240 hostages are being detained by Hamas).

Antisemitism Action Committee. Establishing a committee of students, professors, administrators, alumni and parents to work through solutions to campus antisemitism.  This will include some of the concepts above, as well as (i) Holocaust and antisemitism education for incoming freshmen, student government members, professors and the DEI staff  (ii) revamping courses that are not academic exercises in the history or objectives of the Palestinian people but are excuses for the proselytizing of a political position and the destruction of the Jewish State; and (iii) empowering the committee to react swiftly in recommending appropriately strong consequences to acts of antisemitism by students and staff.

We strongly recommend that you implement all of the suggestions contained herein. Cornell has a unique opportunity to either be at the forefront of finding a solution to this problem or to continue furthering it. Thank you.

Respectfully yours,

Antisemitism Task Force,
Cornell Chapter-Alums for Campus Fairness
Misha Galperin, Parent ’27
Mimi Klimberg, Parent ’20, ’27
Wendy Levitt,  JGSM ’92
Susan Portman Price, ’90 MRP’91, P’21
Daniel Shlufman, Parent ’27
Sarah Victor (Chair), ILR ’13

Daniel Shlufman of Tenafly is the president of the Jewish Federation of Northern New Jersey.

read more:
comments