From, the first days after Hamas’s brutal terror attack in Israel, we have been covering the shocking and scary ways the war is reverberating on U.S. campuses. Death threats at Cornell. An assault at Columbia. An altercaton over the burning of an Israeli flag at Tulane. Harvard students blaming Israel for the attack — and being doxxed for doing so.
We will continue, of course, to cover incidents of antisemitism and Islamophobia and clashes over free speech on campus. But we wanted to get beyond the histrionic headlines and viral videos to build a deeper understanding of what it’s like to be one of the 250,000 Jewish students on American campuses in this fraught moment.
So sent 11 reporters to 11 campuses — some that have drawn national attention, like Cornell and Columbia, and some where conflicts have been perhaps quieter but no less challenging, like Rutgers and the University of Michigan. We watched rallies and joined ice-cream socials. We saw screaming slogans on the sidewalks.
And we listened.
“You can prepare yourself for antisemitism as much as you want, and you can read every scholarly book about it, and you can know everything about it intellectually,” said one Tulane student. “But it's so different when you actually experience it.”
Please let us know what you think by emailing [email protected]. If you value our journalism about antisemitism on campus, support us with a donation, and urge your friends to sign up for our free newsletters.
Thank you for reading,
Jodi Rudoren
Editor-in-chief