As Jewish voices warned about the dangers of skyrocketing anti-Jewish hate crimes last year, the unregistered, unofficial ‘UChicago Jews for a Free Palestine’ group released a detailed piece on why this alarming statistic should be ignored.
The piece addresses Congress, levies accusations at a range of national and international organizations, and closes by labeling political actions in defense of Jewish people as “performance of concern over antisemitism.” The crux of the article dismisses all accusations of Jew-hatred as “phantoms of violence they project onto our words.” The only thing missing from this statement is any mention of the actual incidents of Jew-hatred perpetrated by their ideological accomplices on campuses over the past year.
In November of 2024, two Jewish students at DePaul University were assaulted on their campus for showing support for Israel. It might be claimed that this incident clearly targeting Jews has nothing to do with recent protests, if not for the fact that pro-Palestinian student groups quickly moved to support the assault and accuse the victims of “crying crocodile tears over safety and supposed antisemitism.”
That same week, protesters unaffiliated with DePaul University used fake names to disrupt a private event and vandalize a synagogue during a protest supported by Students for Justice in Palestine.
Despite the wildly disturbing nature of these incidents, some might attempt to characterize them as low-stakes, even unimportant relative to international events. If life-and-death stakes are what is required for Jew-hatred to be taken seriously, there are unfortunately a great many of those as well.
Earlier in November, a visibly Jewish man was shot while walking to synagogue, and the perpetrator was charged with a hate crime. Even still, some might argue that these incidents are isolated, that they are not part of a trend, or some other dismissive response.
Again that same week—in the Netherlands this time—Jewish soccer fans were hunted down in the streets. Was this provoked? No, it was clearly premeditated in a group chat with Palestinian flags in its name, aimed at planning the “Jewish hunt.” Days later, we saw copycat crimes in Belgium and thugs boarded a bus and pelted Jewish children with rocks in England, shouting “f– Israel.”
The global rise in Jew-hatred is lethal, and the permissive attitude of our institutions is, at the very least, conducive towards the further enabling of violent and disruptive protests that leave Jewish students isolated and unsafe.
On our own campus, President Alivisatos said that “despite the obvious violations of policy,” the encampment would be allowed to remain. Emboldened, protesters repaid our President’s indulgence by hanging and destroying an effigy of his likeness outside his house, throwing objects at police, and allegedly shouting slurs at Jewish students. All the while, they occupied the Institute of Politics—in a flagrant violation of school policy—next door to the UChicago Hillel and near the Rohr Chabad Center.
The breaking of school policy to accommodate the violence and disruption brought on by pro-Palestinian students has unquestionably made our community unsafe.
Concern with international politics is important, but I would remind my peers that they are students at this school, in Hyde Park, in Chicago.
Friday night dinners at Chabad are my favorite part of the week, but a conversation with a second-year student earlier this year broke my heart. To my mentioning that I have become distanced from my non-Jewish friends in light of all this, she replied “I never got the chance to make non-Jewish friends.”
Our communities have become insular because the institutions that are supposed to protect us have instead decided to give an unjust exception to a small portion of students, allowing them to disrupt our classes and speaker events, assault our officers, and disrupt our convocation.
This letter raises the question: what exactly are these disruptions intended to achieve? The protesters did not end the war in Gaza. They have not influenced politics at either a local or national level in their favor. Our school administration has yet to acquiesce to any of their discriminatory demands. Their only achievement so far has been making campus unsafe for their Jewish classmates.
Clearly, these protester groups flatly deny their deep-rooted Jew-hatred regardless of any evidence to the contrary. This means that they aren’t interested in having a genuine conversation. You will only find baseless accusations, repetitive slogans, and pedantic excuses.
Instead of following their advice to ignore our pleas, I ask you, reader: please do not become desensitized. Jewish students being assaulted on our campuses is not normal. Pogroms across Europe should not, and cannot, be normal. The national rise in anti-Israel Jew-hatred should not be tolerated.
I have loved my time at the University of Chicago. The Jewish community here is dear to me and it wounds me deeply to be unsafe here.
It doesn’t have to be this way.
Joachim Sciamma is a third-year in the College and a 2024–2025 fellow for the Committee for Accuracy in Middle East Reporting and Analysis (CAMERA) on campus.
UChicago Alum / Feb 18, 2025 at 11:35 am
“I never got the chance to make n̶o̶n̶-̶J̶e̶w̶i̶s̶h̶ Anti-Zionist friends.” Fixed it for you.
Suggest that second year read up on the difference between Zionism and Judaism. One is a settler-colonialist ideology, the other is a religion I (and many others) hold in high esteem for its emphasis on social justice. Once she makes this distinction, hopefully she can start making non-racist friends!
An actual, current UChicago student / Feb 18, 2025 at 4:01 pm
The author never mentioned if she’s a Zionist. You assumed that to be the case because she’s Jewish and complained about antisemitism. Who needs to read up on the difference between Zionism and Judaism?
But correcting the words and invalidating the experience of a person you’ve never met is certainly…a choice.
UChicago Alum / Feb 19, 2025 at 8:04 am
> Third to last paragraph: “Anti-Israel”
Consider retaking HUM.
An actual, current UChicago student / Feb 19, 2025 at 9:10 pm
That has nothing to do with the student you were talking about. If you think protests on campus haven’t affected neutral or non-zionist Jewish students, you’re either delusional or naïve.
Either way, consider retirement.
Or Goldreich / Feb 18, 2025 at 6:19 pm
Justice is individual, “social justice” is a fundamentally collectivist and racist oxymoron. And while Judaism as a religion has many elements I dislike and I’ve left it myself, social justice is not one of them.
UChi Alum / Feb 19, 2025 at 8:46 am
Social justice not being a tenant of Judaism is outright false. Tikkun olam? tzedakah?? Pikuach Nefesh???
Secondly, I encourage you to look at Jewish participation in the civil rights movement (see Jack Greenberg and Brown v Board of Education, Jewish participation in freedom rides, etc.) if you are still unconvinced. I can go on, but my point is that there is a really rich history to Jews being at the forefront of social movements.
Or Goldreich / Feb 20, 2025 at 4:40 pm
1. It’s “tenet”, not “tenant”.
2. The progressive misinterpretation of “Tikkun Olam” is common yet incorrect – only in recent decades have some Reform congregations decided to interpret it as left wing political activism.
3. Tzedakah (charity) and pikuach nefesh (the prioritisation of saving lives) are common measures of decency in many cultures, and have nothing to do with social justice.
4. The civil rights movement was about removing group-based barriers on individuals so they could participate equally in society. This is in direct opposition to social justice, that wants to advantage people based on their immutable characteristics rather than treat them as individuals.
Anonymous / Feb 18, 2025 at 8:44 am
So horrifying, such an important read. My full solidarity to the Jewish community
Donald Swanton / Feb 17, 2025 at 7:24 pm
If you don’t mind a little ancient history, I was an undergraduate from 1962 through 1966. U a boy but my roommate my third year was named Leonard Levy. Fifteen years later he was my best man when I got married in Bond Chapel. You know the saying “But some of my best friends are Jewish.”. Well I noticed that most of my friends were Jews, most of my fellow students I disliked were Jews, and so were those I had no strong feelings about. Leonard said he thought the majority of students in the College were Jews.” But Leonsrd, the survey says about 35%.”. “That’s what you put down if you want to receive stuff from Hillel. Otherwise put down Unitarian” . But of course when your last name is Levy ,they find you ayway. So what fraction of the College is Jewish today?
Bob Michaelson / Feb 17, 2025 at 4:12 pm
You claim that the incident with Jewish soccer fans in the Netherlands was not provoked. But there is lots of contrary evidence, e.g. cited in the Wikipedia article “November 2024 Amsterdam riots,” which points out for example that “In the run-up to the match, Maccabi Tel Aviv fans were filmed pulling Palestinian flags from houses, making racist anti-Arab chants such as “Death to Arabs”, assaulting people, and vandalising local property.”
Although you are perhaps not a habitual liar such as Bibi, Donald, Elon, almost all of the GOP, and the IDF (one could list more examples), you would improve your credibility if you did more research and less cherry-picking before you wrote.
Or Goldreich / Feb 18, 2025 at 6:21 pm
That would be great, except that we have evidence showing that the attack was thoroughly coordinated well in advance of the match, before any fan landed in Amsterdam.
Bob Michaelson / Feb 19, 2025 at 2:27 pm
You “have evidence” showing something something, but you don’t – or are unable to, cite that evidence.
An actual, current UChicago student / Feb 19, 2025 at 9:12 pm
It’s literally linked in the article. This is intellectual laziness on your part.
Bob Michaelson / Feb 21, 2025 at 5:44 pm
Excuse me, I thought you were claiming to have actual evidence, not the nonsense that claims a soccer riot (a common occurrence) was a “pogrom.” Some of my long-ago relatives were killed in pogroms, and I don’t buy that nonsense.
Also, your “evidence” doesn’t show anything like coordination “well in advance of the match” – as one of the linked articles states,
the violence was “after leaving the stadium at the end of their team’s Europa League match.”
Maybe you trust The Times of Israel, but the co-founder and owner of that right-wing rag, Seth Klarman, is a big donor to neo-fascist organizations such as CAMERA. Personally I don’t trust Ynet either, but you may be more forgiving of Bibi’s co-conspirators than I am.
Mike / Feb 17, 2025 at 8:00 am
lmfao it took you over a year to respond with this garbage? The DePaul students were proud IDF war criminals and the “vandalized synagogue” was hosting another IDF war criminal. The Netherlands hoax was debunked with the video photographer herself confirming it showed Israelis attacking locals, forcing Reuters to remove the video. Your precious “Jewish soccer fans” were singing on video about killing children in Gaza. You can take all the Jewish supremacist billionaire money you want but no one will believe your fake victim deceptions.
What a way to self report / Feb 18, 2025 at 6:07 am
“Jewish supremacist billionaire money” ? Can you hear yourself ?
Mike / Feb 19, 2025 at 8:35 pm
Believe it or not, the people who chant “death to Arabs” and those that support them are indeed Jewish supremacists. Zionism is cancer. Do you really think that billionaires who fund this author’s “Committee for Accuracy in Middle East Reporting” fellowship like Trump’s #1 donor Sheldon Adelson and “The Times of Israel” founder Seth Klarman are promoting serious journalism?
What a way to self report / Feb 20, 2025 at 5:15 am
None of those people have anything to do with each other? You’re using the alleged behavior of soccer fans in Europe to come to conclusions about Jews in America only because they have the common factor of having the same ethnicity.
Or, you know, pretty much the definition of racism. Examine your biases.
And maybe look to how your precious Palestinians are cheering for the deaths of infants this morning. Acting like the murdering the Bibas kids has anything to do with their liberation.
Mike / Feb 21, 2025 at 3:34 pm
First, it is not “alleged” behavior, the vile Israeli soccer fans’ behavior is all proudly filmed on video.
Second, the Adelson billionaires Sheldon and Miriam have made it perfectly clear their top priority is the further Jewish colonization and annexation of the West Bank, where they believe Jews from Brooklyn should have the right to steal homes from the indigenous Palestinians. You could not find a more clear-cut example of Jewish supremacists, who are funding the author of this article defending the fascist Israeli soccer fans.
Third, the Bibas kids were murdered by Israeli airstrikes as a part of their official Hannibal Directive policy – even their FATHER Yarden Bibas acknowledged that Israel killed them in a video.
And lastly, the Palestinians were celebrating the handing over of the bodies because it is part of an exchange deal that will result in all Palestinian women and children under 19 who were detained since October 7 being freed from prison. So it quite literally has to do with their liberation. Although it of course has nothing to do with the nonexistent anti-semitism on college campuses. But hey, maybe if you keep repeating sloppy, easily debunkable Zionist drivel, you too could one day receive funding from Jewish supremacist billionaires.
Lisa Bernstein / Feb 27, 2025 at 4:03 am
The bibas children were killed by Hamas according to the forensics.
Concerned student / Feb 16, 2025 at 10:55 pm
Well said! The time has come to reject extremism and uphold the values that define us. A university is a place of learning and debate, and those who continuously disrupt it—especially while co-opting racism and antisemitism—should face consequences.