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Susan Abulhawa, program director of UPennâs âPalestine Festival,â just praised terrorist Elias Rodriguez and called for more attacks. Sheâs also claimed that âthe Jewish peopleâ are entirely fake.
Newsflash: Jews have prayed for ânext year in Jerusalemâ for centuries.
The Rambam (Maimonides) wrote the Iggeret Teiman (Epistle to Yemen) in the 12th century. He lived in Cordoba in Al-Andalus (now in Spain), Morocco, and Egypt.
There are many families today that are mixed Ashkenazi and Yemenite Jewish heritage.
âWhat Mr. Rodriguez did should come as no surprise. In fact, Iâm surprised it has not happened sooner.â
Bet money that Riley Gaines and other white cis terfs like her will go after black athletes next. Something something "I think that black woman was actually a man look at it it has muscles!"
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In January 18, 2024, Faculty at UPenn published an article announcing the formation of their Faculty for Justice in Palestine chapter.
A fascinating excerpt from the article:
So PFJPâŠ
does not believe Antisemitism and Islamophobia are discrete forms of racism that overlap and interconnect.
Believes Judaism and Islam are⊠the same religion?????
I have so many questions.
Also allow me to note that antisemitic bigotry predates the advent of Islam by over a thousand years, so thereâs that. Thereâs also the awkward fact that early Muslim conquests were rooted in antisemitism.
Groups say EEOC demand for names and personal details echoes dark history and threatens safety and civil rights
Several faculty groups have denounced the Trump administrationâs efforts to obtain information about Jewish professors, staff and students at the University of Pennsylvania â including personal emails, phone numbers and home addresses â as government abuse with âominous historical overtonesâ.
The US Equal Employment Opportunity Commission (EEOC) is demanding the university turn over names and personal information about Jewish members of the Penn community as part of the administrationâs stated goal to combat antisemitism on campuses. But some Jewish faculty and staff have condemned the governmentâs demand as âa visceral threat to the safety of those who would find themselves identified because compiling and turning over to the government âlists of Jewsâ conjures a terrifying historyâ, according to a press release put out by the groupsâ lawyers.
The EEOC sued Penn in November over the universityâs refusal to fully comply with its demands. On Tuesday, the American Association of University Professorsâ national and Penn chapters, the universityâs Jewish Law Students Association and its Association of Senior and Emeritus Faculty, and the American Academy of Jewish Research filed a motion in federal court to intervene in the case.
âThese requests would require Penn to create and turn over a centralized registry of Jewish students, faculty, and staff â a profoundly invasive and dangerous demand that intrudes deeply into the freedoms of association, religion, speech, and privacy enshrined in the First Amendment,â the groups argued.
âWe are entering territory that should shock every single one of us,â said Norm Eisen, co-founder and executive chair of the Democracy Defenders Fund on a press call. The fund is representing the faculty groups along with the American Civil Liberties Union of Pennsylvania and the firm Hangley Aronchick Segal Pudlin and Schiller. âThat kind of information â however purportedly benign the excuses given for it â can be put to the most dangerous misuse. This is an abuse of government power that drags us back to some of the darkest chapters in our history.â
The EEOC did not immediately respond to a request for comment.
The University of Pennsylvania was among dozens of US universities to come under federal investigation over alleged antisemitism in the aftermath of the 7 October 2023 Hamas attacks and Israelâs subsequent war in Gaza. In response, the university established a taskforce to study antisemitism, implemented a series of measures and shared hundreds of pages of documents to comply with government demands.
But the university refused to comply with the EEOCâs July subpoena for personal information of Jewish faculty, students and staff, or those affiliated with Jewish organizations who had not given their consent, as well as the names of individuals who had participated in confidential listening sessions or received a survey by the universityâs antisemitism taskforce. A university spokesperson said in November that âviolating their privacy and trust is antithetical to ensuring Pennâs Jewish community feels protected and safeâ. Instead, the university offered to inform all its employees of the EEOC investigation, inviting those interested to contact the agency directly.
But that was not enough for the commission, which brought the university to court to seek to enforce the subpoena.
âThe EEOC remains steadfast in its commitment to combatting workplace antisemitism and seeks to identify employees who may have experienced antisemitic harassment. Unfortunately, the employer continues to refuse to identify members of its workforce who may have been subjected to this unlawful conduct,â the EEOC chair, Andrea Lucas, said in a statement at the time. âAn employerâs obstruction of efforts to identify witnesses and victims undermines the EEOCâs ability to investigate harassment.â
The EEOC request prompted widespread alarm and condemnation among Jewish faculty, and earned rebukes from the universityâs Hillel and other Jewish groups.
Steven Weitzman, a professor with Pennâs religious studies department who also served on the universityâs antisemitism taskforce, said that the mere request for such lists âinstills a sense of vulnerability among Jewsâ and that the government cannot guarantee that the information it collects wonât fall âinto the wrong hands or have unintended consequencesâ.
âPart of what sets off alarm bells for people like me is a history of people using Jewish lists against Jews,â he said . âThe Nazi campaign against Jews depended on institutions like universities handing over information about their Jewish members to the authorities.â
âAs Jewish study scholars, we know well the dangers of collecting such information,â said Beth Wenger, who teaches Jewish history at Penn.
Itâs not the first time the EEOCâs efforts to fight antisemitism have caused alarm among Jewish faculty. Last spring, the commission texted the personal phones of employees of Barnard College, the womenâs school affiliated with Columbia University, linking to a survey that asked respondents whether they identified as Jewish or Israeli.