Monday, December 23, 2024
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Columbia university admin under fire for antisemitic texts



Columbia University is getting slammed after transcripts of antisemitic texts sent between Columbia administrators were released, as was detailed by the U.S. Committee on Education and the Workforce.

This update comes after a previous release from the committee about alleged offensive texts that โ€œdownplayedโ€ antisemitism issues at the university being sent between Columbia administrators, as The Center Square previously reported.

The texts were sent in a group chat between school deans during a panel discussing antisemitism that was hosted on Columbiaโ€™s campus as a part of an alumni weekend, according to a news release from the committee.

โ€œEducation and the Workforce Committee Chairwoman Virginia Foxx (R-NC) today is again demanding accountability for Columbia University administrators after releasing text messages received as part of the Committeeโ€™s ongoing antisemitism investigation that show the disparaging and dismissive attitudes Columbiaโ€™s administrators hold towards Jewish students,โ€ the Education and the Workforce Committee said in their release.

Several of the text messages between Columbiaโ€™s administrators reinforced multiple harmful stereotypes of Jewish people, according to the release.

Stereotypes specifically aimed at Jewish people and money were used in the text message exchanges in a mocking manner.

Some of the messages were referencing an op-ed piece on antisemitism at Columbia that was written by Campus Rabbi Yonah Hain and published in 2023, according to the release.

โ€œAmazing what $$$$ can do,โ€ one text message said in reference to Hainโ€™s op-ed piece.

Hainโ€™s op-ed was published as a call to action concerning antisemitism at Columbia.

Hain talked about the โ€œbinary thinkingโ€ and โ€œus versus themโ€ attitude that many pro-Palestine protesters exhibited on Columbia’s campus in his writing.

โ€œThe Columbia University community has lost its moral compass,โ€ Hain wrote.

Hain highlighted the “suffering” of Jewish people in his op-ed.

โ€œMuch of the rest of the campus community โ€“ administrators, faculty and students โ€“ has lost its moral core,โ€ Hain wrote. โ€œI know the pressure and legitimate struggle for people on all sides of this conflict. But we must differentiate between political concerns and moral imperatives; it is a moral obligation that any laudation of the indiscriminate atrocities Hamas has perpetrated against Israelis or minimization of our campusโ€™ Jewish communityโ€™s suffering not be accepted as legitimate in this discourse.โ€

Another text message pushed the stereotype of Jews and money even further, mentioning Lavine Family Executive Director Brian Cohen and referring to โ€œhuge fundraising potentialโ€ for him. 

One scathing text sent between the deans said that it was โ€œhard to hear the woe is me, we need to huddle at the Kraft center,” which referenced Columbia’s Kraft Center for Jewish Life.

Foxx slammed the administrators in the latest release, calling for โ€œaccountabilityโ€ on campus at Columbia.

โ€œJewish students deserve better than to have harassment and threats against them dismissed as โ€˜privilege,โ€™ and Jewish faculty members deserve better than to be mocked by their colleagues,โ€ Foxx said in the release.

โ€œThese text messages once again confirm the need for serious accountability across Columbiaโ€™s campus,โ€ Foxx said.

This incident at Columbia is not the first of its kind, as antisemitism has been on the rise at universities and other places in America, as The Center Square previously reported.

One text message from one of the Columbia deans referred to the administration at Columbia as being โ€œjokersโ€ for hosting the panel. 

โ€œThis panel is really making the administration look like jokers,โ€ the dean said in one of the text messages. 

Another disparaging text message from this exchange detailed how the Jewish students were โ€œprivileged,โ€ referencing them as โ€œcoming from a place of privilege.โ€

Some of the texts included the use of emojis that seemed to mock the university panel’s antisemitism discussion even further, including the usage of a vomit emoji and a nauseous face emoji.