https://www.americanthinker.com/articles/2023/11/the_plight_of_jews_on_college_campuses.html
This is not the best of times for many — perhaps most — Jews on college campuses. Pro-Hamas, anti-Israel demonstrations and occasional vandalism have become commonplace, with more than a few explicitly calling for the extermination of Jews. Harvard’s graduate student union, backed by a majority of its members, issued a statement that demanded “the end of “occupation and colonization of all Arab lands.” A group of MIT students, the Coalition Against Apartheid (CAA), meanwhile, physically blocked Jewish students from attending class. The CAA “support[s] the liberation of all peoples, with a focus on the Israeli occupation of Palestine.” Faculty similarly celebrate Islamic terrorism while condemning Israel for genocide and war crimes. This is not just from a nutty fringe. According to one study, one in five college students sympathizes with Hamas.
Jewish students can do little to turn the tide. Jewish billionaires can threaten to cease donations unless the school administration “does something,” but the campus apparatchiks are powerless. Ditto for firing professors who glorify Hamas brutality, nor can schools pull the plug on campus groups falsely condemning Israel for war crimes. Also forget about the federal government defunding of higher education unless universities crack down on hate speech.
What Jewish students and their sympathizers fail to grasp is that this antisemitic outpouring is not an aberration triggered by recent events in Gaza. Rather, it reflects the long and nearly invisible transformation of the academy, beginning in the late 1960s with the anti–Vietnam war protests and reaching maturity when the black civil right movement successfully advanced its racial justice agenda. Campus antisemitism is just the latest installment of a long story and will not be vanquished when the university’s president offers up a limp pro-Israel speech or Washington taxing school endowments.
Fundamental is how physical violence or its threat has become an integral part of campus life.