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Chronicle of Higher Education, FEBRUARY 03, 2020 PREMIUM
This U.S. Official Is Leading the Charge Against Anti-Semitism on
College Campuses. Here’s What You Should Know About Him.
By Danielle McLean
When President Trump signed an executive order aimed at stopping
anti-Semitism, in December, colleges were suddenly faced with a new
burden: Police anti-Jewish rhetoric on campus, or risk being
investigated for a civil-rights violation.
But what qualifies as anti-Semitism, and when does a college have a duty
to intervene?
The writings of one U.S. Education Department official may hold the key
to an answer.
For more than a decade, Kenneth L. Marcus, the assistant secretary for
civil rights, has led a crusade to clamp down on anti-Semitism in
academe, in a fashion that aligns with the directives in the executive
order.
Through two books, numerous op-eds, academic studies and talks, Marcus,
a lawyer, has argued that the past 20 years have seen a rise in
anti-Israel, pro-Palestinian protests on American campuses and in the
harassment of Jewish students. He has also asserted that many Middle
East-studies programs are biased and dismissive of counter views that
support the Jewish right to a homeland in the state of Israel, or Zionism.
Since his 2018 appointment to the same post he held during the George W.
Bush administration, the Education Department office that enforces
civil-rights laws has placed a new focus on the matter.
The office has reopened an investigation into a 2011 civil-rights case
at Rutgers University using the definition of anti-Semitism that appears
in the executive order. In August, the department also ordered revisions
in the joint Middle East-studies program at the University of North
Carolina at Chapel Hill and Duke University after the program was deemed
biased, in part because it did not offer enough positive imagery of
Judaism and Christianity.
Marcus, through the Department of Education press office, declined to
answer questions about enforcement of the executive order, instead
issuing a written statement:
“The executive order makes clear that Jewish students are covered by
Title VI of the Civil Rights Act. Title VI provides protection to
individuals, including Jewish students, who face discrimination on the
basis of race, color, or national origin. Under Secretary DeVos, it is
the policy of OCR to pursue vigorously all forms of discrimination
prohibited by Title VI,” he said.
But Marcus’s influence over the executive order and recent enforcement
actions are clear, according to Samuel Bagenstos, a professor at the
University of Michigan at Ann Arbor’s law school.
“I think it’s fair to say that Ken Marcus is certainly supportive of and
behind a lot of this, and very likely very supportive and behind all of
it,” said Bagenstos, who was second in command at the U.S. Department of
Justice’s civil-rights division in the Obama administration.
Among the biggest hints of Marcus’s influence is that the executive
order mirrors his writings. They offer a glimpse of what colleges can
expect in the coming months.
What, exactly, is in the executive order?
The executive order, signed by President Trump in December, essentially
requires investigators at the Department of Education’s Office for Civil
Rights to regard anti-Semitic bias at colleges to be in violation of
Title VI of the Civil Rights Act, which bans discrimination on the basis
of a person’s race, color, or national origin.
When investigating whether a violation occurred, the order also mandates
U.S. Office for Civil Rights investigators to collect evidence of
discriminatory intent by using a definition that characterizes
anti-Semitism as “a certain perception of Jews, which may be expressed
as hatred toward Jews. Rhetorical and physical manifestations of
anti-Semitism are directed toward Jewish or non-Jewish individuals
and/or their property, toward Jewish community institutions and
religious facilities.”
The order specifically directs federal investigators not to infringe
anyone’s First Amendment rights. But the definition, previously adopted
by the State Department for data-collection purposes, also provides
examples of anti-Semitism that include the anti-Israel speech common
among progressive activists, who often protest on college campuses.
Any speech that challenges Israel’s existence, according to the
definition cited in the executive order, is also considered
anti-Semitic. As is creating a double standard for Israel — holding it
to a standard that is not demanded of other democratic nations.
What do we know about Kenneth Marcus’s views on anti-Semitsm?
Marcus and many Jewish groups — among them, the American Jewish
Committee and the Anti-Defamation League — believe that modern day
anti-Semitism, or anti-Jewish sentiment, is often veiled as anti-Zionist
protest challenging Israel’s right to exist. They say the executive
order is needed to stem the rise of such activism, which they say
demonizes Jews.
In 2011, Marcus founded an organization called the Louis D. Brandeis
Center for Human Rights Under Law, which filed Title VI anti-Semitism
complaints and has also supported the executive order.
In 2016 he supported a bill called the Anti-Semitism Awareness Act that
would have allowed Office for Civil Rights investigators to use the
definition when assessing whether an alleged Title VI violation was
motivated by anti-Semitic intent. The bill failed to pass through Congress.
In his 2015 book The Definition of Anti-Semitism, Marcus stressed that
not all criticism of Israel is anti-Semitic. Speech would become
anti-Semitism, he writes, if someone were to characterize Israel using
symbols or images associated with “classic anti-Semitism,” compare
contemporary Israeli policy to that of the Nazis, or blame Israel for
all religious or political tensions.
But he wrote extensively about how the Boycott, Divest and Sanctions
movement could be considered anti-Semitic.
Commonly known as BDS, the boycott was created in 2005 in opposition to
Israel’s treatment of Palestinians. The BDS movement that has taken
place on American college campuses has called for an end to Israel’s
occupation of Palestinian land and discrimination against Palestinian
people, along with the right for Palestian refugees to return to their
homes. Many Jewish people believe these demands attack their deeply held
belief that Jews have the right to their own state and that Israel has
the right to protect itself.
Marcus wrote in his 2015 book that boycotts against Jewish people have
roots to Nazi Germany and a 1945 movement by the 22-nation Council of
the Arab League. The movement, he said, is anti-Semitic because its
primary strategy is to “reject Israel’s ‘normalization’”— echoing
anti-Jewish boycotts of the past.
While not all proponents of BDS are anti-Semitic and may be ignorant of
the movement’s anti-Semitic roots, Marcus wrote: “This only makes them
unwitting agents in a process by which hatred articulates itself across
time. Moreover, they are allying themselves with others who consciously
seek to undermine Israel for reasons of sheer hatred.”
Jewish students have said that pro-Palestinian protesters have harassed
them for showing their support for Israel, or that they’ve been shut
down by professors when they try to debate their views during what they
described as biased Middle East-studies classes or speaking events on
campus. They say this harrassment has caused Jewish students to feel
uncomfortable on campus and affected their ability to learn.
Marcus underscored specific examples from complaints in 2004 at the
University of California at Irvine, in which Jewish students were
allegedly threatened with beatings for wearing T-shirts expressing their
love for Israel, called derogatory names, and told they would “burn in
hell,” and that they should “go back to Russia.” He added that lecturers
described Zionism as a “disease” and said that Jews control the
government, among other examples.
However, the Office for Civil Rights, he said, had found that the events
at UC Irvine were not actually in violation of Title VI because “OCR was
swayed by its finding that ‘their criticism of Jews was focused on their
perceived support of Israel.’ This amounts to holding ‘Jews collectively
responsible for the actions of the state of Israel,’ which the working
definition provides as an example of anti-Semitism,” he explained in his
book.
The case underscored the need for the Office for Civil Rights to define
anti-Semitism differently, he wrote.
While there is no list of words or phrases that are anti-Semitic,
investigators must weigh each word, phrase, or deed with its speaker’s
intent, tacit meaning, and its cultural significance, according to Marcus.
How has Marcus influenced the Education Department’s civil-rights
enforcement so far?
In September 2018, the Office for Civil Rights reopened the 2011 case at
Rutgers that the Obama administration had closed in 2014. In that case,
Jewish students said they were charged last-minute fees to an advertised
free and open campus event called Never Again for Anyone, which linked
atrocities committed by the Nazis against Jews to Israel’s policies
toward Palestinians. The students said the last-minute fee was part of
an effort to block pro-Israel protesters from attending. The university,
however, determined that event organizers were simply trying to manage
the larger-than-expected attendance.
If civil-rights investigators find Rutgers guilty of anti-Semitism and
the college fails to take remedial action, it could lose federal funding.
Then, in August 2019, the department threatened to withhold federal
funds from the University of North Carolina at Chapel Hill over its
joint Middle East studies program with Duke University unless it revised
its schedule of activities.
Among its criticisms, the department said the program lacked balance by
placing a “considerable emphasis” on “understanding the positive aspects
of Islam,” while not placing a similiar focus on the positive aspects of
Christianity, Judaism, or other belief systems in the Middle East,
according to a letter to UNC published in the Federal Register.
What does the executive order mean for civil-rights enforcement?
There is some debate over how the executive order will affect college
campuses. After all, the order includes a line that solidifies that the
free speech rights of students are protected.
Among those that doubt the order will have much impact is David
Bernstein, a professor and executive director of George Mason’s Liberty
& Law Center, who says he has spoken to Marcus about the subject.
Bernstein says he believes the order was a political move, since the
Office for Civil Rights had already been enforcing anti-Semitism under
Title VI.
Under the law, Bernstein said, a professor would not get in trouble for
comparing Israel to Nazi Germany. However, a professor could get in
trouble for discrimination if they singled out a Jewish student in class
and berated and harrassed the student about why they would visit Israel,
a country that the faculty member compared to Nazi Germany, he said.
But Bernstein said the executive order could quiet supporters of the BDS
movement. “I actually understand why, if you are a BDS supporter, you
think that it has a chilling effect on you for the government to
officially suggest that your movement is anti-Semitic,” he said.
Others say the impact of the executive order will be substantial.
Some organizations, like the American Civil Liberties Union and the
Foundation for Individual Rights in Education, criticized the executive
order, saying it was too broad and could stifle protected free speech on
campus.
Kenneth S. Stern, the scholar who originally wrote the executive order’s
definition of anti-Semitism, is in that camp. He said it will discourage
criticism of Israel on campuses and create an environment that violates
the First Amendment rights of students.
Stern, who now runs Bard College’s Center for the Study of Hate, said
that because the definition of anti-Semitism “looks at things that are
inherently contentious and political and applies to campuses, it’s
disingenuous to say that it will have no impact on speech.”
Meera Shah, who represents Palestinian-rights protesters as a senior
staff lawyer at the advocacy group Palestine Legal, says the executive
order “makes crystal clear that it will be used to justify censorship
and attempt to silence advocacy of Palestinian rights in violation of
the Constitutional protections guarenteeing free speeh,” Shah said.
The order, Shah stressed, is already having an impact on student
activists who now fear speaking out in this climate. Her organization
has responded to many incidents of suppression, she said, in which
students had to defend themselves in disciplinary proceedings because
Israel activists charged them with anti-Semitism for their
pro-Palestinian speech.
“Students and faculty activists supporting Palestinian rights don’t just
feel that their speech is being chilled. It’s actually happening,” she said.
Danielle McLean writes about federal education policy, among other
subjects. Follow her on Twitter @DanielleBMcLean, or email her at
dmcl...@chronicle.com.
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