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US Congress Probes Anti-Semitism at Elite Universities after 'Morally Bankrupt Testimony' – News18

US Congress Probes Anti-Semitism at Elite Universities after 'Morally Bankrupt Testimony' – News18


Last Updated: December 08, 2023, 06:59 IST

Washington D.C., United States of America (USA)

U.S. Representative Elise Stefanik (R-NY) speaks during a House Education and The Workforce Committee hearing titled Holding Campus Leaders Accountable and Confronting Antisemitism on Capitol Hill in Washington, U.S., December 5. (Reuters)

House Republican Stefanik, who studied at Harvard, has called for the presidents of the top three Universities to resign

US lawmakers launched a probe Thursday into anti-Semitism at three of the top universities in the country after their leaders quibbled over whether student protests calling for the genocide of Jews amounted to harassment.

The probe comes with the presidents of Harvard, the University of Pennsylvania, and MIT facing a backlash over their testimony Tuesday on rising anti-Semitism on campus since the October 7 attack on Israel. The trio were pressed during a hearing in the House of Representatives on whether pro-Palestinian student activists calling for “Jewish genocide” violated their codes of conduct on harassment but all three equivocated, claiming it would depend on the context.

“After this week’s pathetic and morally bankrupt testimony by university presidents when answering my questions, the Education and Workforce Committee is launching an official congressional investigation with the full force of subpoena power into Penn, MIT, Harvard and others,” Elise Stefanik, the fourth-ranking House Republican, said in a statement. “We will use our full congressional authority to hold these schools accountable for their failure on the global stage.”

During the five-hour hearing, the presidents told Stefanik that calling for the genocide of Jews would only violate their schools’ rules if it led to individuals being bullied. Stefanik, who studied at Harvard, has called for the presidents to resign. Harvard president Claudine Gay sought to clarify her comments Wednesday, arguing in a statement that critics were confusing “a right to free expression with the idea that Harvard will condone calls for violence against Jewish students.”

In a video statement, Penn president Liz Magill said that she should have been focused on the “irrefutable fact that a call for genocide of Jewish people is a call for some of the most terrible violence human beings can perpetrate.” The backlash to the hearing has been bipartisan, with the White House joining the condemnation.

“It’s unbelievable that this needs to be said: calls for genocide are monstrous and antithetical to everything we represent as a country,” a spokesman for President Joe Biden said in a statement. Israel has been pressing for the destruction of Hamas over the October attack, when militants broke through Gaza’s militarized border to kill around 1,200 people and seize hostages, 138 of whom remain captive, according to Israeli figures. The bloodiest-ever war between Israel and Hamas is now in its third month, with the death toll in Gaza soaring above 17,000 according to the Hamas-run health ministry.

(With agency inputs)





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