“反犹太主义在这里没有立足之地”——哈佛校长在 1600 名犹太明矾捐款后谴责“从河到海”的说法
"Antisemitism Has No Place Here" - Harvard President Condemns "From The River To The Sea" Phrase After 1600 Jewish Alum Pull Donations

原始链接: https://www.zerohedge.com/geopolitical/antisemitism-has-no-place-here-harvard-president-condemns-river-sea-phrase-after-1600

最近,哈佛大学围绕反犹太主义引发了巨大争议。 为了回应克劳丁·盖伊总统关于哈马斯 2021 年 10 月袭击以色列的最初声明的强烈反对,哈佛大学正在建立一个反犹太主义咨询小组,旨在通过实施教育和培训计划来打击反犹太主义行为。 超过1600名富人代表哈佛犹太校友会对盖伊没有直接谴责哈马斯表示担忧,并要求做出改变。 因此,盖伊正式谴责使用“从河流到海洋”一词,这是一个历史上颇具争议的巴勒斯坦口号,通常与从以色列消灭犹太人联系在一起。 这一声明遭到了克尔斯滕·韦尔德教授的批评,而联邦调查局和当地执法部门仍在调查本月早些时候某些学生参与抗议活动的情况。 因此,由于这些持续存在的问题,许多知名的非亿万富翁校友会威胁要停止捐款。 最终,慈善支持占哈佛每年总收入的近一半,使得这种情况对这所享有盛誉的机构产生了非常重要的影响。

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原文

Following enormous backlash against the University over its initial statement about Hamas’ Oct. 7 attack on Israel - with critics condemning Harvard President Claudine Gay's statement for failing to explicitly denounce Hamas and lack of response to a controversial joint letter by Harvard student groups in support of Palestine that called Israel “entirely responsible” for the violence - Harvard has just announced that it will work with its newly established antisemitism advisory group to implement antisemitism education and training for affiliates.

“I affirm our commitment to protecting all members of our community from harassment and marginalization, and our commitment to meeting antisemitism head-on, with the determination it demands,” Gay wrote.

“Antisemitism has no place at Harvard,” Gay added. “We are committed to doing the hard work to address this scourge.

Harvard President Claudine Gay announced plans to implement training around antisemitism in a Thursday email.

Additionally, in her email, Gay explicitly condemned the use of the phrase “from the river to the sea” - a pro-Palestine slogan that prominent alumni have called “eliminationist” and antisemitic.

“Our community must understand that phrases such as ‘from the river to the sea’ bear specific historical meanings that to a great many people imply the eradication of Jews from Israel and engender both pain and existential fears within our Jewish community,” Gay wrote.

“I condemn this phrase and any similarly hurtful phrases.”

The Crimson reports that Gay’s decision to single out the phrase “from the river to the sea” - which is frequently chanted by the Harvard Undergraduate Palestine Solidarity Committee and other pro-Palestine student groups - almost immediately received backlash from some Harvard affiliates.

Kirsten A. Weld, a professor of History at Harvard, criticized Gay’s decision to denounce a specific phrase used by student activists.

“Can’t recall any prior instance of a contested phrase/idea receiving official condemnation like this, or having one singular ‘specific historical meaning’ imputed to it, in my 11 years on this campus,” Weld wrote in a post on X.

Gay, standing next to Harvard Chabad President Rabbi Hirschy Zarchi, views an Shabbat table installation in the Yard symbolizing the hundreds of hostages held by Hamas.

Gay also confirmed that the FBI and HUPD are investigating a video taken during the Oct. 18 pro-Palestine “die-in” protest at Harvard Business School depicting several protesters confronting a man and escorting him away after he filmed protester’s faces.

The protesters shouted “shame” after the man, who other media outlets later identified as an Israeli student.

What could have caused such a sudden and considerable 'flip' in Gay's perspective (or silence) on the jew-hatred being seen at Harvard - and across many so-called 'Ivy League' schools? Doesn't she realize the world is binary - oppressor vs oppressed, victimizer vs victims?

We are sure it is simply a realization that principles matter (and terrorism is bad), and has nothing at all to do with the fact that 1600 wealthy jewish alumni have withdrawn their donations from the once-prestigious learning academy.

As CNN reports, high-profile billionaire alumni like Pershing Square founder Bill Ackman and former Victoria’s Secret CEO Leslie Wexner have already said that if Harvard doesn’t take steps to fix the problem they could face a donor exodus, but now the largest group yet of alumni - most of whom do not have billionaire status - are threatening to withdraw their donations.

“We never thought that, at Harvard College, we would have to argue the point that terrorism against civilians demands immediate and unequivocal condemnation,” wrote members of the Harvard College Jewish Alumni Association (HCJAA) in an open letter to President Claudine Gay and Dean of Harvard College Rakesh Khurana.

“We never thought we would have to argue for recognition of our own humanity.”

Philanthropy is the single largest contributor to revenue at Harvard, accounting for 45% of the university’s $5.8 billion in income last year. Philanthropic gifts accounted for 9% of the university’s operating budget last year and 36% of its $51 billion endowment amassed over decades.

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