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Barnard College will ban masks, not engage with anti-Israel ‘apartheid divest' student protest group after antisemitism lawsuit settlement

Barnard College will ban masks, not engage with anti-Israel ‘apartheid divest' student protest group after antisemitism lawsuit settlement

New York Post6 days ago
Barnard College leaders agreed to settle a scorching lawsuit by Jewish students claiming the Columbia University-affiliated school failed to address rising antisemitism in the wake of the Israel-Hamas conflict, court papers filed Monday show.
The all-women's school will prohibit masks, not engage with the anti-Israel Columbia University Apartheid Divest student protest group and establish a dedicated Title VI coordinator to oversee compliance with anti-discrimination laws, officials said.
'Antisemitism, discrimination, and harassment in any form are antithetical to the values Barnard College champions,' Barnard President Ann Rosenbury said in a statement.
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'Today's settlement reflects our ongoing commitment to maintaining a campus that is safe, welcoming, and inclusive for all members of our community.'
3 Barnard College reached a settlement in a lawsuit accusing the school of turning a blind eye to antisemitism.
Robert Miller
The settlement will drop Barnard College from a lawsuit filed by Jewish students and two nonprofits that accused the school and Columbia University of turning a blind eye to antisemitism.
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The agreement, however, appears not to extend to Columbia, meaning the lawsuit against the storied Manhattan Ivy League institution remains active.
The bulk of the lawsuit was largely focused on alleged anti-Jewish incidents on the Columbia campus it was roiled by protests after the Oct. 7, 2023 terror attacks.
Pro-Palestinian students and faculty protested Israel's retaliatory war against Hamas in Gaza, contending it led to thousands of innocent deaths.
But many Jewish and Israeli students argued the sprawling protests — with their chants condemning 'genocide' in Gaza and other anti-Israel slogans, such as 'from the river to the sea' — stoked ugly antisemitism that left them feeling unsafe, according to the lawsuit.
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The furor — and other incidents at Harvard University and New York University — helped fuel calls to ban masks out of fear that anti-Israel protesters could commit crimes or acts of hate with impunity.
Columbia University agreed to institute a mask ban, among other changes, in March after President Trump's administration yanked $400 million from the Morningside Heights university over how it handled antisemitism.
The lawsuit settlement with Barnard includes, and goes further, than a mask ban.
3 The settlement includes a mask ban.
AFP via Getty Images
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3 Columbia University's and Barnard College's campuses saw mass protests against the Israel-Hamas war.
AFP via Getty Images
The school will create a 'Title VI coordinator' to review accusations made by students — including Jewish and Israeli — that they're facing discrimination based on their race, color or national origin, officials said.
Title VI is the part of the Civil Rights Act that prohibits racial discrimination in programs or activities that receive federal assistance.
The settlement also cements that Barnard College will not recognize or engage with Columbia University Apartheid Divest — a group that calls for the school to 'divest from the zionist (sic) occupation and genocide of Palestine.'
Marc Kasowitz, an attorney for the Jewish groups and students, said the settlement provides a groundwork for other universities.
'Barnard's commitment to take meaningful actions to combat antisemitism demonstrates its leadership in the fight against antisemitism and upholding the rights of Jewish and Israeli students,' he said in a statement. 'These commitments are not only the right thing to do, but are essential to creating a welcome and inclusive campus for all members of the Barnard community.'
Additional reporting by Carl Campanile
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Elon Musk's xAI apologizes for Grok chatbot's antisemitic responses
Elon Musk's xAI apologizes for Grok chatbot's antisemitic responses

USA Today

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  • USA Today

Elon Musk's xAI apologizes for Grok chatbot's antisemitic responses

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Hamilton Spectator

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  • Hamilton Spectator

At least 30 are killed in Israeli strikes in Gaza as war deaths top 58,000, officials say

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GHF is actually feeding Gazans, not letting Hamas extort them — and paying a price
GHF is actually feeding Gazans, not letting Hamas extort them — and paying a price

The Hill

timean hour ago

  • The Hill

GHF is actually feeding Gazans, not letting Hamas extort them — and paying a price

The likelihood of a ceasefire in Gaza could turn on whether Israel meets a core demand of Hamas to stop a successful effort to feed the Palestinian people. The Gaza Humanitarian Foundation has distributed more than 60 million meals over the last five weeks without interference or diversion. This has severely undercut Hamas's revenue streams, because Hamas has for years stolen humanitarian aid and sold it at high prices, despite the daily struggle of the Palestinian people to meet their basic needs. For Israel, the priority remains unchanged in the aftermath of the October 7, 2023 terror attacks: eliminate Hamas and free the hostages still held in its underground labyrinth. At the same time, however, the world cannot ignore the immense suffering of Gaza's innocent civilians, most of whom are trapped by Hamas's control. Nor can Israel revert to the status quo ante, when Hamas was starving Gazans so it could finance terror. The Gaza Humanitarian Foundation, of course, has a singular mission: to feed the people of Gaza, safely and directly. It operates with transparency, logistical expertise, a commitment to human dignity, and yes, coordination with the Israeli government. Without that coordination, its food would face the same looting and diversion that plagues other aid organizations who see Israel as an obstacle. For this success, the Gaza Humanitarian Foundation has been rewarded with cheers from the Palestinian people in Gaza, as well as robust international condemnation from nearly everyone outside of the Trump administration, which has chipped in at least $30 million in support. These critics claim that the foundation violates humanitarian principles by working with Israel. Their statements ignore the facts and focus instead on ideology. What they call 'neutrality' often serves as an excuse to avoid confronting the actions of Hamas, which routinely blocks aid and threatens aid workers. Apparently, if you play by Hamas's rules — accept their fabricated statistics, their propaganda, and their theft of aid — you are considered 'legitimate' by much of the legacy media. But if you challenge that system by delivering aid efficiently, securely, and without Hamas' interference, you become the villain. Even worse, Hamas has now turned its violence against Palestinian civilians for working with the Gaza Humanitarian Foundation. Recently, Hamas attacked a bus of Palestinian foundation volunteers. According to regional reports, a Hamas unit killed or detained dozens of aid workers. Its operatives have also attacked American aid workers with explosives packed with ball bearings then before retreated into crowds of aid seekers, all in the hope of drawing fire and creating an international incident. Despite the violence, the United Nations has remained nearly silent. The European Union has offered no meaningful condemnation. Some affiliated agencies have continued to question the foundation's mission while ignoring the violence. Only the U.S. has led with clarity in its condemnations. The U.N., the International Red Cross and other captains of civil society insist on a sacrosanct neutrality that is effectively moral blindness. There are good and evil in this world. Feeding starving civilians is good; stealing the aid and murdering the people who feed them is evil. People of faith should recognize that the Gaza Humanitarian Foundation is delivering help where others have failed and doing so in the face of violence and death-threats. It deserves our support, not our suspicion. The values behind this work are not abstract. They reflect the deepest commitments of the Judeo-Christian tradition: charity, mercy and human dignity. While the ceasefire negotiations are underway, the UN, EU and international aid organizations should publicly pledge to work with GHF. If they will not assist, they should at least stop obstructing those who will. The time for moral equivocation has passed. Congress will soon hold hearings on the delivery of humanitarian aid in Gaza, too. Lawmakers should examine not only the work the foundation has done, but also the failure of other agencies to condemn or confront Hamas. If these groups continue to undermine the foundation or turn a blind eye to violence against its staff, American policymakers should reconsider how humanitarian dollars are allocated. Those who cannot condemn terror should not be trusted to address suffering. The tools of compassion are challenging the forces of cruelty. Feeding the hungry is a sacred duty and now, thanks to the foundation, the people of Gaza are enjoying reliable access to food. Hamas's opposition to feeding Palestinians must be understood. Aid organizations failing to fulfill their mission to bring aid to the people need to be named. And those who place bounties on their heads must be condemned and isolated. In a conflict filled with gray zones, this is a line the world must be willing to draw.

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