Rutgers denies claims in anti-Semitism probe
U.S. Dept. of Education pursues ZOA grievance over on-line incidents
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The Zionist Organization of America claims that Rutgers failed to properly investigate incidents of threats and bullying against Rutgers student Aaron Marcus.
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December 7, 2011
Rutgers University is denying claims, contained in a federal probe, that it failed to address anti-Semitic incidents on campus.
University officials replied Monday to reports that the federal Department of Education’s Office of Civil Rights is pursuing claims made by the Zionist Organization of America. The ZOA charged in a complaint first filed in July that Rutgers failed to address “the hostile anti-Semitic environment” on campus or that it properly investigated a university administrator who threatened and bullied a Jewish student.
“The claims by the ZOA are contrary to the true values of Rutgers University and are not supported by the facts,” said spokesperson E.J. Miranda in an e-mail response to NJJN. “Rutgers University has one of the largest populations of Jewish students of any public university in the nation. Rutgers also has a long tradition of working with and supporting the Jewish community, and a longstanding commitment to facilitate meaningful dialogue and promote civility among all members of our community.”
The OCR is investigating a ZOA complaint alleging the university is in violation of Title VI of the Civil Rights Act of 1964, requiring that recipients of federal funding ensure their programs are free from ethnic and racial discrimination, including anti-Semitism.
In its complaint, the ZOA charged that Shenaz Sheik Abdeljaber, outreach coordinator for the Rutgers Center for Middle Eastern Studies, made anti-Semitic comments to a columnist for the student newspaper, The Daily Targum.
It alleges she called Aaron Marcus of West Orange “a racist Zionist pig” and encouraged other students to leave comments on Facebook disparaging him, and threatened and bullied him on other occasions. NJJN previously tried contacting Abdeljaber on numerous occasions, without response.
The ZOA also alleged that another student threatened Marcus on Facebook, saying he wanted to “see [Marcus] beat with a crowbar.” Several of his Facebook “friends” indicated they “liked” his sentiment. However, in an April e-mail to NJJN, the student said the post, which had already been taken down, was made out of frustration with the ongoing conflict between the two sides. He said he apologized to Marcus.
Marcus, who previously told NJJN he has also been verbally threatened many times for his pro-Israel views, said last April that he had filed a complaint with the university, which was not addressed within the 24 hours required by the institution’s guidelines. He also filed a police report and a bias incident report with the dean of students involving the student who had threatened him on Facebook.
“Rutgers hasn’t done anything to stop this type of language,” he said last April. “It basically created this blanket statement that this Middle Eastern studies department official has a First Amendment right to her opinion. They’re right about that, but not if it comes at my expense.”
The ZOA asserted that when the dean finally contacted Marcus more than a month later it informed him there were insufficient grounds to formally charge the student. The offender was given a “warning event,” though Rutgers’ student code of conduct states that threatening to use force against another person is prohibited and could lead to suspension or expulsion from the university.
In a June 29 letter from university president Richard L. McCormick to the ZOA, which was provided by Rutgers, he reiterated an earlier stance that “the university cannot comment on the behavior of individual students or any personnel matter. Federal and state laws limit the university’s ability to release this information.”
ZOA also charged that the admission fee for a January event sponsored by “the vicious anti-Israel student group” BAKA: Students United for Middle Eastern Justice was “selectively enforced” in violation of university policy prohibiting false advertising, in an effort to prevent those who appeared to be pro-Israel or Jewish from attending. The OCR, however, is not pursuing this claim.
OCR opened its investigation on Oct. 26, according to a report in The Huffington Post.
The ZOA complaints came after a period since 2010 in which pro-Palestinian groups on campus staged various events that some Jewish and pro-Israel groups claimed crossed the line from confrontational to hostile.
Morton A. Klein, ZOA’s national president, and Susan B. Tuchman, director of its center for law and justice, welcomed the investigation.
“We strongly praise OCR for recognizing that the harassment, intimidation, and discrimination that Jewish students have been subjected to at Rutgers merits the government’s scrutiny,” they said in a Dec. 2 statement. “We urge the agency to thoroughly and vigorously investigate Rutgers’ response to campus anti-Semitism; the ZOA will assist in any way we can, so that Jewish students there will be assured the kind of campus environment that every student deserves — one that is physically and emotionally safe and conducive to learning.”
However, without denying the seriousness of the charges surrounding the Marcus incident, some Jewish leaders said Rutgers is nevertheless a campus with a strong and secure Jewish population.
Hillel president Zeke Pariser, an Orthodox Jew from Teaneck who wears a kipa, told NJJN, “In my three-and-a-half years at Rutgers, I have never experienced any anti-Semitism, and it’s pretty obvious I’m Jewish.”
Pariser said that included a willingness among administration and professors to work around Jewish holidays in scheduling exams and other academic requirements.
“I’m not saying that this incident did not happen — and if it did, the university needs to take appropriate action,” he said. “But I hope it’s not being perceived as representative of the culture at Rutgers. That is my concern, and if that’s how it’s being viewed, that’s just not accurate.”
The university’s Jewish student population jumped from 6,000 to more than 7,400 this year, according to Rutgers Hillel director Andrew Getraer. The New Brunswick campus Chabad House is undergoing major expansion and Hillel is raising funds to build a new center (see Related Article).
“We feel this issue is about one student in particular, and it’s a serious issue that needs to be addressed, but it is not representative of the experience of 99 percent of the Jewish students for whom Rutgers is a warm and welcoming place,” Getraer told NJJN.
However, he said, the university did not live up to its responsibility in that it did not address the situation with Abdeljaber and did not let others know how it was handled.
“One incident of bias is one too many, but we shouldn’t lose perspective,” Getraer said.
ZOA complaints have also triggered ongoing federal investigations at the University of California at Irvine, University of California at Santa Cruz, and Columbia University.





Comments
milton turoff
December 07, 2011
Not surprising. Our educational system from the get-go indoctrinates first, educates a distant second, so by the time many students get to the college campus, they spew what they’ve been taught. Regrettably, this does not excude some Jewish students.
Rabbi Dr. Bernhard Rosenberg
December 11, 2011
Article Title:
ADL: Rutgers must respond to anti-Semitic allegations against employee
To view the contents on http://www.mycentraljersey.com go to,:
http://www.mycentraljersey.com/apps/pbcs.dll/article?AID=/201112110600/NJNEWS/312110014
Referring to the above article, I met with a vice president of Rutgers after the initial anti-Semitic action first occurred and suggested Rutgers officials meet with the Jewish press to air their side of the story. In addition I stated that contrary to Rutgers PR people advising them to leave the issue alone since it was not being discussed in Jewish circles, this was a major topic of discussion and would not die by itself. Having taught at Rutgers for over twenty years I consider it a wonderful university and a great place for Jewish students. The school offers numerous Judaic studies courses and has a very active Hillel and Chabad. However this issue is real and must be addressed immediately by the university. I offer my assistance as someone involved in anti-Semitism and university life.
RABBI DR. BERNHARD ROSENBERG
April 02, 2012
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RABBI BERNHARD ROSENBERG
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Edison, NJ 1 min ago
Those following this site can read my previous messages. I have been a part time lecturer in the Department of Communication for over 20 years. My rate your professor is 4.9 out of 5.0. I have had very high evaluations throughout my career. In 36 years of teaching Public Speaking on the University level I never had issues with a department until this past year. I was accused by an unnamed student of using my twitter and utube in class to teach. Several days ago the Home News Tribune had an article stating that this form of media is being used in all facets of education across the country. Why was I singled out? I was bullied and harrassed by the department chair at this meeting. Students in all my classes (I teach 3 in the fall, 2 in spring, 1 in summer) all wrote the chairman and the deans that they found what I did educational. As other professors do, I used my own textbook on Speech in addition to the required one. At this meeting I was also accused of selling it directly to students instead of through the bookstore. I immediately correctly that mistake. It now costs students an additional $15 (which the Rutgers bookstore makes in profit). I feel my book is better and so do the students.
I was yelled at, berated, harrassed and bullied. This was the first time this ever happened to me.
I was then asked out of the blue if I took the anti harrassment test which everyone has to take. Because I made a joke , I was harrassed some more. I took this test and passed in the past.
My summer course has been taken away from me without notice (I taught this for around 10 summers). I was not even given the moral courtesy of notification. I only found out through a student. All my classes are always filled to capacity and one needs special permission numbers to get in.
Now no one in the department will let me know if I am teaching this fall. This is a large part of my livelihood.
No one will reveal who this student was (if there was one). The only reason I can think of for a complaint would be that this student who dropped out after the first day of class was anti-Semitic. Why would a students present a written complaint against an instructor after one day of class? I am the only male teacher whom I know of who wears a skullcap every day in this department. I have been treated rudely as a clergyman. I have been the Rabbi of Congregation Beth El in Edison for 23 years.
I feel that this all began because of my religion.
Rabbi Dr. Bernhard Rosenberg