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“Moral leadership is vitally important at this fraught moment. It would be of great consequence for you, the presidents, to condemn the barbarous acts of Oct. 7 publicly and unequivocally,” wrote the Israeli president.
By: JNS.org
Israeli President Isaac Herzog sent a letter on Tuesday to the presidents and directors of universities and colleges throughout the United States.
The letter comes against the background of Hamas’s massacre of 1,400 people in southern Israel on Oct. 7—men, women and children—with thousands wounded, and as many as 240 others being taken hostage and held captive in the Gaza Strip. What followed after an initial bout of international solidarity turned into a dramatic increase in anti-Semitism on North American campuses.
In his letter, Herzog conveyed a clear demand that any incidents of support or sympathy for the actions of Hamas terrorists be dealt with urgently.
Below is an excerpt of the letter:
“Over many years as a leader in Israel, I have often returned to my days at Cornell and NYU [New York University]. It was on these campuses that I gained critical thinking skills that have served me throughout my life. It was there that I was exposed to the highest standards of academic inquiry and of debate. I benefited from brilliant and patient faculty, from the diverse student body, and from the distinctly American atmosphere of intellectual freedom.
“Never, as someone who has always looked up to the standards of the American university, could I have foreseen the images and voices that have reached me since the tragedy of October 7. As president of Israel, I have spent the past month traveling among devastated Israeli communities, more than 1,400 grieving families and the relatives of more than 240 hostages. I’ve been trying to comfort survivors of the largest massacre of Jews since the Holocaust, a sadistic atrocity that included rape and torture.
“And while doing so, I hear of Jewish students harassed at Harvard University. A Jewish student assaulted at Tulane, Jewish students locked in a library at the Cooper Union as a mob shouts outside, signs accusing Israel of genocide, swastikas painted on dorm-room doors, hateful and intimidating demonstrations—too many examples to list. All of this is happening not on the fringes of society but in the very temples of scholarship, in halls meant to be beacons of humanism, progress and rigorous inquiry. And it is happening not in Europe a century ago, but in the United States in 2023.
“Debate is welcome on any topic, including Israel’s actions. This goes without saying. As America has learned in its own wars, the trial of fighting heartless terrorists who hide among civilians is agonizing and offers no easy choices. But the events on campus are not debate, but a defilement of the university and its principles. How can anyone endorsing, excusing, or glorifying the Hamas atrocities have a place in any college, or in the civilized world?
“I have been encouraged by those who have spoken out clearly. I was heartened that a Cornell professor who pronounced himself ‘exhilarated’ by the massacre was placed on leave and that students at Harvard Hillel received a visit from the university’s president. If I can be helpful to you, I’m always available for a sincere conversation and am happy to answer even the toughest question.”
(JNS.org)

