Stanford professor under probe for reportedly calling Jewish students colonizers, downplaying Holocaust
The Hoover Tower rises above Stanford University in this aerial photo in Stanford, California, U.S. on January 13, 2017. REUTERS/Noah Berger/File Photo
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An instructor at Stanford
University has been removed from teaching duties as the school investigates
reports that during a discussion on the conflict
between Israel and Hamas, the instructor downplayed the Holocaust and
singled out students “based on their backgrounds and identities.”
“Without prejudging the matter, this report is
a cause for serious concern. Academic freedom does not permit the
identity-based targeting of students,” Stanford said in
a statement Wednesday.
“The instructor in this course is not
currently teaching while the university works to ascertain the facts of the
situation,” the statement continued.
The instructor, who is not a faculty member,
has not been named. CNN has reached out to the instructor for comment.
The university’s action comes as fierce
fighting this week between Israel and Hamas militants in Gaza has
increased tensions beyond the Middle East.
Some Jewish people in the US say they fear
being targeted as the country contends with widespread reports of
antisemitism. Last year, the Anti-Defamation League, which tracks antisemitic
incidents, recorded nearly
3,700 incidents in the US, the highest amount since tracking began in 1979.
Rabbi Dov Greenberg, executive director of Rohr
Chabad House, Stanford’s Jewish community center, told CNN the students
were “shaken up.”
Greenberg, who said he spoke with the students
involved in the incident, said they are “not doing well” and are afraid to face
backlash or bullying on campus.
According to Greenberg, the students said the
instructor tried to justify the actions of Hamas and asked the students how
many Jews were killed in the Holocaust.
After one student answered “6 million,” the
instructor then said more people have been killed by colonizers and said,
“Israel is a colonizer.”
The instructor then illustrated his point by
asking some students to physically go to the back of class. “That’s what Israel
does to Palestinians,” the teacher said, according to Greenberg.
“That was the main exchange that made students
feel marginalized, attacked, and isolated,” said Greenberg.
The students who spoke to Greenberg did not
push back against the instructor at the time. “The students told me clearly
they were traumatized, frightened. They could not believe this was happening to
them,” Greenberg said.
“This is a classic case of young students,
first time away from home, feeling traumatized,” Greenberg said of the college
freshmen. “They did not feel like they had the capacity at this time to argue
with a teacher at Stanford. They’re just kids.”
The Stanford instructor’s
alleged comments came during two classes Tuesday, with a total of 18 students,
during which the instructor announced the day’s lesson would focus on
colonialism, the San
Francisco Chronicle reported. The outlet cited Jewish student leaders
who spoke with students in the course called College
101, a required class for first-year students.
Nourya Cohen and Andrei Mandelshtam,
co-presidents of the Stanford
Israel Association, said the students told them the instructor asked Jewish
students to raise their hands, separated those students from their belongings
and said they were simulating what Jews were doing to Palestinians, the
Chronicle reported.
The students with whom Cohen and Mandelshtam
spoke asked to remain anonymous, the Chronicle said.
Cohen and Mandelshtam declined CNN’s request
for comment.
Students told Cohen and Mandelshtam the
instructor brought up the colonization
of Congo by Belgium’s King Leopold II in the 19th century and said
more people were killed then than during the Holocaust, and Israel had
colonized Palestinians, the Chronicle reported.
Students from both classes told Cohen and
Mandelshtam the instructor asked students where their ancestors were from and
labeled them as a “colonizer” or “colonized,” according to the Chronicle.
“I feel absolutely dehumanized that someone in
charge of students and developing minds could possibly try and justify the
massacre of my people,” Cohen told the newspaper. “It’s like I’m reliving
The instructor’s reported
comments come months after Stanford’s campus police department opened
a hate crime investigation into an antisemitic drawing discovered on a
whiteboard attached to a Jewish student’s dorm room door.
And in February, multiple swastikas, the
N-word and the letters “KKK” were scratched into a metal panel in a bathroom on
campus, the university said.
“We have heard many expressions of concern regarding student safety. We have heard from Jewish students, faculty, and staff concerned about rising antisemitism. We have heard from Palestinian students who have received threatening emails and phone calls,” Stanford said in its Wednesday statement. “We want to make clear that Stanford stands unequivocally against hatred on the basis of religion, race, ethnicity, national origin, and other categories.”


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