WASHINGTON -- Leaders of three large public school systems strongly denied allegations that they let antisemitism run rampant in their schools, telling a congressional panel Wednesday that they are fighting it with education and, when necessary, discipline
As part of a series of hearings on antisemitism, a House Education and Workforce subcommittee sought testimony from leaders of the New York City Public Schools, the Berkeley Unified School District in California and the Montgomery County Public Schools in Maryland.
âLet me be clear â we do not shy away from imposing consequences for hateful behavior, including antisemitism,â said Karla Silvestre, the board president of the suburban Maryland school system.
The first of the antisemitism hearings to focus on K-12 education comes amid a wave of pro-Palestinian student protests that have washed across dozens of U.S. universities and a growing number of high schools.
The committee's hearings have been heated, with the first one in December precipitating the resignations of the presidents of Harvard and the University of Pennsylvania. Most recently, the testimony of Columbia Universityâs president, Minouche Shafik, escalated into weeks of protests that spread well beyond her campus.
In an opening statement, Rep. Aaron Bean, R-Fla., said antisemitism has become a âdominant forceâ in America's schools, with students as young as second-graders âspewing Nazi propaganda.â
âYouâve been accused of doing nothing and turning a blind eye," he said.
The school leaders took issue with that claim.
Chancellor David Banks from New York questioned whether the panel's actions had brought schools any closer to address antisemitism on campuses.
âThis convening feels like the ultimate âgotchaâ moment,â he said. âIt doesnât sound like people trying to solve for something we actually solve for.â
Banks cited actions his district has taken, including student suspensions and employee terminations. But he also emphasized the role of education, saying the district is building a new curriculum on the contributions of the Jewish community, along with separate lessons about hate crimes and bias.
âWe cannot simply discipline our way out of this problem,â Banks said. âThe true antidote to ignorance and bias is to teach.â
Silvestre described a similar approach in Montgomery County. Classrooms have more lessons on the Jewish experience, and the district will now require âhate-based trainingâ for all staff, she said. Teachers who don't provide a safe learning environment âwill not remain in Montgomery County public schools,â she said.
Each of the leaders acknowledged a rise in antisemitism, but Berkeley Superintendent Enikia Ford Morthel denied that it has become âpervasive." Since the Israel-Hamas war began on Oct. 7, her district has received complaints of antisemitism arising from nine incidents within the district's jurisdiction, she said.
âWe take action to teach, correct and redirect our students,â she said. âWe do not publish our actions because student information is private and legally protected under federal and state law. As a result, some believe we do nothing. This is not true.â
Echoing a tactic from the previous hearings, Republican lawmakers peppered the school leaders with questions about what they consider antisemitic. Asked if the phrase âfrom the river to the sea, Palestine will be freeâ is antisemitic, all three generally said yes, though with some equivocation.
âIt is if it is calling for the elimination of the Jewish people in Israel," Ford Morthel said. âAnd I will also say that I recognize that it does have different meanings.â
Throughout the hearing, Republicans demanded tougher consequences for teachers and principals accused of antisemitism. They repeatedly confronted Banks over the case of a high school principal who was reassigned but not fired after a chaotic student demonstration protesting a pro-Israel teacher.
Banks said it was âclearly an act of antisemitism,â and some students were suspended. The principal was removed from the school âfor a lack of leadership" and moved to an administrative role.
Rep. Burgess Owens, R-Utah, questioned that outcome, saying âwe want results.â
âIâm hearing nice words, really nice words here: teaching, redirecting, directing," Owens said. "What Iâm missing is discipline, and I'm missing the word âfired.ââ
Pressed on firings and suspensions, Silvestre said Montgomery County has taken âdisciplinary actionâ against some teachers, but none has been fired. Bean suggested that wasn't good enough: âSo you allow them to continue to teach hate,â he said.
Speaking to reporters last week, Banks acknowledged that the school system had not been perfect in handling issues in schools that have emerged since the start of the war in Gaza, but that he was proud of how leadership had responded.
Banks seemed critical of how previous hearings had quickly been reduced to viral moments and video clips.
âI fundamentally believe that if we truly care about solving for antisemitism, you donât do it through cheap political theater and cheap soundbites," he said. "Putting a spotlight on any particular individual and sometimes trying to create gotcha moments and viral moments is not how you ultimately solve problems you deeply care about.â
Both New York City and Montgomery Public Schools are subjects of Education Department civil rights investigations into allegations of antisemitism. Both cases center on whether the districts responded to harassment of students in a manner consistent with Title VI, which prevents harassment based on shared ancestry.
In February, the Brandeis Center, a Jewish legal advocacy organization, filed a complaint with the department's Office of Civil Rights, citing incidents of bullying and harassment of Jewish students in the Berkeley district, including one instance where the phrase âKill Jewsâ was found written in a high school bathroom.
In a statement, Ford Morthel said she âdid not seek this invitation" but would testify.
âBerkeley Unified celebrates our diversity and stands against all forms of hate and othering, including antisemitism and Islamophobia," the statement said. "We strive every day to ensure that our classrooms are respectful, humanizing, and joyful places for all our students, where they are welcomed, seen, valued, and heard.â
All three districts, in predominantly liberal areas, have diverse student populations and a sizeable Jewish American community.
In a lawsuit filed against Montgomery County Public Schools by the Council on American-Islamic Relations, three teachers alleged the district placed them on leave and investigated them because they expressed pro-Palestinian sentiments, some of which were on their personal social media pages.
Student-led Pro-Palestinian protests have taken place in high schools across the country, including in the three districts that will appear before Congress. The demonstrations include walkouts during school hours, and like their college counterparts, include the question of whether certain phrases â including âFrom the river to the sea, Palestine will be free!â which can mean widely different things to different groups â cross the line into antisemitism.
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