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Antisemitism at Northwestern University Still a Problem, New Poll Finds

Demonstrators rally at a pro-Hamas encampment at Northwestern University in Evanston, Ill. on April 28, 2024. Photo: Max Herman/Sipa USA via Reuters Connect.

Jewish students at Northwestern University in Illinois continue to report experiencing antisemitism at alarming rates despite the school’s insistence that the campus climate has improved since pro-Hamas demonstrations held during the 2023-2024 academic year triggered a cascade of antisemitic incidents.

According to a new Spring Campus Poll conducted by The Daily Northwestern, the school’s official campus newspaper, 58 percent of Jewish students reported being subjected to antisemitism or knowing someone who has. An even higher 63.1 percent said antisemitism remains a “somewhat or very serious problem.”

Northwestern University, however, has claimed that antisemitic discrimination on campus is decreasing. Last month, it touted its progress in addressing the issue, publishing a “Progress Report on Northwestern University Efforts to Combat Antisemitism” which enumerated a checklist of policies school officials have enacted since being censured by federal lawmakers over their allegedly insufficient handling of antisemitic, pro-Hamas demonstrations and occupations of campus property in April 2024. Most notably, the document boasted an 88 percent decrease in antisemitic incidents from November 2023 to November 2024.

The so-called progress report was released just over three weeks after US President Donald Trump began confiscating taxpayer funded research grants and contracts previously awarded to elite universities deemed as soft on antisemitism or excessively “woke.”

On Monday, the Combat Antisemitism Movement (CAM), a coalition of hundreds of organizations that fight anti-Jewish bigotry around the world, charged that the claims in the report now ring false.

“Yes, the university has reformed policies, implemented trainings, and adopted new definitions. It has pledged transparency and accountability — and some of those measures are meaningful,” the group said in a statement, citing the university’s adoption of the International Holocaust Remembrance Alliance (IHRA) definition of antisemitism and enactment of other policies supported by the Jewish community. “But the reality remains: Jewish students continue to feel unsafe, and a majority still see antisemitism as a serious, unresolved issue.”

It continued, “If Northwestern is truly committed to confronting antisemitism, its actions must go beyond compliance. Policies must be enforced. Commitments must be honored in practice. And Jewish students must be seen, heard, and protected. What defines institutional credibility isn’t stated intentions — it’s whether students feel safe. And right now, they don’t.”

In a statement shared with The Algemeiner on Tuesday, Northwestern University maintained that it has made immense progress toward improving campus life for Jewish students, citing as evidence the 88 percent reduction in antisemitic incidents.

“We believe this significant decrease in antisemitic incidents is directly attributable to the strength of our updated policies that were implemented at the start of the 2024-2025 academic year,” said Jon Yates, the university’s vice president of global marketing and communications. “These included revisions to our code of conduct with clear policies and procedures governing the type of actions that are prohibited and the consequences for anyone who engage in them.”

He added, “We remain confident that the measures we have implemented are working as intended and are continuing to adjust and refine our approach as necessary to ensure that our campuses are a safe and welcoming place for all.”

In April, the Trump administration expressed its skepticism of a quick turnaround at Northwestern, impounding $790 million of its federal funds.

Critics of Northwestern’s approach to rampant pro-Hamas and anti-Israel demonstrations have noted that the university’s president, Michael Schill, acceded to protesters’ demands that he establish a scholarship for Palestinian undergraduates, contact potential employers of students who caused campus disruptions to insist on their being hired, create a segregated dormitory hall that will be occupied exclusively by students of Middle Eastern and North African (MENA) and Muslim descent, and form a new advisory committee in which anti-Zionists students and faculty may wield an outsized voice.

“As of this writing, we have received 98 stop-word orders, mostly for Department of Defense-funded research projects, in addition to 51 grant terminations that were mostly received prior to the news of the funding freeze. In addition, we have not received payments for National Institutes of Health grants since March. These now appear to be frozen,” Schill said in a May 1 statement addressing the government’s funding cuts. “This is deeply troubling, and we are working in many ways to advocate on behalf of the university and to resolve the situation.”

The antisemitic incidents that Northwestern University continues to see have not lost their shock value.

In April, during the Jewish holiday of Passover, someone graffitied Kregse Hall and University Hall with hateful speech calling for “Death to Israel” and an “Intifada,” alluding to two prolonged periods of Palestinian terrorism during which hundreds of Israeli Jews were murdered. The vandals also spray-painted an inverted triangle, a symbol used to express support for the terrorist group Hamas and its atrocities.

“Antisemitic acts cannot and will not be tolerated at Northwestern, nor will vandalism or other violations of our polices on displays, demonstrations, or conduct,” Schill said following the incident. “We are working systematically and utilizing camera footage, forensics, and other methods to identify the individuals responsible for this vandalism. If these individuals are current Northwestern students, they will be immediately suspended and face full disciplinary proceedings under university policies, as well as criminal charges under the law.”

Follow Dion J. Pierre @DionJPierre.

The post Antisemitism at Northwestern University Still a Problem, New Poll Finds first appeared on Algemeiner.com.

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Israel to Raise Defense Spending to Meet Security Challenges

Israeli tanks are positioned near the Israel-Gaza border, in Israel, March 18, 2025. Photo: REUTERS/Amir Cohen

Israel will raise defense spending by 42 billion shekels ($12.5 billion) in 2025 and 2026, the finance and defense ministries said on Thursday, citing the country’s security challenges.

The budget agreement will allow the Defense Ministry to “advance urgent and essential procurement deals critical to national security,” the ministries said in a statement.

Finance Minister Bezalel Smotrich said the new defense budget “fully covers the intense fighting in Gaza, alongside comprehensive security preparations for all threats — from the south, the north, and more distant arenas.”

Israel‘s military costs have surged since it launched its military offensive on Gaza following the deadly attacks by Hamas terrorists on Israel on Oct. 7, 2023.

Since then, Israel has also fought Hezbollah in Lebanon and waged a 12-day air war with Iran, and carried out airstrikes in Syria this week after vowing to destroy government forces attacking Druze in southern Syria and demanding they withdraw.

Over the past 21 months, Israel‘s missile defense systems have been working almost daily to intercept missiles fired by Hezbollah, Iran, and Houthis in Yemen.

Current annual defense spending is 110 billion shekels – about 9 percent of gross domestic product – out of a total 2025 budget of 756 billion shekels.

The extra budgetary funding “will allow the Defense Ministry to immediately sign procurement deals for the weapons and ammunition required to replenish depleted stocks and support the IDF’s ongoing operations,” said Amir Baram, director general of the Defense Ministry.

It would also enable the defense establishment to initiate development programs to strengthen the Israel Defense Forces’ qualitative edge for future systems, he said.

MULTIPLE SCENARIOS

Defense Minister Israel Katz said the funds would allow Israel to prepare for multiple scenarios since “enemies are openly declaring their intent to destroy us … For this we require complete military, technological, and operational superiority.”

Separately, the Defense Ministry said it had signed a deal with state-run Israel Aerospace Industries (IAI) to accelerate serial production of Arrow interceptors.

The Arrow, developed and manufactured in cooperation with the US Missile Defense Agency, is a missile defense system designed to intercept and destroy ballistic missiles.

The Arrow had a high interception rate during the conflicts with Hamas and Iran. As part of the deal, IAI will supply the military with a significant additional amount of Arrow interceptors.

“The numerous interceptions it carried out saved many lives and significantly reduced economic damage,” Baram said.

On Wednesday, the ministry signed a $20 million deal with Israel Weapon Industries (IWI) to supply advanced machine guns aimed at significantly enhancing the IDF ground forces’ firepower capabilities.

($1 = 3.3553 shekels)

The post Israel to Raise Defense Spending to Meet Security Challenges first appeared on Algemeiner.com.

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French Court Backs Release of Lebanese Terrorist Jailed for US, Israeli Diplomat Murders

A protester holds a flag with the slogan “Freedom for Georges Abdallah” during a demonstration to demand the immediate and unconditional release of Georges Ibrahim Abdallah, a Lebanese terrorist held in France since 1984, on the eve of a French appeals court ruling on his conditional release, in Paris, France, July 16, 2025. Photo: REUTERS/Abdul Saboor

A French court on Thursday ruled in favor of releasing Lebanese terrorist Georges Ibrahim Abdallah from prison, after he served almost 40 years of a life sentence for attacks on US and Israeli diplomats in France.

The Paris Appeals court agreed to Abdallah’s release on July 25 on the condition he leaves France, a judicial source said. A second source familiar with the case said he would be deported to Lebanon.

Abdallah is the former head of the Lebanese Armed Revolutionary Factions. He was jailed in 1987 for his role in the 1982 murders in Paris of US military attache Charles Ray and Israeli diplomat Yacov Barsimantov and for the attempted murder of US Consul General Robert Homme in Strasbourg in 1984.

The US Department of Justice and France’s general prosecutor have for years vigorously opposed his release, and eight previous release requests had been rejected.

Neither Abdallah’s lawyer nor the Lebanese and US embassies were immediately available for comment.

In a hearing in February, the Paris court said Abdallah should make an effort to compensate his victims’ families, according to a person familiar with the matter.

His lawyer said in June that around 16,000 euros ($18,546) had been disbursed into his account, an amount the US Department of Justice and France’s general prosecutor said was insufficient and did not come from Abdallah.

A source familiar with the case said on Thursday that Abdallah will not have to pay compensation to the victims.

It was not clear if there could be further appeals.

Abdallah, 74, has remained a staunch defender of the Palestinian cause.

The Paris court has described his behavior in prison as irreproachable and said in November that he posed “no serious risk in terms of committing new terrorism acts.”

However, the US Department of Justice has asserted that his release would pose a threat to the safety of US diplomats.

Washington has also used Abdallah’s previous comments that he would return to his hometown Qobayyat on the Lebanese-Syrian border as a reason not to release him, given the recent conflict between Israel and Iran-backed Hezbollah fighters.

($1 = 0.8627 euros)

The post French Court Backs Release of Lebanese Terrorist Jailed for US, Israeli Diplomat Murders first appeared on Algemeiner.com.

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Independent Schools Need More Tools to Fight Antisemitism in Their Classrooms

New York City Mayor Eric Adams announcing the formation of the Mayor’s Office to Combat Antisemitism at a press conference at City Hall on May 13, 2025. Photo: Ed Reed/Mayoral Photography Office.

Too many American schools fail Jewish students by not addressing antisemitism head-on.

Thankfully, more of them now realize these shortcomings and want to make meaningful changes.

As the last school year drew to a close in May, 160 leaders from 32 of New York City’s leading independent schools gathered for a single, urgent purpose: to better support Jewish students and build educational communities that have the knowledge, tools, and moral clarity to respond to antisemitism in all its manifestations and regardless of its source.

Convened by American Jewish Committee’s (AJC) Center for Education Advocacy and the New York University Center for the Study of Antisemitism, this first-of-its-kind gathering was a recognition that this an urgent issue for schools to tackle.

AJC’s State of Antisemitism in America 2024 Report found that 96% of American Jews aged 18-29 believe antisemitism is a problem in the US, and 93% believe it has increased in the last five years. But among their peers in the general US adult population, those numbers dropped to 59% and 43% respectively.

We have seen the consequences of these disparate beliefs — when the peers of younger Jews don’t think antisemitism is as serious a problem, Jewish youth experience gaslighting, othering, and exclusion.

The polarization, exclusion, and breakdown of civil discourse that fuel antisemitism also threaten the functioning of our society as a whole. Addressing these issues must begin in kindergarten and continue through high school graduation.

For this meaningful and challenging work to take place, trusted relationships with school leaders need to be cultivated. That is our shared responsibility as educators, and why there is no time to waste.

Educational institutions are the lynchpin to ensuring that today’s students are equipped with the knowledge, empathy, and skills to engage in dialogue, which are indispensable to a functioning democracy. They are well-equipped to foster empathy in their students while providing a strong civic education.

As we’ve heard from college leaders, we cannot fix campus culture if we neglect the K–12 pipeline that feeds it. Issues like identity politics, deepening divisions, and “us vs. them” mindsets begin early — and schools must confront them right away.

The educators at the summit came away with a deeper understanding of how they can live up to their schools’ missions by ensuring the safety and belonging of the Jewish members of their school community, including faculty, staff, students, and their parents.

To aid those efforts, AJC has published an action plan for independent school administrators, so that we can provide a roadmap for those looking to make meaningful change.

Among its recommendations:

  • Implement mandatory educational programs about Jewish identity and antisemitism for administrators and staff responsible for a culture of belonging. Understanding Jews and antisemitism is vital to effectively address these issues in classrooms.
  • Organize education programs about antisemitism for students and parents. Most Americans only have a passing familiarity with Jewish culture and identity. Providing more education fosters can foster an environment where there is zero tolerance for anti-Jewish hate.
  • Establish and publicize clear goals for promptly responding to antisemitic incidents and provide guidance on how incidents should be reported and how they will be addressed.
  • Provide professional development for faculty on how to teach about the Israel-Palestinian conflict, whose best practices include classrooms promoting viewpoint diversity, fact-based inquiry and the use of primary sources to promote and open and respectful dialogue.

The summit laid the foundation for this serious, positive change — but it is one of only many steps that must be taken to make much-needed progress. The students sitting in today’s classrooms will inherit a democracy already strained by division and mistrust.

If we cannot teach them to engage across differences respectfully, to recognize hatred in its many forms, and to build bridges across ideological divides, we will have failed them — and ourselves — in the most consequential way possible.

Ira Glasser is Director of K-12 Education, New York, at the American Jewish Committee’s Center for Education Advocacy.

The post Independent Schools Need More Tools to Fight Antisemitism in Their Classrooms first appeared on Algemeiner.com.

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