Guest essay: Swarthmore vs its Jewish students

This is an open letter to the Board of Managers of Swarthmore College, from Benjamin Schwartz, class of 2006, concerning anti-Semitism on campus.

Benjamin Schwartz, a disappointed alum

To Swarthmore’s Board of Managers:

A year ago I wrote a letter to my children. I needed to explain to them what was happening because they were hearing about the murder and torture on October 7th of friends and family members of teachers and classmates at their Jewish middle school. This week I received a message from a friend at Swarthmore with a picture of an advertisement for a “teach-in” on “anti-colonial armed resistance” in the Scheuer room that was posted on the one-year anniversary of the pogrom in Israel. This Swarthmore hosted event by “SwarthmoreSJP” followed their announcement on social media of “Happy October 7th everyone!” and request for donations “in honor of this glorious day.”

I share this with Swarthmore’s leadership and Board of Directors without an expectation that this matters to you very much or really at all. However, my eldest son is now old enough to be thinking about where he will go to college and I need to explain to him why he should not consider Swarthmore College: his father and grandfather’s alma mater, the school where his mother and I met, and from where I still maintain close friendships with professors and former classmates.  Putting words down in writing helps me with that task and I figure I may as well share those words with you as well. 

Swarthmore College, like a number of elite academic institutions, has become home to both students and faculty that reject the most basic moral and intellectual precepts that make learning possible. I’m not assailing their motivations in this statement. I’m sure that those who assumed the authority to enforce social and academic norms in every generation thought they were doing right. 

This surely includes the Inquisitors of the Middle Ages, the revolutionaries of Moaist China, as well as closer to our own history, the Klu Klux Klan and their enablers in various American institutions. Recently a significant number of Swarthmore faculty called on the administration not to enforce campus policies against harassment by invoking the 1960s civil rights protests, but their defense of the mob is more accurately reminiscent of those who protected Klan members from law enforcement as they terrorized a minority with impunity. In those times as in our time, the very worst was probably well intentioned. 

It’s important to understand that this situation is not fundamentally about the Jews. The demonization and isolation of Jews as a collective on elite college campuses is a symptom of a failure of these institutions to safeguard the distinctions that allow society to function. Distinctions like the difference between rape and sex, murder and self-defense, speech and harassment. The students and faculty celebrating the events of October 7th have collapsed these distinctions into nothingness. The Jews are again at the center of this not because of anything happening in the Middle East. No one really believes deep down that a “teach in” in the Scheuer room is going to change the course of events in Israel, Gaza, Lebanon, etc. These “protests” are really aimed at destroying the distinctions that matter. 

Jews are the canary in the coal mine because the Jews have always been about distinctions. Over 4,000 years ago, our collective identity was created around them – the sacred and the profane – separating kosher and unkosher, milk and meat, wool and linen, holy days and work days, and on and on we’ve been obsessed with making distinctions ever since. The distinctions that people and institutions make about right and wrong shape their destiny.  

This can be confusing because there are no doubt Jewish individuals among these students and faculty, but again distinctions matter. Jews are a very, very, very small minority and as such feel tremendous pressure to be respected and represented in elite institutions wherever they have lived. And so, in every age one finds Jewish individuals zealously adopting the fashionable and dominant ideas of elite institutions even when that means parroting millenia old libels against the Jewish people. The blood libels directed against the Jewish state today are not meaningfully different from the libels familiar to my great grandparents and their great great grandparents. Tolerating Jewish individuals who repeat them does not equate to tolerating Jews. Jewish life can only fully exist in a Jewish community (it’s actually not possible to observe most Jewish rituals without a community). If your institution doesn’t tolerate the communal Jewish groups that allow Jewish life to exist, then the institution is not actually tolerating Jews. 

What does this mean? Well, on the anniversary of October 7th the Hillel that a friend of mine attends had to meet at a secret time and location to avoid protest and harassment. This wasn’t a problem at Swarthmore because Swathmore expelled Hillel from campus some years ago. 

As stewards of Swarthmore College, I don’t necessarily expect you all to care about the fate of the Jews. You have no such fiduciary duty (though you may want to check with your attorneys about your duty to your Jewish students). There is also no need. In defiance of every rational pattern of human history, this tiny people, the Jewish people live. How revealing is it that this phrase “Am Yisrael Chai/The People of Israel Live” is our “battle cry” in contrast to the slogans of those “revolutionaries of October 7th” championed on campus who chant “Death to America, Death to Israel”. The Jews will be fine. One day in the future, the people of Swarthmore College will wonder where their Jews went and they will find them at other colleges doing interesting and important work. What you should care about, because it is your duty to care about it, is what this all means for the health of Swarthmore. It may be worth looking around the world at the places that have kicked out the Jews and see how things are going there. 

Respectfully, 

Benjamin Schwartz 

Class of 2006 

16 thoughts on “Guest essay: Swarthmore vs its Jewish students”

  1. Eloquent and beautifully written. When an institution founded by Quakers has to be reminded of their responsibilities to all of their students this way, it is truly lamentable, if not shocking. I fear for my grandkids. Three years ago when my granddaughter Alina made her Bat Mitzvah, I commissioned her a gold necklace with her name written in Hebrew. She loved it and wore it all the time. When I saw her last, she was not wearing it. When I asked her why, she told me that she did not feel safe in attracting any attention to herself as a Jew. I ask myself, what would my refugee, immigrant parents think of an atmosphere where their granddaughter is feeling the same attitudes that they did in pre-war Poland. I’m glad they are not alive to hear this.

  2. Excellent Stu. I cannot for the life of me understand, given the Democrats and their absolute abandonment of the Jewish population this past year, understand why anyone would consider casting a vote for them. As a Catholic, who has seen anti Catholic bigotry rising. I feel the same about my own brothers and sisters in faith. You don’t need to vote for Republicans. But people like Liz Cheney who speak of decency and shill for Kamala, after her blatant bigotry against people of various faiths, are anathema.

    1. WOW. That’s your take-away from this piece? Don’t vote Democratic. MAGA’S, and even lesser insane Repugs twist anything and everything into their own political message. Anti-Catholic bigotry rising? Reminds me of those that say, people other than Jews were killed in concentration camps. For a smart woman, your lack of insight and empathy is disturbing.

      1. I agree with your take on this Naomi, except for the smart part. Check out our buddy, Freeze’s comment.

  3. Excuse me, but when did the Democrats abandon the Jews? You wanna talk about hyperbole and generalization, there’s it is.

    As an atheist and former Carholic, I have a general problem with ALL religions. You wanna align yourself with those protectors of child molesters, those people who stole babies from un-wed mothers in Italy for cash, those people who hoard millions of dollars that could be given to the poor, well you go right ahead. That’s your right. But it doesn’t give me any confidence that you have your fucking eyes and ears open.

  4. Today will be my last following this blog. I was delighted to find this by complete accident a few years back. Not only did I find it informative, it was always entertaining, too. But, your “crew” of certain individuals who regularly comment can no longer be tolerated by me. Best of luck & goodbye!

  5. The tens of thousands of marchers chanting “from the river to the sea” and “Hitler was right” are chanting for the genocide of 7 million Jews. I guess that for the marchers, for Swarthmore, and for many other colleges and universities, Hitler murdering 6 million Jews just wasn’t enough; thirteen million murdered Jews would be better perhaps? Or wouldn’t that be enough either?

  6. Allan NLN, a friend of mine for almost 50 years, once said to me that he loves America because this is the last place on earth where he, a Jew, and his fellow Jews can feel safe. Of late he has expressed a sense of fear for his safety as he watches anti-Semitism on the rise. That an ‘elite’ school like Swarthmore should tolerate — support — such shameful goings on is ominous. This is how an avalanche begins: with a few stones rolling downhill.

  7. The regime of Swarthmore President Valerie Smith and her cohorts, Board included have to go !

  8. I agree with Mark D. Schwartz and Vince. Thank you for publishing this very important article, Stu

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