A delegation of pro-Israel student leaders from top US universities arrived in Israel last week to discuss growing antisemitism on college campuses. Their testimonies, shared at the Israel Knesset, exposed graphic, and at times violent, experiences of Jew-hatred.
After visiting the southern Israeli communities and speaking with survivors of Hamas’s October 7 attacks and Israeli activists and leaders, including Isaac Herzog and Noa Tishby, the American students met with former Israeli ambassador to the United Nations Likud MK Danny Danon.
Speaking to The Jerusalem Post, Danon said that one of the biggest challenges student advocates have is that they are often “not facing hate and antisemitism from Palestinian groups. Sometimes they have to challenge the institutions themselves. That’s very hard. And the greatest tool they have is courage. [Speaking] from my experience in the past, be courageous about fighting for Israel, for the Jewish cause. It’s not easy, but it will serve them [students] also in the future when they become leaders in their hometowns.”
Jewish voices on campus stand up to antisemitism
Jake Klatzker, a junior at the University of Washington in Seattle has been active in a variety of local Jewish organizations including the university’s Hillel chapter, StandWithUs, and Students Supporting Israel.
“I’m kind of known as that one Israel guy on campus,” he laughed. Kletzker recalled that it was 2021’s Operation Guardian of the Walls that woke his passion for Israel and drove him to learn as much as he could.
Nearly every student had an experience of direct antisemitism or where, their university’s inaction made them feel as though they, and their safety did not matter.
Another student, attempting to relate her experiences, began sobbing and had to leave the room.
Still, the student leaders emphasized that they would continue to fight for Israel, and each student who spoke to the Post described their plans to continue with their advocacy work upon returning to the US.
MK Danon noted the difficulty of their positions as advocates of Israel but expressed that he maintained confidence in the next generation of Israel advocates.
“First we have to realize that hate will be there. It’s not going to disappear. Maybe we will be better prepared for that, or we will be able to fight harder, but hate is not going to disappear. Antisemitism has been there for centuries, [and] unfortunately, it will be there also in the future. But today, [the next generation of pro-Jewish and Israeli voices] are capable and knowledgeable. I felt today that we have great representatives on the ground."
Hasbara fellowships, in partnership with IsraelAmbassadors.com, sponsored the high-level pro-Israel student leadership mission. For further information, please visit www.israelambassadors.com