Critics of the International Holocaust Remembrance Alliance's (IHRA) definition of anti-Semitism are once again lashing out—this time at Columbia University’s decision to formally adopt it.
Georgetown University is under fire for its growing Qatar ties, after interim president Robert Groves defended awarding a presidential medal to a Qatari royal who celebrated the Hamas Oct. 7 terror attack.
George Mason University is now facing federal scrutiny over anti-Semitism complaints after its president, Gregory Washington, repeatedly refused to issue a direct condemnation of anti-Jewish incitement—even as he denounced “Islamophobia” following unrelated violence 500 miles away.
Columbia University trustee Shoshana Shendelman condemned the school’s “lack of moral clarity” and failure to confront anti-Semitism, declaring the university has shown a “disturbing lack of moral clarity” and “tarnished” its reputation “for the foreseeable future.”
A disturbing case of Stanford antisemitism has emerged as Israeli chemist Dr. Shay Laps accuses Stanford University lab director Dr. Danny Chou of fabricating a sexual harassment investigation to vengefully punish him after a campaign of anti-Israel bias.
Barnard College has settled a major lawsuit with Jewish students who accused the school of egregious civil rights violations and ignoring campus antisemitism for years.
Columbia University stoked outrage by appointing Farah Jasmine Griffin—a longtime supporter of BDS (the boycott, disinvestment, sanctions movement targeting Israel)—to the esteemed University Professor position, its “highest academic distinction.”
Harvard University is now scrambling for corporate funding after President Trump revoked over $2 billion in federal grants, citing campus anti‑Semitism and discriminatory DEI policies.