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U.S. Naval Academy removed books about the Holocaust, antisemitism and Jewish Americans ahead of Hegseth visit

The removals came as the academy also briefly pulled down a display honoring Jewish female graduates

(JTA) — At the same time as the U.S. Naval Academy removed a display honoring Jewish female graduates ahead of a visit from Defense Secretary Pete Hegseth, it also removed books about the Holocaust and antisemitism.

The books, which also covered the history of white supremacy in the United States, were among nearly 400 removed ahead of the visit last week.

The order to remove the books, most of which focused on topics like race, diversity and gender, appeared to come at the behest of Hegseth himself. The Pentagon chief, whose initiatives against diversity, equity and inclusion programming have already led to the removal of other Holocaust remembrance content from the Defense Department’s digital platforms, sent a memo to the Maryland school instructing it to comply with larger anti-”woke” purges at the department. The list of books was made public by the Navy on Friday.

Among the removed books with Jewish content were a history of hate in America written by a former director of Boston’s Jewish Community Relations Council; an academic study of Holocaust memorials through a gender lens; two books about sexuality in Weimar-era Berlin; and a history of early Jewish American efforts to censor antisemitic media.

The author of the latter book, M. Alison Kibler, told the Jewish Telegraphic Agency that “censoring a book about censorship would be laughable, except that banning a long list of books at the USNA is absolutely serious and alarming.

“It’s unclear to me why my book would be dangerous to the education of cadets — adults who are seeking a well-rounded education; and it’s unclear to me why my book is on the list but other books about race and immigration in the history of the United States are not,” Kibler, a professor at Franklin & Marshall College and author of “Censoring racial ridicule: Irish, Jewish, and African American struggles over race and representation, 1890-1930,” wrote in an email.

The removals were notable for occurring at the college level; according to free-speech literary advocacy group PEN America, it was the first notable instance of “college-level library banning.” In recent years, K-12 schools across the country have been the sites of high-profile debates over whether and when to ban books.

Many books studying racism and white supremacy, including neo-Nazis, were also pulled, along with books about Muslim and Palestinian Americans. The removal list also includes several renowned American books about race, including Maya Angelou’s “I Know Why The Caged Bird Sings,” and at least one student thesis by a recent Naval Academy graduate.

While the school said the photos of Jewish female graduates were restored after Hegseth left, the book removals appear to be permanent. A representative for the Naval Academy did not return a request for comment.

The list of removed books with Jewish themes includes:

  • “Memorializing the Holocaust: Gender, Genocide and Collective Memory,” by Janet Jacobs
  • “Legacy of Hate: A Short History of Ethnic, Religious, and Racial Prejudice in America,” by Philip Perlmutter, former director of Boston’s JCRC
  • “Gay Berlin: Birthplace of a Modern Identity,” by former U.S. Holocaust Memorial Museum fellow Robert Beachy
  • “The Masculine Woman in Weimar Germany” by Katie Sutton
  • “Hate on the net,” a study of online antisemitism and hateful ideologies by Antonio Roversi and Lawrence Smith
  • “Censoring racial ridicule: Irish, Jewish, and African American struggles over race and representation, 1890-1930,” by M. Alison Kibler
  • “Blood and Politics: The history of the white nationalist movement from the margins to the mainstream,” by Leonard Zeskind, a MacArthur Fellow and researcher of antisemitism
  • “Josiah Nott of Mobile,” a biography of an influential racist 19th-century physician who once wrote a pamphlet outlining “The physical history of the Jewish race,” by Reginald Horsman
  • “American Hate: Survivors Speak Out,” an account of minority group persecution under the first Trump administration, including Jewish stories, by Arjun Singh Sethi
  • Several other books about white supremacism in the U.S., including “American Swastika”

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