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Antisemitism Notebook

Why the ADL is struggling to find its campus footing

The Anti-Defamation League’s new “report cards” scoring schools on antisemitism drew criticism from some of its partners

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As fears over campus antisemitism escalated following Oct. 7, the Anti-Defamation League announced plans to get more involved in higher education, including by releasing “report cards” for dozens of colleges and universities.

But when the group released its first batch of grades last week — awarding only two “As” and “failing” some of the most prestigious schools in the country — it received a sharp rebuke from Hillel, the best-known group serving Jewish students on campus.

“We do not believe it is constructive or accurate to try to assign grades to schools,” said Adam Lehman, Hillel’s chief executive, who otherwise is usually a close partner of the ADL. “Efforts to do so, however well-intended, produce misleading impressions regarding the actual Jewish student experience at those schools.”

The tension over the report cards stems in part from the ADL’s apparent desire to transcend the existing models for combating antisemitism and criticism of Israel on campus:

  • The insiders: Hillel and Chabad staff interact with tons of students and believe they know best how — and when — to work with school administrators over the course of many years.
  • The big dogs: National organizations like the American Jewish Committee and powerful Jewish federations get involved on campus when problems flare, applying political pressure on university leaders and donors at key moments.
  • The rabble rousers: Activist groups like StopAntisemitism.org take a more guerilla approach to amplify clashes on campus, generating public outrage via social media and, increasingly, hiring so-called “doxxing trucks” to beam the names and faces of pro-Palestinian students and professors across campus.

These different approaches can work in harmony, with outside groups splashing a campus incident across social media, creating a headache for administrators who may then be more willing to listen to the insiders.

But the separation is also key. Outsiders have more leeway to use hyperbole and controversial tactics, like doxxing anti-Israel activists, because they aren’t the ones actually meeting with university presidents.

Liora Rez, the pseudonymous social media influencer who runs StopAntisemitism, has been releasing campus “report cards” for years, without regard to their impact on her relationships with the schools. Which is fine, because her group’s raison d’être is to name and shame people it deems antisemites.

The insiders and their big-dog allies are not so cavalier. They save their political ammunition for bigger battles, like changing a school policy or forcing a dean to confront a problematic professor.

Two other recent insider efforts to assess campus antisemitism — an “antisemitic hostility index” created by Brandeis University and Hillel’s latest annual college guide — notably avoided ranking or grading schools.

But the ADL wants to play the inside and outside game at once. They’re offering educational resources to university administrators and writing letters asking them to investigate student clubs, while simultaneously naming and shaming many of those very schools. And Jonathan Greenblatt, its chief executive, was quoted in The Washington Post this week defending StopAntisemitism’s approach.

That may set the stage for future conflicts between the nation’s preeminent Jewish defense group and many of its historic allies.

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