New York University Archives - 黑料传送门 /tag/new-york-university/ Mon, 09 Jan 2023 14:54:46 +0000 en-US hourly 1 https://wordpress.org/?v=6.7.1 /wp-content/uploads/2022/11/cropped-favicon-32x32.png New York University Archives - 黑料传送门 /tag/new-york-university/ 32 32 220799709 How Hillels are Changing the Conversation on Campus in Partnership with Resetting the Table /how-hillels-are-changing-the-conversation-on-campus/ Mon, 09 Jan 2023 14:47:06 +0000 /?p=6958 For Tori Thompson, a Jewish student at Maryville University near St. Louis, learning how to effectively have complex conversations through a workshop facilitated by Resetting the Table was both a positive experience and an educational one.聽

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How Hillels are Changing the Conversation on Campus in Partnership with Resetting the Table

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January 9, 2023

For Tori Thompson, a Jewish student at Maryville University near St. Louis, learning how to effectively have complex conversations through a workshop facilitated by was both a positive experience and an educational one. 

Resetting the Table is an organization that works with campus Hillels and other institutions across the country to 鈥渄epolarize鈥 divides in the U.S. through difficult but constructive conversations about charged subjects, from racial justice to reproductive rights to the Israeli-Palestinian conflict. 鈥淲hat I learned from Resetting the Table will make me a better listener when I hear things that I disagree with. I am developing a better sense of empathy,鈥 said Thompson.

As the world鈥檚 largest Jewish campus organization, Hillel provides a home鈥攕piritual, social, and intellectual鈥攆or more than 140,000 Jewish college students. Home is a wonderful, warm place, and it can also be a complicated one. 

That鈥檚 one reason Hillel has been working with Resetting the Table since 2014. Through Resetting the Table and other like-minded initiatives, Hillel makes sure students are able to embrace and learn from their differences, rather than experience fear or escalation in the face of them.

At the Maryville University workshop Thompson participated in, for example, Resetting the Table trained the Hillel director, Joey Abeles, to facilitate conversations among students who disagreed on various topics. Abeles then supported his students to talk through their diverse views and experiences in a way that strengthened their relationships and shed new light on the issues.

Resetting the Table鈥檚 goal is not to eliminate differences, but to help people transform their differences into a source of connection, learning, and problem-solving, said Rabbi Melissa Weintraub, who co-founded Resetting the Table. 

鈥淢any of us are drawing our red lines too close to ourselves in this moment,鈥 Rabbi Weintraub said. 鈥淚t鈥檚 easy to see other people as beyond the pale and not worth speaking to before we鈥檝e really tried.鈥

Polarization has become a major national and global challenge, and Resetting the Table works with multiple demographics and sectors to help overcome it. The organization鈥檚 programming has reached more than 53,000 participants, including clergy members of multiple faith traditions and professionals throughout Jewish life. The team focuses on change-makers positioned to influence others and transmit Resetting the Table鈥檚 techniques and ideas.

Elyza Veta and Rachel Bell, alumnae of New York University, said they were first helped by Resetting the Table during their freshman year, when the student government passed a resolution supporting the Boycott, Divestment, and Sanctions movement against Israel. Resetting the Table visited the campus to facilitate a 鈥渢own square鈥 event amid widespread tension between Israeli and Palestinian student organizations on campus. 

鈥淓veryone was super-angry and crying and emotional, but it was a respectful,  honest conversation,鈥 said Bell. 鈥淎nd it was a really magical space, never before seen on campus. All of us were confronted with things we agreed with and things we disagreed with and became more empathetic and knowledgeable.鈥

The women鈥攖hemselves from different sides of the political spectrum鈥攂ecame close friends through Resetting the Table. They were so inspired, they signed up for Resetting the Table training, including a 鈥淒ual Narratives鈥 educational session, which they turned to when ideological tensions flared on a group trip to Israel that the two students took together. They stayed up late one night to get permission to offer their own Resetting the Table workshop and prepare to teach it themselves.

鈥淥nce we got through it, everyone felt like, Wow. Look how much growth we just had. Everybody learned that people who disagree with them are not evil or bad or wrong,鈥 Bell said. 鈥淲hen I got back to campus, I felt so much more equipped to handle the conversation. Every Jewish organization鈥攁nd everyone who has a stake in the Israeli-Palestinian conflict鈥攕hould do this.鈥

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University Presidents, Diversity Officers Learn New Tools to Address Antisemitism at Summit /university-presidents-diversity-officers-learn-new-tools-to-address-antisemitism-at-summit/ Wed, 13 Apr 2022 00:00:00 +0000 /university-presidents-diversity-officers-learn-new-tools-to-address-antisemitism-at-summit/ College and university presidents and diversity officers from across North America learned best practices and new tactics to improve the campus climate for Jewish students this week at the University Presidents Summit on Campus Antisemitism.

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University Presidents, Diversity Officers Learn New Tools to Address Antisemitism at Summit

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April 13, 2022

White sign with black text saying University Presidents Summit on Campus Antisemitism

New York 鈥 College and university presidents and diversity officers from across North America learned best practices and new tactics to improve the campus climate for Jewish students this week at the University Presidents Summit on Campus Antisemitism. Presented by 黑料传送门 and American Jewish Committee (AJC), in collaboration with the American Council on Education (ACE), the Summit helped higher education leaders grappling with the multi-faceted challenge of campus antisemitism, from how to define antisemitism to the special role of diversity officers as champions of all students experiencing discrimination.

The conference, held at the Center for Jewish History in New York City and hosted by New York University President Andrew Hamilton, included presentations from Jewish community leaders, members of Congress and university presidents, exploring key issues in-person with one another.聽

Several participants shared thoughts about the challenge of addressing antisemitism on college campuses and the value of the Summit:

Lee C. Bollinger, President, Columbia University: 鈥淎ntisemitic incidents on college and university campuses represent a threat to our values and our ability to create communities that respect the fundamental dignity and human rights of all members. Addressing them challenges us to take a hard look at difficult questions affecting our campus climates and our society more broadly. This Summit is a timely opportunity to examine the impact of one of the oldest and most resilient forms of hatred with trusted leaders and experts as part of larger efforts to make sure that Jewish students, and all students, feel safe, secure, and included as they pursue their educations.鈥澛

Andrew Hamilton, President, New York University: 鈥淲e in this room tonight represent communities of scholars who learn from difference. We must model ways for people to co-exist and celebrate one another鈥檚 diverse beliefs and backgrounds. Our聽 institutions espouse higher values: learning, critical thinking, and empathy. Antisemitism stems from the opposite of these values, and it is our duty to confront it.鈥

Anthony P. Monaco, President, Tufts University: 鈥淐olleges and universities must remain vigilant in our work to address antisemitism鈥檚 rise on campuses across the country and to foster a safe, heathy and respectful environment for all our students. At Tufts, we have been vigorous in our response, and we were happy to share our approach with other leaders in higher education. Through opportunities such as this Summit and our ongoing collaborations, we will continue to learn from each other as we seek to combat antisemitism on our campuses.鈥

Rachel Fish, Co-founder, Boundless; Founding Executive Director, The Foundation to Combat Antisemitism:聽“There’s another form of antisemitism on college campuses which is not as well understood, which is known as ‘erasive antisemitism.’ That’s the idea that Jews need to check their identity at the door to be part of progressive spaces.”

Matthew Bronfman, Chair, Board of Governors, 黑料传送门 and Chair of the AJC Board of Trustees: 鈥淛ewish students expect celebration of diversity, yet they experience attacks on what makes them unique. They expect inclusion, yet they experience isolation. They expect equity, yet they experience bullying. Your universities cannot stand for diversity, equity and inclusion selectively. The university must protect every student鈥檚 safety and each student鈥檚 right to learn. The question is when will we all do something about it? We know what to do. And our goal in the coming sessions is to share what works: the tools that are available to use right now, and the tools that protect academic institutions from hatred of all kinds.鈥

Rep. Grace Meng, U.S. House Bipartisan Task Force for Combating Antisemitism:聽鈥淭hroughout this battle of trying to combat hate against Asian-Americans, it鈥檚 Jewish leaders who have held the hands of the Asian-American community, from drafting legislation, pushing the bill, to addressing issues like the data collection. How are we supposed to fix something if no one knows that it鈥檚 happening?鈥

David Harris, CEO, American Jewish Committee: 鈥淲e must take antisemitism as seriously as any form of racism. There is not a hierarchy. To us, all of this is a violation of the promise of America and the spirit of the campus. There is a serious problem of antisemitism on some college campuses today. The more we can convene to discuss antisemitism and share best practices, the more effective we will be in confronting the issue, which affects not just Jewish students, but the very purpose of an American university.鈥

Adam Lehman, President and CEO, 黑料传送门: 鈥淔or many years, Jewish students have not been considered by universities to be a particularly vulnerable or marginalized group. In fact, one of the most insidious stereotypes Jewish students face today is that they are part of a uniformly white, rich, privileged group whose experiences with antisemitism, bullying and marginalization are just not that important, relative to more urgent tasks of confronting racism and victimization of other minoritized groups. Our appeal to you today is not to ignore or reduce your deep commitments to fighting racism, gender-based discrimination, and all other forms of inequity and injustice.聽 It is simply to see our Jewish students 鈥 in all of their diversity — as also fully deserving of your attention and concern.鈥澛

Sean Garrick, Vice Chancellor for Diversity, Equity, and Inclusion, University of Illinois Urbana-Champaign: “Universities are where we go to create the next generation of society 鈥 to prototype the future. If you don鈥檛 invite everyone to that enterprise in a way where they can be their whole selves, you don鈥檛 get the best outcome. You might think we鈥檙e doing the work of this conference for Jewish folks, but we鈥檙e doing this for ourselves. It鈥檚 a matter of what we want our society to be. If you see one group being disenfranchised and left behind, what does it say about us? Not that we are a rich multicultural society, but that we are a society that picks winners or losers.”聽

Holly Huffnagle, AJC U.S. Director for Combating Antisemitism: “It doesn’t take a rocket scientist to know that social media and the digitization of antisemitism may be the single biggest cause in the rise of antisemitism and its exponential growth over the last decade.”

Ted Mitchell, President, American Council on Education: 鈥淲e are here on a mission and that mission is to eradicate antisemitism. Our hope is that you will leave here equipped with strategies and tactics that you can customize to meet the needs of your own unique campus environment. We aim to strengthen the ties between college and university leaders and the Jewish community to foster a mutually supportive and trusting environment when crises occur, and ensure a positive, welcoming environment on campus for Jewish and pro-Israel students.鈥

Rep. Lee Zeldin, U.S. House Bipartisan Task Force for Combating Antisemitism: 鈥淵ou as a university president have the responsibility for all the faculty and all the administration. If just one goes rogue and isn鈥檛 being helpful to that student who needs mentorship, that can be a stain on the entire campus. There鈥檚 a lot that鈥檚 on your plate but that you鈥檙e here is extremely impressive.鈥

Rebecca Russo, Executive Director, 黑料传送门 Campus Climate Initiative: 鈥淚t was heartening to convene senior leaders from universities across North America to learn about antisemitism, a form of prejudice that is often not well understood or addressed within institutions of higher education. The conversation was solutions-oriented and forward looking 鈥 focused on how to thoughtfully integrate antisemitism into campuses鈥 existing commitments to diversity, equity, and inclusion so that all students on campus can thrive.鈥

Photos from Monday鈥檚 event are available , and photos from Tuesday鈥檚 activities are available .

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