Newsletter
Newsletter Support JNS

Computer science professor leaves MIT ‘dream job’ for Yeshiva due to Jew-hatred

Noam Wasserman, dean of Yeshiva’s business school, told JNS he is “very impressed” with Mauricio Karchmer’s “steadfast adherence to his values.”

Rabbi Ari Berman and Mauricio Karchmer
A fireside chat between Rabbi Ari Berman, president of Yeshivah University, and Mauricio Karchmer on the professor leaving MIT to join the staff at Yeshiva. Credit: Courtesy.

After quitting his “dream job” at Massachusetts Institute of Technology due to antisemitism on campus, Mauricio Karchmer is fitting in at his new job at Yeshiva University.

The computer scientist has, in his first two days at Yeshiva, already “mentored students, taught courses in multiple domains of expertise, and helped both university leadership and the broader community understand the dynamics on college campuses outside of YU,” Noam Wasserman, dean of Yeshiva’s Sy Syms School of Business, told JNS.

Weissman said Karchmer is already brainstorming with department chairs at the school about a course he is designing for the fall semester, “which will bring together his expertise in financial engineering and computer science.”

The professor also held a fireside chat at Yeshiva with Rabbi Ari Berman, the university president, about antisemitism on campus.

Karchmer “observed that the stakes are much bigger than just the war with Hamas, because ‘The Palestinians are a pawn and Israel is a proxy,’” Weissman said.

Karchmer announced his move to Yeshiva, where he is a visiting guest faculty member, on LinkedIn. He said he was honored to be part of a “deeply grounded institution” with leaders who lead by living up to their values.”

Also on LinkedIn, Berman wrote that it was a “privilege” to welcome Karchmer to the faculty. “As a top-tier professor in his field and a leader who lives his values with integrity and authenticity, he is a role model to us all,” Berman said.

In an article for The Free Press, Karchmer noted that MIT drew comparisons between Israel and Hamas. A message from the head of his department and its diversity, equity and inclusion office sent out a message “riddled with equivocations, without mentioning the barbarity of Hamas’s attack, stating only that ‘we are deeply horrified by the violence against civilians and wish to express our deep concern for all those involved,’” Karchmer wrote.

“I was shocked that my institution—led by people who are meant to see the world rationally—could not simply condemn a brutal terrorist act,” he added.

Wasserman told JNS he was “very impressed” with Karchmer’s “mix of humility and desire to learn, combined with steadfast adherence to his values even when they meant having to leave his dream job at MIT when those values were threatened.”

Rabbi Ari Berman, Professor Mauricio Karchmer
From left: Rabbi Ari Berman, president of Yeshiva University, with professor Mauricio Karchmer. Credit: Courtesy.

“Why are we to trust the U.N.’s own vetting procedures?” Adam Kaplan, of USAID, asked a congressional committee.
The pro-Israel group “has become increasingly problematic for many American Jews and for many candidates running for office,” Lauren Strauss, of American University, told JNS.
Sharon Liberman Mintz, of Jewish Theological Seminary, told JNS that the 1526 Haggadah “is one of the most exciting books that I have ever had the pleasure to turn the pages of.”
Tehran combines a narrative of victory with one of victimhood to shape public opinion. Israel is trying to catch up in the battle for public perception.
Two people wounded and two homes damaged in Rehovot in Iranian missile barrages.
The U.S. Army has “flattened” Iran’s air defenses and defense industrial base, including the factories and production lines supporting missile and drone programs, the American defense secretary said.