Newsletter
Newsletter Support JNS

Students put on probation, expelled, suspended for Vanderbilt anti-Israel sit-in

“The gravity of this situation and these outcomes weighs heavily” on the school’s leadership, said C. Cybele Raver, Vanderbilt’s provost and vice chancellor for academic affairs.

Vanderbilt University
Entrance sign to Vanderbilt University in Nashville, Tenn. Credit: Fotoluminate LLC/Shutterstock.

Activists who were arrested at Vanderbilt University in Nashville, Tenn., on March 26 after staging a sit-in in the school’s Kirkland Hall calling for targeting Israel with boycotts have received punishment.

C. Cybele Raver, Vanderbilt’s provost and vice chancellor for academic affairs, issued a statement updating the school community on the administration’s response to the demonstrations. “After a thorough review of the incident, including examination of evidence and interviews with students,” Raver stated, the school “issued a range of findings and sanctions that took the individual circumstances of each student’s conduct into account.”

Raver wrote that “the sanctions included disciplinary probation as well as suspension and expulsion.”

Vanderbilt would not identify which students received punishment, what the punishments were or what factors shaped the administration’s decisions.

“Student disciplinary outcomes are considered part of an individual student’s educational record, the contents of which are protected by federal privacy laws,” Julia Jordan, Senior Media Relations Specialist at Vanderbilt, told JNS. “We cannot release information that would make a student or group of students identifiable.”

Raver said “the gravity of this situation and these outcomes weighs heavily on those of us charged with carrying out our responsibility as leaders; we fully understand that student choices and decisions can lead to serious and costly consequences.”

Cairo has taken on the role of mediator, but local media is clearly leaning toward Tehran.
There was never a question whether bar and bat mitzvahs were going to continue, says Rabbi Marla Hornsten at Temple Israel, despite the havoc that had teachers and children evacuate the building.
“We will not rest in the mission to stop the spread of radical Islam,” Texas Gov. Greg Abbott stated.
The panel conducts research on antisemitic activity and works with public and private entities on statewide initiatives on Holocaust and genocide education.
“If it’s something that families are attuned to, then I think it may be a good way to engage the kids on that level,” Rabbi Steven Burg, of Aish, told JNS.
“I was a little surprised at the U.K. to be honest with you,” U.S. President Donald Trump told reporters at the White House. “They should have acted a lot faster.”