The U.S. government has sent an unequivocal message to American universities: Antisemitism has consequences. After months of harassment, intimidation and outright violence against Jewish students, federal authorities are stepping in where campuses have failed, making it clear that institutions can no longer ignore the rising tide of hatred.
The fact that 60 universities are under federal investigation should horrify every American. Sixty places of so-called higher learning have allowed antisemitism to fester and explode into open discrimination and violence. For more than a year, Jewish students have been doxxed, harassed, physically threatened and silenced. Acts of targeted hate have gone unpunished by school administrators who either fear backlash or condone the hostility.
The U.S. Department of Education’s intervention, a necessary step, cannot be a symbolic gesture. The reality is undeniable. This is not mere student activism; it is systemic, targeted discrimination. Antisemitism isn’t an abstract policy debate, it is a real and immediate threat to Jewish faculty and student safety, dignity and future on these campuses.
The time for warnings is over. Universities that fail to protect their Jewish students must be held accountable, period. If campuses allow hatred to fester, they must be investigated and forced to change.
Columbia University’s loss of federal funding was just the beginning, and we see its loss bleed into other universities scrambling in the face of potential funding cuts. The University of California, Los Angeles, for instance, on March 10, announced an initiative to combat antisemitism.
It’s too little, too late. We cannot continue supporting institutions that enable antisemitism.
Across the country, Jewish students have faced a growing wave of hostility. Swastikas defaced dorm rooms; Jewish speakers were shouted down and physically threatened; and students were forced to hide their Star of David necklaces for fear of attack. This is the modern American college campus experience for many Jewish students.
For years, university presidents and administrators have ignored the cries of Jewish students—too afraid or complicit to take a stand. Now, they are being forced to listen. If a university allows antisemitism to fester unchecked, if it fails to protect its Jewish students, if it refuses to enforce the same standards of safety and inclusion that it applies to every other group, then it will pay a price.
This is a wake-up call for the broader community. For generations, Jewish families have sacrificed to send their children to prestigious institutions out of the belief that education is key to opportunity and advancement. Jews have helped build these institutions, funding scholarships, endowing chairs, and contributing to the intellectual and cultural vibrancy of campuses across America. But what happens when those same institutions betray the community? What happens when they allow our children to be harassed, threatened and ostracized?
For too long, we have relied on the goodwill of university administrators, hoping they would do the right thing. The fact that 60 universities are under federal investigation marks a turning point—proof that action, not patience, is the only way forward. Jewish students deserve to learn in an environment free from fear. They deserve administrators who take their safety seriously.
This investigation must result in real consequences—not just another round of performative task forces and empty statements.
To university administrators nationwide: The era of unchecked antisemitism is ending. Jewish students are no longer asking for protection; they are demanding it. And this time, the consequences of ignoring them will be very real.