Newsletter
Newsletter Support JNS

Columbia Jewish group urges president to resign after seeming to downplay campus Jew-hatred

Claire Shipman’s messages “cannot be explained by ‘taken out of context,’” Ari Shrage, co-founder of the Columbia Jewish Alumni Association, told JNS.

Columbia University College Walk New York City
Columbia University College Walk, New York City. Credit: Wikimedia Commons.

The Columbia Jewish Alumni Association is calling on Claire Shipman, the university’s interim president, to resign, following the release of messages in which she appeared to downplay concerns about antisemitism and sought to remove a Jewish board member.

Ari Shrage, co-founder of the Columbia Jewish Alumni Association, told JNS that Interim President Shipman’s statements are extremely offensive and unacceptable.

“They cannot be explained by ‘taken out of context,’” he said. “Her lack of empathy and disregard for a board member concerned with student safety, as well as deliberate isolation and a suspicion of withholding of information from a board member, make her not fit to serve in the office of president of Columbia University.”

“We believe that the interim president should step down immediately,” he said.

In October 2023, Shipman wrote to Minouche Shafik, at the time the president of Columbia, that “people are really frustrated and scared about antisemitism on our campus and they feel somehow betrayed by it, which is not necessarily a rational feeling, but it’s deep, and it is quite threatening.”

On Tuesday, Reps. Elise Stefanik (R-N.Y.) and Tim Walberg (R-Mich.) demanded answers from Shipman regarding the messages.

Stefanik and Walberg also point to January 2024 messages from Shipman in which she sought to appoint “somebody from the Middle East or who is Arab” to Columbia’s board. She did so even as she sought to remove from the board Shoshana Shendelman, who is Jewish and who the lawmakers describe as “one of the board’s most outspoken Jewish advocates” since the Hamas-led terrorist attacks in southern Israel on Oct. 7, 2023.

Vita Fellig is a writer in New York City.
“It is disturbing to see some corners of our justice system treat the life of a Jewish American as worth so little,” Alyza Lewin, president of U.S. affairs at the Combat Antisemitism Movement, told JNS.
“We are more scared than ever,” Jewish activist Jennifer Laszlo Mizrahi told JNS. “Despite the overall reduction in the number of instances, the severity of instances is terrifying.”
“I was eventually told by the police that there’s not much that they could do and the case would ultimately get thrown out,” Nir Golan told a public inquiry of the 2023 attack.
The analysis found that Cole Allen, who faces multiple felony charges for the April 25 attack, had “multiple social and political grievances” and cited his social media posts criticizing the war.
A spokesman for the New York City Economic Development Corporation told JNS that a Japan page was also taken down.
The incident occurred as America continues its blockade of the Strait of Hormuz.