California colleges settle antisemitism complaints linked to campus pro-Palestinian protests

UC Berkeley apologized to Israeli scholar Yael Nativ and will pay her $60,000, while Pomona College agreed to add a Title VI coordinator and a new advisory body on Jewish life after federal complaints alleging a hostile environment

Associated Press|
Two California colleges have reached settlements with Jewish organizations and individuals who filed complaints alleging antisemitism arising from pro-Palestinian campus protests, including a $60,000 payment to an Israeli sociologist and dance researcher who says she was not rehired by the University of California, Berkeley, despite the popularity of her class.
UC Berkeley Chancellor Rich Lyons on Wednesday issued an apology to Yael Nativ, a visiting professor in 2022 who was found in a campus investigation to have been the victim of discrimination, the Los Angeles Times reported. She has also been invited to teach her class in a semester of her choosing.
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מחאות פרו-פלסטיניות בלוס אנג'לס קליפורניה ארצות הברית ארה"ב
מחאות פרו-פלסטיניות בלוס אנג'לס קליפורניה ארצות הברית ארה"ב
(Photo: RINGO CHIU / AFP)
Nativ sued in state court this year after asking the university to follow up on the campus report by rehiring her and taking steps to prevent similar incidents. She said she received what she viewed as an inadequate response.
At Pomona College, officials said they will hire a federal Title VI civil rights coordinator and create a “task force, committee or advisory council” on Jewish life and antisemitism after a federal complaint filed last year with the Education Department alleged civil rights violations in the school’s response to pro-Palestinian demonstrations.
Some Jewish students said the protests created a “hostile environment” for them and argued that college leaders did little to enforce free speech and nondiscrimination rules.
On Tuesday, UC Berkeley announced a six-month suspension without pay of a computer science lecturer, Peyrin Kao, for alleged pro-Palestinian political advocacy in the classroom, the San Francisco Chronicle reported.
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