CAMBRIDGE, MASSACHUSETTS - APRIL 15: A tower on one of the Harvard University buildings on April 15, 2025 in Cambridge, Massachusetts. A Trump administration task force announced Monday that it would block Harvard University from receiving $2.2 billion in federal grants and $60 million in contracts after the Ivy League school defied demands to adopt new policies on student and faculty conduct and admissions. (Photo by Scott Eisen/Getty Images)

Harvard University Hillel has issued a forceful rebuke of the school’s student-run newspaper after its “Ethicist” columnist advised readers that they are “justified” in cutting ties with Zionist friends.

In an email sent Friday to Harvard’s Jewish community, the Jewish life center expressed “shock, hurt, and concern” over the Harvard Crimson’s controversial advice column. The statement made clear that Harvard Hillel would not tolerate the exclusion of Zionists on campus.

Jason Rubenstein, Harvard Hillel’s executive director, drew a stark contrast between this incident and historical antisemitism at elite universities. “It’s a critical thing to understand that this is not like the genteel antisemitism at the elite universities in the mid-20th century,” he said. Rubenstein noted that alumni from Princeton’s eating clubs in the 1960s, who restricted Jewish membership, “didn’t say they should” exclude Jews, nor did they cite a “moral obligation” to do so.

What makes the Crimson article “more troubling,” Rubenstein argued, is its “morally tinged call to exclude Jews, to exclude Jewish nationalism from the purview of one’s friend circle, from your circle of sympathy.” He emphasized Harvard Hillel’s commitment to ensuring that Zionists have a place “among the political fabric of America, the social fabric of our communities, no less than anyone else,” adding that “any call to the contrary is a form of bigotry and discrimination.”

Rubenstein concluded his statement by saying he would ask the Crimson’s ethicist “what it’s like to write in the context of widespread discrimination against Jewish students” and how they address concerns about “contributing to a plausibility structure of discrimination, marginalization, demonization, and bigotry.”

The backlash centers on a recent edition of the paper’s “Amateur Ethicist” column, which responded to a self-described “Jewish and anti-Zionist” student questioning whether to end friendships with peers who support the Jewish right to self-determination in their ancestral homeland.

“I am still friends with a few Zionist students, but have become increasingly unsure about how to navigate my relationships with them,” the student wrote. “My friends are good people, I want to believe, but their Zionism taints my certainty of that especially after two years of Israel’s genocide in Gaza. Should I let go of my Zionist friends in the same way that many of them have already let go of me?”

Harvard junior Andrés Muedano, an opinion writer at the Crimson who authors the ethics column, concluded the answer was straightforward. “The answer is yes,” he wrote, affirming the student was “justified” in “letting go” of Zionist friends.

Muedano went further, exploring whether there might even be an obligation to sever such friendships. Citing Aristotle’s Nicomachean Ethics, he noted the philosopher’s position that “we do have an obligation to unfriend morally condemnable people” whose views might corrupt “our own moral ideas.”

Yet Muedano ultimately disagreed with Aristotle, arguing that “our moral and political beliefs can and should be strong enough to withstand disagreement, even within our closest relationships.”

The column also prompted Harvard’s campus Chabad to issue a similarly sharp reprimand. “Would the Crimson publish: ‘Should I let go of my Muslim friends?’ or, ‘Should I let go of my gay friends?’” the Jewish religious and cultural center asked on X.

They added, “If they would, read the published response to letting go of Zionist friends, and replace Zionism and Zionist with Islam and Muslim. Ask yourself if the ‘Amateur Ethicist’ would respond this way if it was about letting go of Muslim or gay friends.”
https://www.nysun.com/article/harvard-hillel-calls-crimsons-anti-zionist-advice-worse-than-genteel-antisemitism-of-past

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