Antisemitism Surges in America’s Public Schools, Requiring Action by Trump — and by Voters This November

The Brandeis Center warns that at New York City, antisemitic graffiti, bullying, anti-Jewish slurs, and pro-Hamas propaganda are tolerated in public schools.

Spencer Platt/Getty Images
Assemblyman Zohran Mamdani, who won the Democratic primary for mayor of New York City, attends an endorsement event from the union DC 37 on July 15, 2025. Spencer Platt/Getty Images

“From the river to the sea” — shorthand for the obliteration of Israel. It’s a phrase meant to terrorize.

Here in America, from the Hudson River to the Pacific, antisemitism is surging in public schools. 

The Trump administration, which is cracking down on the abuse of Jewish students on college campuses, needs to also turn attention to the public schools. And people of all faiths need to object. Jews shouldn’t have to fight this battle alone.

At New York City, antisemitic graffiti, bullying, anti-Jewish slurs, and pro-Hamas propaganda are tolerated in public schools, according to the Brandeis Center, a human rights organization.

At Baltimore, Jewish students “have had to isolate themselves, drop classes, eat lunch alone, and hide their Jewish identities to avoid harassment,” including from one teacher who repeatedly threatened to go “all Nazi,” according to a civil rights complaint submitted to the federal Department of Education on July 22.

A California state assembly member, Rebecca Bauer-Kahan, said through tears that “students are being taught to hate my children … because they’re Jewish.”

Most troubling, rank-and-file public school teachers across the nation are on board with antisemitism. Last month, members of the nation’s largest teachers union, the National Education Association, voted to redefine the Holocaust, erasing any mention of the extermination of 6 million Jews. 

The woke definition, included in the NEA handbook, recognizes “the more than 12 million victims” from “different faiths, ethnicities, races, political beliefs, genders, and gender identification, abilities/disabilities, and other targeted characteristics.” This is a hateful falsehood.

NEA members also voted to educate the public about the Nakba: the “forced, violent displacement and dispossession of at least 750,000 Palestinians from their homeland in 1948 during the establishment of the state of Israel,” as the union puts it.

The handbook has since been removed from the NEA website in response to criticism from Jewish groups. Yet this is what a majority of NEA members — teachers in public schools — voted for.

A generation of college students indoctrinated in antisemitism has brought the same hate to the public schools where they teach.

You can also thank the teachers unions.

At New York City, the powerful United Federation of Teachers endorsed Assemblyman Zohran Mamdani on July 8, citing his willingness to cede mayoral control of the schools “to give more say to educators and parents.” Cross out “parents.” It will be a union takeover. Period.

New York State United Teachers, the statewide parent union for the UFT, already has a tight grip on school boards across the state, fielding candidates for most boards and winning 91 percent of the time.

New York State United Teachers is intent on making schools left-wing propaganda machines, the religious teachings of parents be damned.

On June 26, the United States Supreme Court ruled that parents have a right to opt their elementary school-aged children out of instruction that violates their religious teachings. 

The case involved LGBTQ+ themes that Muslim, Catholic, and Ukrainian Orthodox parents didn’t want taught to their children. But the significance of the ruling goes beyond LGBTQ+.

If Jewish parents at New York object to their children hearing a woke rewriting of the Holocaust or a view of Palestine that vilifies Jews, will they be able to opt their children out?

No. They’ll be in for a fight, according to New York State United Teachers. On July 28, the union issued a response to the court, saying it applied “to a single school district” and that “educators and school leaders are best positioned to select materials.” Parents with religious scruples can take a hike.

Mr. Mamdani has expressed almost no interest in education policy, aside from attacking specialized high schools, even though more money is consumed by the Department of Education than any other city agency.

Indifferent to what education means to parents striving for their children’s futures, Mr. Mamdani has cynically suggested that a scandal-scarred former congressman, Jamaal Bowman, a fire alarm enthusiast and Israel-hater, be considered to lead Gotham’s public school system, the largest in America, as New York City’s schools chancellor.

Even members of his own party are unimpressed. New York state’s Democratic Committee chairman, Jay Jacobs, commented in March that Mr. Bowman should promote “the economic interests of working-class Americans instead of continuing his antisemitic, pro-terrorist advocacy.”

Don’t count on Messrs. Bowman or Mamdani to heed that advice. 

It’s time for New Yorkers, and Americans everywhere, to oppose the Jew-hating in our public schools. First the Jews are targeted, then Catholics, and before long, America isn’t America anymore.

Creators.com


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