October 7 changed both Israel and American Judaism forever. Since that date, Jewish communities have been asked to reconsider the place of Judaism in the public sphere; the role of Israel in American politics; the future of Judaism in this country; and fundamental questions about Zionism, liberalism, and Jewish identity. This lecture series will bring diverse perspectives to reflect on these topics, helping us make sense of these unprecedented times in which American Jews are living.

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Harvard historian Derek Penslar, the William Lee Frost Professor of Jewish History and Director of the Center for Jewish Studies, will deliver a lecture exploring how the promise of belonging in America’s universities has given way to a new sense of alienation—and what that shift reveals about Jewish life in America today.

For many American Jews, this has become a time of deep vulnerability—unlike any experienced since the Second World War; traumatized by the Hamas-led attack on Israel on October 7, 2023, and by the spike in antisemitic incidents worldwide that have paralleled the last two years of war in Gaza. Colleges have been of particular concern to Jewish students, parents, and alumni who feel that pro-Palestinian students and faculty have had free rein to shut down other points of view, disrupt campus life, and shame or shun Jewish students who refuse to disavow Israel.

The fraught emotional state of American Jews today is a product of previous generations of Jewish integration and acceptance within American society. From the 1960s until the recent past, universities like Harvard welcomed Jews, but demographic and cultural changes have altered the composition of elite university student bodies and students’ views on Israel and the Israeli-Palestinian conflict. Campus politics over the past two years illuminate American Jewish expectations, frustrations, and fears today.

Penslar has previously taught at Indiana University, the University of Toronto, and the University of Oxford, where he was the inaugural holder of the Stanley Lewis Chair in Modern Israel Studies. Derek has published a dozen books, most recently Zionism: An Emotional State (2023), and is currently writing The War for Palestine, 1947-1949: A Global History. Penslar is a past president of the American Academy for Jewish Research, a fellow of the Royal Society of Canada, and an Honorary Fellow of St. Anne’s College, Oxford.
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Harvard historian Derek Penslar, the William Lee Frost Professor of Jewish History and Director of the Center for Jewish Studies, will deliver a lecture exploring how the promise of belonging in America’s universities has given way to a new sense of alienation—and what that shift reveals about Jewish life in America today.

For many American Jews, this has become a time of deep vulnerability—unlike any experienced since the Second World War; traumatized by the Hamas-led attack on Israel on October 7, 2023, and by the spike in antisemitic incidents worldwide that have paralleled the last two years of war in Gaza. Colleges have been of particular concern to Jewish students, parents, and alumni who feel that pro-Palestinian students and faculty have had free rein to shut down other points of view, disrupt campus life, and shame or shun Jewish students who refuse to disavow Israel.

The fraught emotional state of American Jews today is a product of previous generations of Jewish integration and acceptance within American society. From the 1960s until the recent past, universities like Harvard welcomed Jews, but demographic and cultural changes have altered the composition of elite university student bodies and students’ views on Israel and the Israeli-Palestinian conflict. Campus politics over the past two years illuminate American Jewish expectations, frustrations, and fears today.

Penslar has previously taught at Indiana University, the University of Toronto, and the University of Oxford, where he was the inaugural holder of the Stanley Lewis Chair in Modern Israel Studies. Derek has published a dozen books, most recently Zionism: An Emotional State (2023), and is currently writing The War for Palestine, 1947-1949: A Global History. Penslar is a past president of the American Academy for Jewish Research, a fellow of the Royal Society of Canada, and an Honorary Fellow of St. Anne’s College, Oxford.


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Acceptance and Betrayal: Jews, Universities, and the Promise of America

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