Carnegie Mellon University Accused of Tolerating Discrimination, Antisemitism, and Harassment
Carnegie Mellon University Accused of Tolerating Discrimination, Antisemitism, and Harassment
A recently-filed lawsuit accuses Carnegie Mellon University and its administrators of turning a blind eye to antisemitism, and—in some cases—actively enabling discrimination against Jewish students.According to CBS News, the lawsuit was filed on behalf of Yael Canaan, a student who attended the Pittsburgh-based university’s School of Architecture between 2018 and 2023. It accuses Carnegie Mellon of creating a hostile environment by tolerating harassment and bigotry, citing several examples of seemingly discriminatory actions.One example cited in the lawsuit asserts that, when Canaan asked for a homework extension to attend an on-campus memorial for Tree of Life synagogue shooting victims in 2018, her request was denied without explanation.The attack—which took place a five-minute drive from Carnegie Mellon campus—left 11 people dead and another six injured, excluding the perpetrator. Law enforcement quickly identified antisemitic hate as a motivating factor.Canaan has since said that professors’ consistent refusals to accommodate her religious beliefs resulted in physical symptoms, “requiring doctor’s visits, debilitating and nausea-inducing migraines, depression, isolationism, and anxiety, and treatment, including medications.”In contrast to similar discrimination lawsuits now being filed against other large universities, Canaan’s complaint makes an unusual and potentially contentious allegation: that Carnegie Mellon’s purportedly discriminatory misconduct could be related to “outsized” donations it has received from Qatar, which amount to nearly $600 million.“Yael deserves to have her civil rights protected. The school needs to be held accountable for not just tolerating and allowing a discriminatory environment, but for the retaliation she received after the fact,” Lawfare Project executive director Brooke Goldstein told FOX News. “We want to create real systemic change within this university system.”Expanding in this alleged retaliation, the lawsuit indicates that Mary-Lou Arscott--associate head for design fundamentals at the Carnegie Mellon School of Architecture--repeatedly harassed Canaan, making overtly discriminatory remarks and sending her violently antisemitic materials.In one incident, Canaan says that she created a project exploring the conversion of public space into private space, for which she integrated elements of an eruv.An eruv, a small boundary typically made of fishing wire, symbolically extends the boundaries of some Jewish households into public areas. By creating an extension of the home within the broader community, the eruv facilitates engagement in activities that would otherwise be forbidden in public on the Sabbath. The eruv is a common sight in many predominately Orthodox Jewish neighborhoods, both in the United States and in Israel.However, Arscott apparently took Canaan's use of Jewish motifs as an opportunity to make politically-charged and potentially antisemitic comments about Israeli policy.“In response to questioning, Canaan began explaining the concept of an eruv to Arscott, but Arscott cut her off,” the lawsuit claims. “Arscott said—completely out of the blue—that the wall in the model looked like the wall Israelis use to barricade Palestinians out of Israel.”
A gavel. Image via Wikimedia Commons via Flickr/user: Brian Turner. (CCA-BY-2.0).
Sources
Carnegie Mellon accused of 'cruel campaign of antisemitism,' accepting millions from Qatar: lawsuitCarnegie Mellon graduate alleges 'cruel campaign of antisemitic abuse'Lawsuit accuses Carnegie Mellon University of antisemitism and discrimination
About Ryan J. Farrick
Ryan Farrick is a freelance writer and small business advertising consultant based out of mid-Michigan. Passionate about international politics and world affairs, he’s an avid traveler with a keen interest in the connections between South Asia and the United States. Ryan studied neuroscience and has spent the last several years working as an operations manager in transportation logistics.