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It’s been nearly five months since officials at the University of Windsor signed what many observers describe as the most far-reaching agreement by any post-secondary school in Canada to meet the demands of pro-Palestinian students who erected protest encampments in the spring. In return, the Windsor student council and the so-called Liberation Zone protesters agreed in July to dismantle their encampment peacefully, with no academic penalties. But the terms of the deal outraged Jewish leaders in the city and across the country: they felt it went too far, rewarded illegal activities, and ignored the trauma felt by the small group of Jewish students who attend Windsor and have long complained they have been the targets of campus antisemitism after Oct. 7. While local Jewish leaders are still working on a legal challenge against the university, and some major Jewish alumni have cancelled their philanthropic donations in protest, the university has recently taken some steps to address the concerns of Jewish students: a campus Jewish advisor has just been hired, (along with someone who will advise Palestinian students). Two links about antisemitism have been uploaded to the school’s new anti-oppression website. And the Jewish students club has just been invited to join a campus Parade of Nations event next semester. So has the situation on campus iactually mproved at all for Jewish students? The CJN Daily’s host Ellin Bessner traveled to Windsor recently to speak at a Jewish community event. On today’s episode, she interviews Justin Hébert, head of the Jewish Students Association at the Windsor law school, Stephen Cheifetz, president of Windsor’s Jewish Federation, and Marion Zeller, the federation’s new CEO.
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