For the past 30 days, this feed has been a living gallery of the Jewish American experience. We’ve looked at so many stories of vibrant, brilliant, and unyielding Jewish joy.
But as May comes to a close, we have to look honestly at the landscape around us. According to recent national data from the ADL and Hillel International, while we have seen a push for greater institutional accountability on college campuses, harassment, vandalism, and physical assaults remain at staggering, historically high levels compared to just a few years ago.
Our campus is feeling that tension. It can feel exhausting to walk through spaces where your identity is hyper-scrutinized, debated, or targeted.
But Jewish heritage is not a story of victimhood. It is a story of vibrant resilience.
True solidarity means celebrating our culture while actively protecting our community. To our peers, faculty, and neighbors on campus who have asked how to support us during this tense time: allyship is an active, daily choice.
3 Ways to Be an Ally on Right Now
1) Do Not Force Jewish Individuals to Be Political Monoliths: Build Nuance.
Recognize the vast diversity within the Jewish community. Jewish students and faculty hold an incredibly wide range of perspectives, beliefs, and relationships to global events. Avoid demanding that your Jewish peers answer for, explain, or defend complex geopolitical issues just to justify their presence on campus.
2) Call Out Everyday Hate Speech: Interrupt the Bias.
Don't wait for a major crisis to speak up. When you hear a casual stereotype, a harmful conspiracy theory masked as a "joke," or see exclusionary language in student groups, interrupt it. True allyship means carrying some of the weight so that Jewish students aren't always forced to be the only ones defending their own humanity.
3) Show Up for Our Joy, Not Just Our Trauma: Celebrate Inclusion.
Don't only text your Jewish friends when a hate crime makes the news. Countering hate requires building genuine, proactive cultural bridges. Show up to cultural events, learn about Jewish history outside of the Holocaust, support Jewish creators, and celebrate the rich traditions that make this community thrive.
Tikkun Olam (Healing the World): A core tenet of Jewish tradition teaches that we are not obligated to complete the work of perfecting the world, but neither are we free to abandon it.
Thank you for spending this month learning, listening, and celebrating with us. Jewish American heritage didn’t start on May 1st, and it doesn't end today. Let's work together to make our campus a place where Jewish students don't just survive, but openly and joyfully thrive.