University of Pennsylvania Faces Growing Resistance to Compulsory "Registry" of Jewish Students and Faculty
A group of five organizations affiliated with the University of Pennsylvania have filed a motion to intervene in a federal lawsuit that seeks to force Penn to provide lists of its Jewish students, faculty, and staff. The Equal Employment Opportunity Commission (EEOC) has been pressuring the university for months to hand over this information as part of an investigation into antisemitism on campus.
The EEOC initially requested a list of Jewish clubs, rosters of their members, employees in the Jewish Studies program, and personal contact information. When Penn refused to comply, the commission sued the university in November, seeking to compel them to furnish the information. However, the university's resistance has sparked opposition from various groups, including civil rights lawyers.
The ACLU of Pennsylvania, along with other organizations, has filed a motion on behalf of the five groups involved. They include two Jewish organizations, the American Academy of Jewish Research and the Jewish Law Students Association of the University of Pennsylvania Carey Law School, as well as the Penn Association of Senior and Emeritus Faculty, the American Association of University Professors (AAUP), and its Penn chapter.
"This is not about what the stated intent is," said Witold Walczak, legal director of the ACLU of Pennsylvania. "The moment our government begins compiling lists of people based on their religion or ethnicity โ especially when those groups have historically faced persecution and worse โ we cross a dangerous line."
According to Walczak, these types of registries don't remain benign; they create a tool for discrimination that can be easily weaponized by malicious actors. The EEOC argues it needs this information to contact people who may have experienced antisemitism at Penn.
The controversy surrounding the university's response to antisemitism on campus has been ongoing since 2023, with former President Liz Magill resigning after providing congressional testimony on the school's response to the issue. If the Penn groups' motion is granted, they will join the university in the EEOC lawsuit, potentially blocking the creation of a "centralized registry" of Jewish students and faculty at UPenn.
A group of five organizations affiliated with the University of Pennsylvania have filed a motion to intervene in a federal lawsuit that seeks to force Penn to provide lists of its Jewish students, faculty, and staff. The Equal Employment Opportunity Commission (EEOC) has been pressuring the university for months to hand over this information as part of an investigation into antisemitism on campus.
The EEOC initially requested a list of Jewish clubs, rosters of their members, employees in the Jewish Studies program, and personal contact information. When Penn refused to comply, the commission sued the university in November, seeking to compel them to furnish the information. However, the university's resistance has sparked opposition from various groups, including civil rights lawyers.
The ACLU of Pennsylvania, along with other organizations, has filed a motion on behalf of the five groups involved. They include two Jewish organizations, the American Academy of Jewish Research and the Jewish Law Students Association of the University of Pennsylvania Carey Law School, as well as the Penn Association of Senior and Emeritus Faculty, the American Association of University Professors (AAUP), and its Penn chapter.
"This is not about what the stated intent is," said Witold Walczak, legal director of the ACLU of Pennsylvania. "The moment our government begins compiling lists of people based on their religion or ethnicity โ especially when those groups have historically faced persecution and worse โ we cross a dangerous line."
According to Walczak, these types of registries don't remain benign; they create a tool for discrimination that can be easily weaponized by malicious actors. The EEOC argues it needs this information to contact people who may have experienced antisemitism at Penn.
The controversy surrounding the university's response to antisemitism on campus has been ongoing since 2023, with former President Liz Magill resigning after providing congressional testimony on the school's response to the issue. If the Penn groups' motion is granted, they will join the university in the EEOC lawsuit, potentially blocking the creation of a "centralized registry" of Jewish students and faculty at UPenn.