Washington Square News | April 29 2019

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4 CULTURE

9 OPINION

From Georgia With Love and a Camera

Allowing for Ronell’s Return Creates Culture of Contradiction

7 ARTS

10 SPORTS

Grey Art Gallery Pays Tribute to the Art That Came From Stonewall

In Appreciation of the NBA’s Middle Class

VOLUME LII | ISSUE 13

MONDAY, APRIL 29, 2019

Student Allegations of Anti-Semitism at NYU Gain National Attention By VICTOR PORCELLI and MEGHNA MAHARISHI News Editors

VIA YOUTUBE

A fight broke out in Washington Square Park during a rave for Israel’s Independence Day in April 2018. Supporters of Israel clashed with pro-Palestine protestors.

A complaint filed against NYU to the Department of Education alleging that the university has enabled anti-Semitism on campus has received national attention after articles appeared in publications such as The New York Post and Newsweek. The former president of the Zionist student group NYU Realize Israel, Adela Cojab, filed the compaint on Monday. The Gallatin senior alleges that student activist groups have alienated and harassed students who support Israel. If the Department of Education finds the allegations to be true, NYU would have the opportunity to resolve the complaint by creating a set of remedial steps to address anti-Semitism on campus. Otherwise, the university could risk losing federal funding. “The master of campus strife clearly is the [Students for Justice in Palestine]; indeed, the SJP takes pride in fomenting this environment,” the complaint read. Multiple requests for comment were

made to SJP as an organization, as well as to individual members of the organization. Individual members declined to comment and SJP did not respond to requests for comment by the time of publication. The complaint goes on to say that SJP is a “terror-affiliated anti-Semitic network” and cites instances at NYU that Cojab sees as examples of anti-Semitism and led her to conclude that the club is a hate group. In April 2018, NYU Realize Israel and TorchPAC hosted a rave in the park for Israel’s Independence Day. Thirty-two Palestinians were killed by Israeli soldiers in the weeks leading up to the rave while protesting in the Gaza Strip. SJP held a rally as a protest against the rave. There, members of Jewish Voice for Peace and SJP burned an Israeli flag, and a protestor grabbed the microphone from a student singing the Israeli national anthem. Another protestor grabbed an Israeli flag from a student. That protestor, as well as one involved in the burning of the Israeli flag, were arrested by the NYPD. CONTINUED ON PAGE 3

Current Wellness Resources Fall Short of Expectations By MANSEE KHURANA Deputy News Editor *Some of those who spoke to WSN asked to only be identified by their first name for privacy reasons.

Jaelynn Ortiz’s first semester at her dream school did not always feel like a dream. Feelings of depression that the CAS firstyear had previously sought counseling for had resurfaced. She decided to seek help through NYU’s Counseling and Wellness Services due to her inability to afford outside therapy. A survivor of sexual assault, Ortiz sought advice from a professional hoping to learn coping strategies to deal with her depression. Her first appointment was a month af-

ter she spoke to a counselor over the phone. Throughout the session, Ortiz says her counselor gave her own opinion on Ortiz’s situation but did not offer strategies to help. Uncomfortable, Ortiz said she canceled her second appointment and has not been back to the center since. Now, instead of speaking to a counselor, she talks to her academic advisor when seeking advice. “I was looking for someone to listen [to me] and provide me with feedback with what I should be doing,” Ortiz said. “In the end of my meeting, my therapist made me feel like I didn’t have any problems.” With 54 counselors on the New York City campus and less than 3% of NYU’s $3.378 billion endowment distributed among 12 departments in Student Affairs — which

also includes Athletics and Residential Life and Housing Services — NYU’s Counseling and Wellness Services has fallen short for 14 students who spoke to WSN about their experiences. Students said that they often experienced three-week to month-long wait times for their first appointments, and sometimes in between appointments, too. Many said the wait times were discouraging, with some giving up on using NYU’s services because of them. Others withstood the wait, but found that when they gained access to counselors, they experienced unprofessional attitudes — such as grinning while asking about suicidal tendencies, advising students to “go smoke” as a solution to their problems or providing no solutions at all.

Presenting the Youngest Director in Tribeca Film Festival History

CONTINUED ON PAGE 2

READ MORE ON PAGE 6

VIA SUSAN NORGET FILM PROMOTION


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