Skip to main content

February 9, 2023

Page 1

thelantern.com

@TheLantern

Thursday, Feb. 9, 2023 | The Lantern | 1

The student voice of the Ohio State University

This illustration is based on a photo taken for a story regarding antisemitic stickers found near and around campus in November 2022.

TOM HANKS John R. Oller Special Projects Editor hanks.53@osu.edu As Shayna Kling prepared to lead Friday night prayers with Ohio State University Hillel for Shabbat, she remembered a sense of excitement for the opportunity to share this special experience with her friends on Zoom. “I had two roommates, and I was like ‘Hey, you guys can watch me do my thing, and sing and lead services,’” Kling, then a second-year in psychology, said. “You always ask me lots of questions about Judaism, so join the call and see what

happens.” Hillel is a Jewish student center that is part of the larger Hillel International network. Shabbat is the day of rest and weekly observance of God’s completion of creation celebrated by the Jewish people and starts Friday night, according to the Jewish Community Federation and Endowment Fund. It was Oct. 16, 2020, and COVID-19 public health orders required religious services and other public gatherings to be moved online. The Zoom service started out like any

other, but halfway through, Kling said, it took a turn. “Someone got the link and started screaming,” Kling said. “I don’t really remember specifically, but just a lot of screaming, slurs, and [they] started typing in a box different things in all caps about Hitler –– and they also somehow took over the annotate tool on the Zoom and started drawing swastikas on the screen.” According to reports from the University Police Department on the incident obtained by The Lantern, the call originated off campus. Because of that, the report stated the university’s Office of the Chief

ABBY FRICKE | DESIGN EDITOR

Information Officer could not proceed with an investigation. No one was arrested or charged. “It just felt very invasive because this is supposed to be that safe space,” Kling said. “And it was just completely obliterated.” Though incidents like these — classified as hate crimes under federal reporting requirements — are rare, Ohio State stands out among Big Ten universities for how many occurred on campus. CONTINUES ON PAGE 2


Turn static files into dynamic content formats.

Create a flipbook
February 9, 2023 by The Lantern - Issuu