'Zionists not welcome:' Jewish Santa Barbara students face harassment at Multicultural Center in US

A group of Jewish students entered the MCC where there were signs on the door warning "Zionists not allowed." The students were confronted by a mob of their peers, who shouted at them.

 Tessa Veksler infront of hateful sign in Santa Barbara University (photo credit: SCREENSHOT/INSTAGRAM/@tessaveksler)
Tessa Veksler infront of hateful sign in Santa Barbara University
(photo credit: SCREENSHOT/INSTAGRAM/@tessaveksler)

On Tuesday, Jewish students were harassed at the University of California Santa Barbara's Multicultural Center (MCC) when signs and messages targeting a Jewish student government president and other Jewish students were placed at the MCC, its social media accounts, and a student dorm room earlier that day and on Monday.

According to Santa Barbara Hillel, its staff members and a group of Jewish students entered the MCC where there were signs on the door warning "Zionists not allowed." The students were confronted by a mob of their peers, who shouted at them, said SB Hillel.

Antisemitic Signs

"Zionists not welcome," was found on Tuesday scrawled on the door of a dorm room door with an arrow pointing to a Mezuzah, a religious talisman traditionally placed on every door frame in a Jewish home.

"Can these anti-zionists make their antisemitism any more obvious?" SB Hillel wrote on Instagram. "When hate persists unchallenged, it spreads."

Most of the signs were placed outside and inside the MCC on Monday, many of them targeting Associated Student President Tessa Veksler. Veksler shared examples of the signs on her Instagram account on Tuesday.

"Attention: Tessa Veksler supports genocide! You cannot hide!" Read one sign that had the fourth-year student's name flanked by what may have been red devil horns or red triangles used in terrorist propaganda to indicate militant targeting. "You can run but you can't hide Tessa Veksler."

Other signs proclaimed that the "AS president is Racist Zionist," and "Get these Zionists out of office."

Tessa Veksler's response

Veksler said the messages were dehumanizing and rooted in antisemitism, and that she did "not feel safe on campus. How can Jewish students feel safe at UCSB when they see a Jewish leader being explicitly targeted?"

The student leader said that her parents had fled the Former Soviet Union because they were discriminated against because they were Jewish and that though they had come to the US to live without that hate, the same discrimination had emerged in her generation.

  (credit: FLICKR)
(credit: FLICKR)

Some of the signs, which according to Hillel were left up for over 24 hours, were addressed in general to other Zionist students. Veksler said that the majority of the Jewish community identified as Zionist, and the signs targeted and vilified them.

"When people are occupied resistance is justified," read one of the signs. Another read "It was never about Hamas, never will be."

University's lack of action

SB Hillel said that similar messages were also placed on MCC's now-deleted social media accounts, with one alleged remark asking "Why does our school support a regime to feast on the blood of our fellow humans." The Hillel said this invoked classic antisemitic blood libels.

Veksler said that the incidents were not an isolated event, but the result of the failure to address such rhetoric and actions in the university. She called on the university not to be silent and remain complicit in the intimidation of Jewish students.

 Santa Barbara California University campus (credit: FLICKR)
Santa Barbara California University campus (credit: FLICKR)

"There is no room for delay in addressing these issues," said Veksler. "We must act decisively and demand accountability to ensure the safety and wellbeing of all students."

The school's investigation

Chancellor Henry Yang and other school officers started on Monday reminding students of the anti-discrimination policy, and it was investigating the issue.

"We were distressed to learn of incidents over the weekend that included offensive social media messages and signage at the MultiCultural Center entrance," said Yang. "Campus offices are reviewing these unauthorized and unofficial messages. The signage has been removed and the campus is conducting a bias incident review based on potential discrimination related to protected categories that include religion, citizenship, and national or ethnic origin. The posting of such messages is a violation of our principles of community and inclusion."

 A person holds an antisemitic sign showing a Star of David in the trash at a demonstration against Israel, amid the ongoing conflict between Israel and Hamas, as part of a student walkout by students of New York University, in New York City, U.S., October 25, 2023. (credit: REUTERS/SHANNON STAPLETON)
A person holds an antisemitic sign showing a Star of David in the trash at a demonstration against Israel, amid the ongoing conflict between Israel and Hamas, as part of a student walkout by students of New York University, in New York City, U.S., October 25, 2023. (credit: REUTERS/SHANNON STAPLETON)

SB Hillel welcomed the statement and called on the university to ensure students were protected in all campus spaces, but Pro-Israel nonprofit StandWithUs issued a letter asking the administration to take action action the local chapter of  Students for Justice in Palestine. SWU claimed that the SJP president shouted “We don’t talk to Zionists,” when the Jewish students entered the MCC. SJP also shared images of the posters in and around the MCC on its social media accounts, with a caption that read "We will reclaim our space! Zionists and admin are not welcome in the MCC!"

Following Yang's statement, UCSB SJP and the local chapter of Jewish Voice for Peace issued joint statements acknowledging that "many students, especially Jewish students, Palestinian students, and students of color are feeling hurt and confused due to actions surrounding the MultiCultural center this week."

"While neither SJP nor JVP was involved with the planning or execution of these events and the many instances of inappropriate language were made by individuals and were not endorsed by either of our organizations, we know that as student organizers we must participate in the healing from harm caused," said the NGOs. "We have begun the process of accountability within our organizing spaces and will continue to work in the community to unlearn oppressive and discriminatory systems."