The New School University’s student government voted on Friday to suspend funding and collaboration with the New York City academic institution’s Hillel branch, though TNS said on Saturday that the student government lacked the authority to make such decisions.
TNS University Student Senate (USS) voted to designate TNS Hillel as “not in good standing” over Hillel International’s Israel trips, which USS’s Registered Student Organization (RSO) Compliance Committee claimed provide material support to supposed Israeli government international law violations and war crimes.
Hillel TNS could return to “good standing” if it renounced its status as a chapter of Hillel and ended participation in several Israel student trips, according to the USS.
“Until today, Hillel at The New School was eligible to receive funding from the USS, drawn through your compulsory Senate fees. To continue to fund Hillel at The New School would mean that your student fees would be used to support violations of international law,” USS said on Instagram on Friday. “With this action, we are refusing to violate our University’s established principles.”
The USS said it was responding to calls from NYC Mayor Zohran Mamdani to ensure the city “stands up for international law.”
The University said in a statement on Saturday that the USS does not have the authority to determine “the recognition, funding eligibility, or official status of registered student organizations.”
The authority for these actions was held by the university administration, TNS said, and the administration was taking action to address the USS’s decision and ensure the student government “acts within its actual purview, now and going forward.”
“Our Hillel chapter remains, as it always has been, in good standing, eligible for funding, and supporting Jewish life at The New School,” said TNS. “The New School was founded on a rejection of violence, hate, and discrimination toward any individual or group, and a commitment to understanding, learning, and open dialogue. Those values apply to every member of our community, without exception.”
Leader Family Hillel at Baruch College executive director Ilya Bratman, whose Hillel network oversees the TNS branch, told The Jerusalem Post that the organization was in contact with the university and the USS decision would not be accepted.
“This is a preposterous attempt to erase Jewish Life on campus and a blatant attempt to exclude and intimidate the Jewish community at the New School!” Bratman said on Saturday. “We will fight this injustice and absurdity with every tool at our disposal.”
The RSO Compliance Committee report claimed that TNS Hillel was providing material support to the IDF and participated in violations of international law by operating in the disputed territories by backing and promoting several Israeli student trips.
The Hillel on Base program allowed participants to visit and volunteer on an IDF base, which the committee said provided morale and logistical support to soldiers.
Onward Israel, an internship program affiliated with Birthright, was condemned for allowing participants to visit IDF bases and partner with Sar El. Birthright Israel, in addition to the Onward program, was castigated for activities in the Golan Heights and West Bank, which ostensibly constituted support for “illegal occupation.”
Pro-Palestinian orgs. welcome Hillel’s suspension
CAIR New York welcomed the suspension of Hillel TNS on Saturday, calling it a “step toward accountability and adherence to international human rights principles.”
“Student organizations should be spaces that foster inclusion, critical dialogue, and respect for human dignity, not platforms that legitimize or support genocide,” said CAIR-NY Executive Director Afaf Nasher.
Jewish Voice For Peace said on Facebook on Saturday that the decision was the first of its kind and hoped that the resolution would inspire “similar efforts to hold Hillel accountable across the nation.”
NYC city council member Eric Dinowitz said on X/Twitter that TNS should not allow the student senate “to be weaponized to target their Jewish population.”
Congressman Ritchie Torres said on LinkedIn on Saturday that while the administration opposed the vote, the action against Hillel was “an ominous sign of the times we live in.”
“Discrimination against Jewish individuals and institutions is becoming increasingly normalized. Even more alarming than the discrimination itself is the lack of outrage it provokes—and the disturbing degree of social acceptability it has acquired in the aftermath of October 7,” said Torres. “Pressuring pro-Israel Jews to renounce their Jewish identity is not only degrading to Jews. It is degrading to America itself.”



