Jewish students are changing their patterns in where they apply, based on the insanity of the anti-Israel left.
Algemeiner reports:
How Jewish Students Are Re-Drawing the College Map and Migrating to the South (PART ONE)As campuses across the country reopen this Fall, the familiar rhythms of college life are returning. Freshmen are moving into dorms, quads are buzzing with activity, and families are sending their children off with hope and excitement.This season of beginnings also coincides with the Jewish High Holy Days: a time of reflection, renewal, and community. For many Jewish families, the symbolism feels especially poignant this year.Yet, beneath the surface of move-in day photos and holiday gatherings, something fundamental has shifted. This Fall marks a turning point. Jewish students are making different choices about where to study, and those choices are reshaping the very map of Jewish campus life.For generations, ambitious Jewish families knew the path forward: aim for Harvard, Columbia, Penn, Yale — the elite colleges and universities of the Northeast and Mid-Atlantic. These schools were not just prestigious academic institutions. They were symbols of Jewish ascent in America, places where a community once shut out by quotas had built vibrant campus lives and become vital to the intellectual and cultural fabric of higher education.That roadmap is now breaking down. Across Jewish day schools, synagogue youth groups, and Jewish and Zionist family dinner tables, a profound debate is unfolding. Parents and students are asking a new question: Should you still chase the Ivy League dream, hoping to carve out a space for Jewish identity on campuses increasingly hostile to open expression and Israel?Or should you go where you can thrive, to universities that welcome you as a student and as a Jew, where you can build community and simply live without fear or exhaustion?
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