Monday, June 29, 2015

New York School District Will Pay $4.48 Million To Settle Anti-Semitism Lawsuit

The Pine Bush School District settled a 2012 lawsuit brought by Jewish students who alleged that school officials did not protect them from years of anti-Semitic discrimination.

Pine Bush Central School District in upstate New York settled an anti-semitism lawsuit on Monday brought by five former and current Jewish students, according to a statement. They will pay the students $4.48 million, The New York Times reported.

The March 2012lawsuit alleged that the five students suffered years of anti-Semitic discrimination and harassment from elementary to high school, including racial slurs, graffiti and drawings of swastikas, Holocaust jokes and physical attacks including being beaten by a hockey stick.

School officials did not do enough to protect them and violated their right to equal access to education, the lawsuit said. The three schools named in the lawsuit were Pine Bush Elementary School, Crispell Middle School and Pine Bush High School.

In a statement, the Pine Bush Central School District said they reached a resolution based on a comprehensive plan to address anti-Semitic harassment allegations and strengthen its tolerance and anti-bullying initiatives.

"Anti-Semitic harassment is wrong. The District will never condone anti-Semitic slurs or graffiti, Holocaust jokes,' or physical violence. No family should have to experience the hurt and pain that bullying and name-calling can cause children to endure because of their religious, national or cultural identity," the statement said.

More than 5,500 students are enrolled in the Pine Bush Central School District. The area served as the headquarters of the Independent Northern Klans — a Ku Klux Klan group — in the 1970s. Janice Schoonmaker, a KKK member and the wife of the" Grand Dragon" of the Klan, served on the Pine Bush School Board at the time.

According to the lawsuit, the students were subjected to anti-Semitic slurs from other students including, "dirty, disgusting Jew," "stupid Jew," "Christ killer," "Jesus hater," "Kike," "Ashes," and "Crispy"— the latter two slurs being references to burning Jews during the Holocaust.

The students were also subjected to "rampant" anti-Semitic graffiti and images on the school property, the lawsuit said. Swastikas allegedly drawn and engraved on books, bathroom walls, desks, and playground equipment, at times with the names of the Jewish students written in it, remained for weeks, despite students' complaints to authorities.

Other students used pipe cleaners to make effigies of Hasidic Jews at which they threw pennies, performed "Hitler salutes" and made Holocaust jokes such as: "What is the difference between a Jew and a pizza? One doesn't scream as it gets put in the oven," the plaintiffs alleged.

The suit also said there were physical attacks against the students. A swastika was drawn on the face of one Jewish student's face when she was in the sixth-grade and another student was hit in the hand with a hockey stick during a game, according to the lawsuit.

One plaintiff alleged he was repeatedly slapped in the head on the school bus after students asked him if he was a Jew, and another had to fend off students who were trying to shove coins into her mouth.

During a seventh grade English class about the Holocaust, a student allegedly told one of the plaintiffs that she should be burned. She also overheard a student telling another that they should "
"stab [her] with a menorah and sink her with a cross."


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