as a medical student, as a resident and, now, as a full-fledged physician, i’m privy to participate in those (admission) processes. in an environment that now feels saturated with anti-israeli sentiment, there is a high chance that somebody would flag you, or just give you a lower rate.
you’re losing your chance at a fair shot if you mention israel.
in your essay, you described how anti-israel sentiment grew on campus. when did it begin to accelerate?
in 2018, the graduate student union at u of t said we are not supporting kosher food for learners, because we don’t support israel. and then i was exposed to the whole “israel apartheid week” and i realized how prevalent anti-israeli and anti-jewish hate is at the university of toronto.
i had colleagues that asked me, “who is paying for this?” meaning my schooling, as if i come from a rich family, which is a stereotype for jews. or “who do you know?” as if it’s all about nepotism.
when covid sent us all to the virtual realm in 2020, i began to see all kinds of caricatures against jews. i saw faculty members, people in power, people that i’m supposed to rely on, post horrible things against jews, against israelis. in 2021, things really exploded. at meetings of student unions, i said i don’t feel safe on my campus. other people said i was crying wolf, a common stereotype about jews.
the faculty created a senior advisor on antisemitism for the u of t’s temerty faculty of medicine, dr. ayelet kuper (in a damming report released in 2022, kuper wrote that “
there are those who do not only cross over the line to anti-jewish hatred but who do so proudly.”)
what i saw was nothing (compared to kuper’s experiences), but her report validated how i was feeling. but it really worried me more about my future.