<p>Interesting. I’m on campus and I didn’t even hear of this, even from my friends involved in the Jewish Association… I wish I did…</p>
<p>I’m paid to do historical research for the town and College, and it’s odd to me that challenges Jews faced at Williams are simply generalized here as minority struggle. Black students at Williams have a very different history with regard to minority status; even more different (and nonintuitive) would be the minority status of Catholics, to name only two examples. These stories are always about changes in an endlessly complicated web of power relationships between national fraternities, the College admissions, trustees of the College, student culture, etc. Unfortunately, if one were to interpret the relative success of Jewish students who identify with their minority status in changing the norms of a historically (de facto) Congregationalist college to gain social acceptance as success for minorities in general, one would be making a syllogistic fallacy. But at least we can say that Williams today is clearly not the anti-Semitic place it was in the days of the Gentleman’s Williams, thank God.</p>
<p>Also it’s just funny to me to think about giving a minority status label to a group of people who (let’s get real here) are a smaller population at Williams than they would be otherwise because of affirmative action policies in the admission of racial minorities. Anyway, with my babble aside, I’m certainly looking forward to reading this book!</p>