The Trump administration on Thursday launched a civil rights probe into New York City’s public schools over claims that pro-Palestinian teachers discriminated against Jewish students.
In a news release, the U.S. Department of Education’s Office for Civil Rights (OCR) said it received reports about a coalition of teachers known as “NYC Educators for Palestine” organizing seminars focused on “Palestine, Zionism, and Resistance.”
“No child should be taught by his or her teachers to hate their peers,” Assistant Secretary for Civil Rights Kimberly Richey said in a statement. “Neither should Jewish children be taught that being Jewish somehow makes them inherently guilty or proponents of hate and violence.”
“The Trump administration will not turn a blind eye to antisemitic harassment. OCR will investigate these appalling allegations to ensure the equal treatment of all students.”
Dominique Ellison, a spokeswoman for the city’s public schools, acknowledged receipt of the notice and said the educational system was reviewing the allegations. She added that NYC Educators for Palestine is “not connected to New York City Public Schools.”
While the exact seminars federal officials were referring to were not immediately clear, NYC Educators for Palestine’s Instagram in January advertised a free “Palestine Teach-In” for children ages 6 to 18 on this past Martin Luther King Jr. Day.
The Trump administration said NYC Educators for Palestine allegedly taught the kids about “‘contemporary and historical Palestinian resistance,’ that Zionists are ‘genocidal white supremacists,’ and to support the federally designated terrorist organization Hamas.”
Federal officials provided no evidence of support for Hamas in the press release. The Daily News has requested more information.
During a protest Thursday urging Mayor Mamdani to veto a “buffer zone” bill that would limit protests near schools, teachers rejected the idea that the the probe is about antisemitism.
“We are apparently being investigated by the federal government for standing up against genocide,” Martina Meijer, a fourth grade teacher at a Brooklyn school, said at the demonstration outside the public school headquarters in Lower Manhattan.
“We’re not going to be quiet,” she added. “It is our job as an educator.”
The city’s public schools were roiled by tensions in the aftermath of Hamas’ Oct. 7 attack on Israel and during Israel’s military campaign in Gaza.
During a tense congressional hearing at the time, the former schools chancellor, David Banks, reported 281 incidents of religious bias during the 2023-24 school year, with 42% related to antisemitism and 30% to Islamophobia.
City schools have responded with an anti-hate hotline, expanding training for school system employees, and rolling out educational resources on the history of both religious communities.
