Jewish Professor Finds Out What It’s Like to be Called an Antisemite

Sven Longshanks
Daily Stormer
October 8, 2014

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Jewish Professor Cameron Johnston faced calls for his resignation after Jewish advocacy groups were told he was an Antisemite.

A Jewish Professor got a small dose of his own medicine a while back, when he was accused of being an Antisemite for giving an example of what Jews think is an unacceptable feeling for people to have.

A highly strung Jewish student heard him talking about Jews being sterilized and did not stop to think about the context, but instead rushed off to alert various Jewish groups that someone was trying to start a holocaust on campus.

A press release had gone out before the mistake was realized, but the loathsome Jewish student still refuses to believe that it was a Jew she was attacking.

The Star:

Cameron Johnston, who has been teaching at York for more than 30 years, has been forced to respond to allegations that he made anti-Semitic remarks in a lecture on Monday afternoon after a student misunderstood his comments and began sending emails to Jewish groups and the media.

Johnston was giving his introductory lecture to Social Sciences 1140: “Self, Culture and Society,” when he explained to the nearly 500 students that the course was going to focus on texts, not opinions, and despite what they may have heard elsewhere, everyone is not entitled to their opinion.

“All Jews should be sterilized” would be an example of an unacceptable and dangerous opinion, Johnston told the students.

He didn’t notice Sarah Grunfeld storm out. Grunfeld, a 22-year-old in her final year at York, understood Johnston’s example to be his personal opinion.

She contacted Oriyah Barzilay, the president of Hasbara at York — an Israel advocacy group on campus — who then sent a press release to media and other Jewish community groups calling for Johnston to be fired.

Blogs and Facebook groups picked it up, and in a few hours the allegations spread within the city’s Jewish community, albeit mostly online.

Sensitivities around anti-Semitism are particularly heightened at York, which has a large Jewish population and a history of toxic relations between supporters and critics of Israel on campus.

“I’m terribly upset,” Johnston said Tuesday. “I’m very proud of the fact that in the history of my teaching career I’ve stood for the best values of what constitutes a meaningful human community.”

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