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Nick Cohen

ByNick Cohen, Nick Cohen

Opinion

Find me an Oxford college that says it is a safe place for Jews

Jewish fathers may soon advise their kids to go to this rather than that college because it takes antisemitism seriously

December 7, 2023 14:15
93362119
3 min read

When I applied to Oxford University in 1979, my father was appalled. He was a socialist and believed that Oxford was a bastion of conservatism. If I had to ignore his better judgment and go to a hidebound institution that took most of its students from private schools, I must apply to one of five Oxford colleges that boasted they were safe spaces for working- and middle-class students.

Hertford, St Peter’s, Brasenose, Keble and St Catherine’s colleges advertised that they, unlike the rest of the university, were not filled with the children of the upper class. Rather than look for Etonians, they “welcomed” state-school pupils.

In these colleges, students would not be on the receiving end of the sneering snobbery of the English class system. But altruism did not motivate them. As 93 per cent of pupils went to state schools, they could have the pick of the brightest. It was the smart business move. Today, that world has gone. In 2022, the proportion of places offered to state-school students was 68 per cent at Oxford and 72.5 per cent at Cambridge.

But other prejudices have replaced the class prejudices of the 20th century. Now may be the time for a handful of colleges and universities to advertise the fact that, while others might indulge antisemitism, they at least welcome Jewish students. Once again it would be a smart move. The 2021 census showed that 65 per cent of Jews aged 25 to 49 achieved higher educational qualifications, a performance beaten only by British Hindus. Corner the Jewish market and your institute’s ratings would soar.

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