Despite the denial by a Cambridge University college that a recent attack on three Jewish students was antisemitic, one of the victims of the assault toldThe Algemeiner that the school is “setting a dangerous precedent” by whitewashing the assailants’ motivation.

Christ College student Shlomo Roitner-Jesner — one of three kippah-wearing students verbally and physically assaulted by members of a Cambridge drinking society — said he found it “positively shocking” that the head of the school, Professor Jane Stapleton, “categorically rejected the antisemitic nature” of the incident in a recent email she sent out to the campus community.

Responding to media reports of a cover-up, Stapleton wrote that the college has “no corroborating evidence” that any students involved had exhibited antisemitic behavior, adding, “I personally condemn in the strongest possible terms antisemitic, racist or any other form of discriminatory abuse.”

Roitner-Jesner told The Algemeiner that he is “not out for revenge or punishment,” but is “concerned with how future antisemitic events on campus will be treated.” 

“While Cambridge is a comfortable place to be a Jew,” he said, “there is a general sentiment of callousness when it comes to antisemitic and anti-Israel incidents, which are treated very poorly.”

“It’s not a question of if, but when the next one occurs, and based upon the school’s reaction to my complaint, I can’t even begin to imagine how it will react to subsequent ones,” he said.

Roitner-Jesner originally spoke out about his attack to the UK’s The Telegraph on Sunday, after Christ College cleared the perpetrators of all suspicion of antisemitic and racist behavior.

Last month, Roitner-Jesner and his friends accidentally walked into a private drinking society party at a student union building. While attempting to leave, “all of a sudden, they [the perpetrators] were shouting, ‘Jew, get the f****** out of here.’ We tried to leave but they were yelling at us,” he said.

Another victim — a Jewish student who wished to remain anonymous — told the newspaper that he sent an email to Stapleton the day after the attack, recounting the abuse he and his friends had endured:

We, and other bystanders, heard a number of vicious antisemitic slurs including “f****** Jews, you don’t belong here,’ ‘dirty Jews’ and to myself, ‘f*** off darkie.’ They then proceeded to try and choke my friend with his scarf, leaving him gasping for oxygen, and to push me and the third friend around, despite our attempts to de-escalate the situation. They eventually went back in after threatening to “smash our faces in.”

Footage of the attack was captured on security cameras, but the lack of accompanying audio prevented internal investigators from hearing the alleged verbal slurs. After the perpetrators were questioned — and denied they had used antisemitic epithets — Stapleton informed Roitner-Jesner that two members of the drinking society were “disciplined.” But, according to Roitner-Jesner, she refused to divulge their identity or the nature of their punishment.

Roitner-Jesner said that though he can understand why Stapleton, due to the absence of audio, was unable to determine definitively what was said during the violent exchange, “in a situation where it becomes one person’s word against another, no one is in a position to deny the potential that maybe there was some sort of antisemitism involved in this case.”

“If this had happened to member of any other minority, I don’t think anyone at Cambridge would have dared question the authenticity of their story,” he said.

News of the attack has emerged as the country grapples with rising antisemitism across its college campuses. According to a spokesman from Jewish Human Rights Watch (JHRW) — an advocacy group that aided Roitner-Jesner in the aftermath of the event — what happened at Cambridge is “not an isolated incident.”

“Our experience with Cambridge is simple acquiescence to antisemitic behavior. You don’t have to be Sherlock Holmes to figure out that there is a systemic, antisemitic structure in place at British universities whose sole aim is to harass and intimidate Jewish students,” the spokesman told The Algemeiner.

The UK has a “long and glorious history of protecting Jews,” the spokesman said, and it’s “high time for British society to call for a halt to the intimidation of Jews at our universities.”

Cambridge drinking societies have become notorious for their rowdy behavior, dangerous initiations and demeaning treatment of women. According to global independent university reporting website The Tab — which ranked Cambridge’s top 10 most notorious drinking societies — initiations allegedly include drinking “copious amounts of fluid and goodies to ingest under the strict orders of ‘drinking or vomiting,” remaining drunk for 36 hours and “bra-unhooking competitions,” during which female participants are given “increasingly lethal cocktails leading to several girls being taken home in a semi-conscious state by society members.”