The commission also found that students, teachers, and school leaders “often lack clarity on how to appropriately respond to such incidents.” The Special Commission on Combating Antisemitism said it heard more than 35 hours of testimony over a series of public hearings and found that “many Jewish students feel afraid to openly express their identity or disclose their faith due to fear of mistreatment or bullying.” As the start of a new school year nears, a special state commission on antisemitism agreed last week to adopt a series of recommendations to prevent antisemitic incidents in K-12 schools, after a preliminary...