Suspension for Bristol school student who tried to force-feed ham pizza to Jewish pupil
Teenager removed from Clifton College in Bristol after the controversial incident which occurred in December
A teenage student at a prestigious private school in Bristol was suspended for trying to force-feed a slice of ham pizza to a Jewish student while others watched.
The incident at Clifton College in Bristol occurred in December but was first reported by the local media on this week.
The Jewish student, 15, “suffered psychologically” from the incident, according to the Bristol Post. He continues to attend the school, as do the teens who attempted to force him to eat the ham-topped slice. The newspaper reported it was a short suspension but did not say how long.
Eating pork products is forbidden in Jewish kosher law.
“While the pupil concerned felt that this was not an anti-Semitic act, the school considered the incident to be completely unacceptable, falling far short of the high standards we expect from our pupils,” a school spokesman told the local media. He said the school, which has students from preschool to high school, conducted a “thorough investigation” and that “proportionate and appropriate sanctions were put in place.”
The Christian school was founded in 1862 and opened a boarding house for Jewish students called Polack’s House in 1878, which closed in 2005. The Polack centre, which contains a synagogue, remains at the school, and offers Jewish studies, Hebrew teaching, and bar and bat mitzvah preparation.
An unnamed member of the Bristol Jewish community told the local newspaper that the incident was “not the first case of anti-Semitism at Clifton College. The fact it happened in the first place is awful, but the way in which Clifton College has brushed it under the carpet is much worse.
“For someone who is Jewish and never eaten pork, this is truly horrible thing to go through.”
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