Jewish Students at Brown Face Possible Discipline for Sleeping in Religious Structure

The 17 students may face sanctions for sleeping in their sukkah on a campus green space

Olivia Ebertz/The Public’s Radio
Share
Olivia Ebertz/The Public’s Radio
Jewish Students at Brown Face Possible Discipline for Sleeping in Religious Structure
Copy

Administrators at Brown University are determining whether to discipline 17 Jewish students who were found sleeping in a temporary structure as a part of a Jewish holiday on campus during the early hours of Oct. 22.

The students, who are members of an unofficial campus group called Jews for Ceasefire Now, say their religion commands them to sleep in the structure, called a sukkah, during Sukkot. They say the school is unfairly cracking down on them because of their anti-Zionist stance. But the school says it has strict and long-standing policies about students sleeping on university green spaces.

The university had informed students at the start of the holiday that they were allowed to construct the sukkah but could not sleep in it.

According to a rabbi affiliated with the school’s office of chaplains and religious life, Lex Rofeberg, it is commanded in the Torah to dwell in sukkahs during Sukkot in honor of the Israelites wandering through the desert after escaping from Egypt.

In an email, Brown spokesperson Brian Clark said that the unity has a decade-old policy about not sleeping on campus green spaces.

“Students have erected a sukkah in many other years, but the University has provided no exceptions for sleeping in those cases or any other,” Clark said.

This story was reported by The Public’s Radio. You can read the entire story here.

November 28 - January 2, 2026
Will the Rhode Island Senate remain divided? Plus, Helena Foulkes leans on a big name to raise more campaign cash
From restaurants to bakeries to dance studios, local business owners describe customer losses, creative pivots, and the hard-earned resilience they’ve needed to keep going since the westbound bridge shut down in late 2023
The closures are the latest in what is expected to be a wave of parish consolidations across Rhode Island
After ICE agents “wrongfully” detained a high school intern at a Providence courthouse, the state’s highest-ranking judge said the legal system will consider making virtual hearings more accessible