Summary of Quaker Courage Second Meeting

Sunday, February 15, Quaker Courage had its second meeting. Eight alums and one law student attended. All of us are motivated by a desire to see Penn live up to its values in the face of pressures from our federal government.

During the past month, we (Shobhi and Sharon), have begun connecting with two other Penn-based organizations, Stand Up Penn and Alumni for Freedom and Democracy. Participants in this meeting included representatives from both organizations. 

We engaged in further discussion and refinement of Quaker Courage’s mission. Core themes the group seemed to agree on are support for freedom of speech, academic freedom, and resisting government overreach — that is, the government’s attempts to arbitrarily control the policies and operations of institutions like Penn. (A lively discussion unfolded regarding the complexities of “freedom of speech” and controversies on campuses about what kinds of speech an institution should allow. Quaker Courage is concerned primarily with resisting government’s attempts to dictate such matters.)

We discussed possible actions to further our mission. There was lots of enthusiasm for the three organizations working together to plan events at Penn this spring, during the weekend of Commencement and Reunion. Possibilities mentioned include a rally, making signs for alums to carry during the parade of classes, holding a forum or presentation, and setting up a table where folks could engage in conversation with us about the issues Penn is facing in its relationship with the government.

This idea, and other possibilities for collaboration, will be discussed further by leaders of Quaker Courage and Stand Up Penn at a joint meeting scheduled for February 19. Watch for follow-up emails from us regarding action plans and a date for our next QC meeting.

Penn seeks to protect privacy of Jewish faculty and staff

Quaker Courage applauds Penn’s efforts to protect the privacy of Jewish faculty, staff, and students. Penn is fighting a subpoena demanding names, addresses, and other sensitive information about Jewish faculty, staff, and student workers on campus.

We encourage you to join our Penn Pens letter writing campaign and thank Penn President Jameson and Board Chair Raghavendran. You can also sign a petition that started on campus. Read on for details about the issue and the petition.

According to a November 18, 2025 complaint that the Equal Employment Opportunity Commission (EEOC) filed in Federal Court against Penn, the school is not fully complying with a subpoena.

In the filing, the EEOC states that they opened an investigation December 8, 2023, alleging that Penn was “subjecting Jewish faculty (including tenured, non-tenured, and adjunct professors), staff, and other employees (including, but not limited to, students employed by the university) to an unlawful hostile work environment based on national origin, religion, and/or race.” As part of their investigation, the EEOC subpoenaed Penn to “produce information relevant to the EEOC’s investigation of potential unlawful employment practices.”

Four days after the EEOC filing, on November 21, the New York Times reported that “Hundreds of students and faculty and staff members at the University of Pennsylvania signed a petition this week in support of their university’s refusal to turn over to the Trump administration names, phone numbers and physical addresses for some Jewish employees.” According to the article, Amanda Shanor, Associate Professor at Wharton, was one of those coordinating the petition.

On January 13, 2026, the ACLU of PA filed a motion to intervene in EEOC v. UPenn, on behalf of 5 Penn orgs: American Academy of Jewish Research, Jewish Law Students Association of Penn law school, the American Association of University Professors (AAUP), Penn’s chapter of AAUP, and the Penn Association of Senior and Emeritus Faculty.

Penn responded to the complaint with a January 20, 2026 filing. Penn affirmed that they complied with most of the subpoena. However, to protect the privacy of Jewish faculty, staff, and students, they were not including sensitive information with names, addresses, and other identifying information that the EEOC requested. In the filing, Penn wrote:

The issue presented in the EEOC’s application is narrow but exceptionally consequential. Penn has cooperated for more than two years with the EEOC’s investigation, producing nearly 900 pages of materials. The sole dispute is over the EEOC’s extraordinary and unconstitutional demand that Penn assemble and produce lists of employees that reveal their Jewish faith or ancestry, associations with Jewish organizations, affiliation with Jewish studies, participation in programming for the Jewish community and/or de-anonymized responses to surveys on antisemitism, alongside their personal home addresses, phone numbers, and emails. The EEOC insists that Penn produce this information without the consent—and indeed, over the objections—of the employees impacted while entirely disregarding the frightening and well-documented history of governmental entities that undertook efforts to identify and assemble information regarding persons of Jewish ancestry. The government’s demand implicates Penn’s substantial interest in protecting its employees’ privacy, safety, and First Amendment rights.

One January 21, 2025, one day after Penn’s court filing, over 150 Penn Jewish faculty filed a brief in support of the University’s response to the lawsuit.

The litigation is ongoing. The EEOC was not impressed by the privacy issues Penn raised, nor the support Penn has received from so many different sources. On January 27, 2025 the EEOC responded with a new court filing. Their filing states that,”Rather than comply with EEOC’s requests aimed at identifying possible victims of and witnesses to a hostile work environment based on religion, national origin, and race, Respondent has instead chosen to undertake an intensive and relentless public relations campaign against the EEOC.”

Join Quaker Courage second meeting! Sign up and bring a friend

Sunday, 2/15/26, 4:00-5:30pm on Zoom. Register here.

Since our goal is to help Penn live up to its aspirations, we want to familiarize ourselves with Penn’s stated goals. Prior to the meeting, please read Penn’s posted statements on the University’s values and the words that guide Penn:

Additional helpful actions:

  1. Email info@quakercourage.org a short paragraph about your concerns and what issues you are watching at Penn and universities/colleges elsewhere.
  2. Join our letter writing campaign! And encourage others to do so. Paper letters encouraged. If willing, share these for the QC website by emailing them to info@quakercourage.org, but delete anything you would not want posted on the website.
  3. Encouraging your Penn-affiliated friends to write a letter and to sign up for our Quaker Courage mailing list

Agenda for 2/15/26 meeting

Welcome and Introductions

What Quaker Courage has done so far

  • Website updates (slogan, new articles, menu changes)
  • Conversation with Aiden Ledbetter from Democracy House
  • Meeting with Crimson Courage
  • Planned meetings with Stand Up for Penn & Alumni for Freedom and Democracy
  • Scheduling meeting with Cornell Courage

Discussion inspired by homework from last meeting

  • Your thoughts on the Penn web pages
  • Did anyone write us a paragraph about their concerns and issues they’re following?
  • Did anyone write a letter to Penn leadership?

Identify next steps, plan and schedule next meeting