Newsletter
Newsletter Support JNS

Anti-Israel activist breaks nose of Brazilian university rector

Protesters picket an event with a StandWithUs staffer and grandson of Holocaust survivors.

Andre Lajst, head of the Brazil chapter of StandWithUs. Credit: Courtesy.
Andre Lajst, head of the Brazil chapter of StandWithUs. Credit: Courtesy.

Andreas Lajst, director of the Brazil chapter of StandWithUs, was to deliver a talk on Aug. 10 at the Federal University of Amazonas about the capacity of Israeli technology to aid isolated Brazilian populations.

When the Arab-Palestinian Federation of Brazil got wind of the event, it wrote online that “the university cannot be a stage to defend an apartheid regime.”

The university’s student union also called Lajst—the grandson of Holocaust survivors—a Nazi.

The university did not cancel the event, and protests that began peacefully turned violent. One anti-Israel activist hit the university rector in the face, fracturing her nose. (This occurred despite the presence of security guards.)

“These days, you must be heroic to voice your opinion if pro-Israel,” wrote Roz Rothstein, founder and CEO of StandWithUs. “Shout-out to the police who helped!”

The former Israeli envoy on Jew-hatred said that the paper’s timing “took up all the airspace” to help bury an evidence-based report on sexual violence on Oct. 7.
The Israeli envoy in Washington told JNS that he thinks that “the shared interest in freeing that country from Hezbollah is ultimately going to win the day.”
Rep. Debbie Wasserman Schultz told JNS that it was “really important” to pass the measure, “given the explosive rise in antisemitism,” including violent attacks.
“I want to destroy their nuclear programs, their ballistic missile program, their drone programs and their terrorist proxy programs,” the congressman said of Iran. “But that said, you can’t leave the United States Congress in the dark any longer.”
The judge on the U.S. District Court for the District of Columbia ruled that Francesca Albanese, who is not a U.S. citizen or resident, is protected by the First Amendment.
Dan Sohail faces a maximum penalty of up to three years in prison and mandatory restitution, according to the U.S. Department of Justice.