Newsletter
Newsletter Support JNS

Israeli group appeals to university donors over support of Lara Alqasem

The Zionist organization Im Tirtzu sent letters to dozens of Hebrew University donors, calling on them to not “stand idly by” while the university continues to provide legal support to Lara Alqasem.

Lara Alqasem, a 22-year-old American graduate student, arrives to the courtroom at the Tel Aviv District court on Oct. 11, 2018. The American graduate student was denied entry at Israel's Ben-Gurion International Airport on Oct. 2 over allegations that she promotes a boycott against the Jewish state. Photo by Miriam Alster/Flash90.
Lara Alqasem, a 22-year-old American graduate student, arrives to the courtroom at the Tel Aviv District court on Oct. 11, 2018. The American graduate student was denied entry at Israel’s Ben-Gurion International Airport on Oct. 2 over allegations that she promotes a boycott against the Jewish state. Photo by Miriam Alster/Flash90.

The Zionist organization Im Tirtzu sent letters to dozens of Hebrew University donors, calling on them to not “stand idly by” while the university continues to provide legal support to Lara Alqasem.

Alqasem, former student leader of the virulently anti-Israel and pro-BDS Students for Justice in Palestine group, was slated to begin a master’s degree at Hebrew University, but was forbidden to enter the country in accordance with the 2017 law barring entry to BDS activists.

In the letter, Im Tirtzu’s CEO Matan Peleg wrote that Hebrew University’s defense of Alqasem not only harms students in Israel, “but harms every pro-Israel student in the United States and around the world who is struggling to combat the BDS movement.”

“By defending Alqasem,” the letter continued, “Hebrew University is sending a demoralizing message to pro-Israel students around the world and is providing a boost to the BDS movement.”

The letter also called attention to Alqasem’s support of Rasmea Odeh, a convicted terrorist who murdered two Hebrew University students in 1969. During Alqasem’s tenure as president of Students for Justice in Palestine in the University of Florida, she organized a demonstration in support of Odeh.

Urging donors to bring up this matter with the university leadership, the letter concluded: “We cannot stand idly by as the great Zionist legacy of Hebrew University becomes tarnished by political agendas on behalf of those who oppose Israel’s right to exist.”

The measure excludes funding for immigration enforcement and faces potential delays in the House.
“Periods of heightened conflict abroad too often coincide with increased fear, discrimination, and violence at home, putting both Jewish and Muslim Americans at risk,” the groups said.
The U.S. Justice Department said that the group “systematically targeted vulnerable children, coerced them into producing abuse material and threatened to destroy their lives if they resisted.”
“When Israel is fighting for the safety and security of its people, it is of special significance that representatives of many countries choose to sit together around the table of freedom and express partnership,” the Israeli ambassador said.
As missile barrages continue to target Israeli civilians, Katz warns Iran will pay “a heavy and escalating price for this war crime.”

“Citizens should contribute as much as they can to the country, and the state should give back. That kind of reciprocal relationship is our guiding principle,” she says.