Campus Antisemitism
Sahar Tartak was filming an anti-Israel demonstration on campus when she was assaulted.
Isra Hirsi was suspended from Barnard University after an unauthorized anti-Israel protest encampment on campus; she was summoned for trespassing.
“They can expel me and I’ll stay,” said Maryam Iqbal, a suspended Barnard student. “They can put us in jail. We’ll come back again.”
Isra Hirsi wrote on X that “those of us in Gaza Solidarity Encampment will not be intimidated.”
Well-versed in public speaking and debate coaching, Ruby Grinberg volunteers in her community and seeks to raise awareness about cancer.
“Columbia is in for a reckoning of accountability,” said Rep. Elise Stefanik.
The university’s scheduled student speaker has posted antisemitic content on social media, the End Jew Hatred Movement says.
Teachers’ speech has been “controversial” of late in the “polarized” school district, the Philadelphia Inquirer reported.
“Enough is enough,” Michelle Ahdoot, the group’s director of programming and strategy, told JNS.
“Antisemitism is nothing short of a national emergency, a five-alarm fire that is still raging across the country and in our local communities and campuses.”
Its lawyers offered a range of “tangible steps” that the school had taken to counter Jew-hatred.
“We have an antisemitism talk task force, because everybody on the other side has howled their head off if somebody so much has looked sideways at them,” the professor seems to say as recorded on a hidden camera.