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“Moral leadership is vitally important at this fraught moment. It would be of great consequence for you, the presidents, to condemn the barbarous acts of Oct. 7 publicly and unequivocally,” wrote the Israeli president.
Schools must “provide all students, including students who are or are perceived to be Jewish, Israeli, Muslim, Arab, or Palestinian, a school environment free from discrimination based on race, color or national origin.”
Jewish Insider reported that the Massachusetts university banned the student group, as the school’s president published an op-ed in the Boston globe about confronting antisemitism on campus.
Students can reach out for pro bono legal guidance.
“Time and again, we have warned that UNRWA staff and school materials have created a breeding ground for terror,” said IMPACT-se CEO Marcus Sheff.
Yeshiva University President Ari Berman marshaled his colleagues to sign a declaration denouncing the terror group.
The appeal follows a wave of anti-Israel protests at campuses across the United States featuring both overt and covert praise for Hamas.
The editor Ibrahim Bharmal and Elom Tettey Tamaklo, a graduate divinity student at Harvard who supervises undergraduates, are named in a report to the FBI and campus police.
The report, which would be publicly available, would cover “textbooks, leaflets, pamphlets, magazines, and other instructional materials.”
Editor-in-chief Anika Seth wrote that the publication “was wrong to publish the corrections.”
The attorney representing the group said the Oct. 7 Hamas attacks “poured a lot of fuel on an already raging fire.”
UC regent Jay Sures: “The thought that young and impressionable students might be taught the falsehoods of your letter absolutely sickens me.”