Newsletter
Newsletter Support JNS

Israeli lecturer threatened with beheading at London university

The activists, identifying as from City Action for Palestine, accused Michael Ben-Gad of being part of the “genocide in Gaza.”

The main entrance to City St George's, University of London, in Northampton Square, Jan. 1, 2019. Credit: Spudgun67 via Wikimedia Commons.
The main entrance to City St George’s, University of London, in Northampton Square, Jan. 1, 2019. Credit: Spudgun67 via Wikimedia Commons.

An Israeli professor at City St George’s, University of London, says he was threatened with beheading by a pro-Palestinian protester who disrupted his lecture this week.

Professor Michael Ben-Gad, an economics lecturer who served in the Israel Defense Forces from 1982 to 1985, told Sky News that masked activists burst into his classroom, calling him a “war criminal” and “Nazi.”

“They refused to leave. They were masked. One of them made a threat about having my head chopped off,” he said.

The demonstrators, identifying as members of City Action for Palestine, accused Ben-Gad of being part of the “genocide in Gaza” and chanted slogans including “Shame, this lecturer served in the IOF [Israel Occupation Forces]” and “From the river to the sea, Palestine will be free.”

The latter phrase is widely condemned as antisemitic and calling for Israel’s destruction.

Protesters said the university should not employ someone who had served in the Israeli military, especially during the 1982 First Lebanon War.

Ben-Gad, who has taught at the university since 2008 and previously chaired his department, said he would not be intimidated. “These modern Brownshirts are not going to send me into hiding. I’m an unapologetic Israeli patriot, and no one is going to intimidate me,” he said.

He added that living in Britain is a privilege but “these people hate Britain’s civility, freedom and tolerance as much as they hate Israel and Jews.”

“People shouldn’t think that, ‘Oh this is not going to happen to me,’” the 32-year-old Judaic studies teacher told JNS. “It can happen to anyone walking the streets, anyone with their groceries.”
The state must make changes “to clearly address content that is not permitted, while preserving the ability of candidates to present their qualifications to voters,” its secretary of state told JNS.
Justice Neil Gorsuch wrote that the New Jersey attorney general’s demand for donor information may deter donors from associating with First Choice, a Christian pregnancy resource center.
“It’s very important, not only for Israel, but also for the United States, that people will be more familiar with the real history,” Yigal Dilmoni, of American Friends of Judea and Samaria, told JNS.
“When influential voices spread conspiracy theories, promote terrorism or dehumanize Jewish people, it fuels real-world violence and intimidation,” Rep. Josh Gottheimer said.
The authority “continues to provide a system of compensation in support of terrorism through new mechanisms and under a different name,” the U.S. State Department informed Congress.