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Former top Hague judge: Media wrong to report court ruled ‘plausible’ claim of Israeli genocide

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Joan Donoghue, judge and president of the International Court of Justice, briefs reporters at U.N. Headquarters on Oct. 28, 2022. (Credit: Loey Felipe/U.N. Photo.)

By Mike Wagenheim, JNS

Media reports that the International Court of Justice ruled that Israel was “plausibly” accused of genocide are inaccurate, Joan Donoghue, a judge and former president of the main United Nations judicial arm in The Hague, said in an interview with the BBC on Thursday.

The court never decided that South Africa’s claim that Israel was committing genocide in Gaza was “plausible,” despite an avalanche of media reports to that effect, and a slew of diplomats, who interpreted the court’s ruling that way.

“I’m glad I have a chance to address that, because the court’s test for deciding whether to impose measures uses the idea of plausibility. But the test is the plausibility of the rights that are asserted by the applicant, in this case South Africa” she told the BBC show HARDtalk.

“The court decided that the Palestinians had a plausible right to be protected from genocide and that South Africa had the right to present that claim in the court,” Donoghue said. “It then looked at the facts as well. But it did not decide—and this is something where I’m correcting what’s often said in the media—it didn’t decide that the claim of genocide was plausible.”

“It did emphasize in the order that there was a risk of irreparable harm to the Palestinian right to be protected from genocide,” she added. “But the shorthand that often appears, which is that there’s a plausible case of genocide, isn’t what the court decided.”

Donoghue’s term on the bench expired a few days after the court delivered its initial ruling on Jan. 26.

Following the ruling—and what the judge called the misreported “shorthand” in the media—Israel was widely accused of genocide and lawsuits charged other countries with abeting Israeli genocide, or failing to stop the Jewish state from committing genocide.

After a follow-up South African case, the U.N. court instituted provisional measures on March 28 that ordered Israel to ensure without delay that humanitarian assistance was being scaled and sped up in its delivery to Gaza.

It also ruled that Israel must ensure that the Israel Defense Forces avoids violating the Convention on the Prevention and Punishment of the Crime of Genocide, including by preventing delivery of humanitarian assistance.

The U.N. high court has yet to rule on South Africa’s initial claim that Israel is committing genocide. It is not expected to do so for months.

 

Ivy League grads risk losing prized jobs for schools allowing antisemitic protests to fester: Wall Street honchos

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A woman holds a “Free Azov” sing during a rally. Credit: AP/Francisco Seco

 

The violent, antisemitic protests at some of the nation’s elite colleges has forced top corporate recruiters to assess the quality of the education dispensed at these places — and whether they should look elsewhere for job candidates, the Post has learned.

Activist investor Daniel Loeb, a Columbia University graduate, has begun to reconsider whether to focus offering jobs at his hedge fund to fellow alums and other Ivy League schools like Harvard, Yale, Penn amid their tepid responses to the protests on their campuses, he told The Post.

“We’ve always looked beyond the target schools but we’re doing it even more so now given recent events,” Loeb told The Post on Wednesday.

“We are looking for high-quality candidates but we’re going to be looking at different places.”

Loeb’s firm, Third Point, which manages $11 billion in assets, regularly recruited from places like Columbia in the past, he said.

Now, he’s broadening his focus to schools like Yeshiva University, the University of Florida and Emory University.

The “Ivies” — and schools like NYU and MIT that have also been hotbeds of antisemitic protests — are likely to remain so-called target schools for job recruitment for Wall Street and big corporations given the diaspora of their alumni in board rooms and C-suites.

However, job applicants from these places may find that the days of gliding through the interview process to a job are over, according to Wall Street executives and recruiters.

The anti-Israel protests now at Columbia, and throughout some of the country’s once revered, top-tiered universities are tarnishing degrees from these places, these people say.

Recruiters see the bungling responses from school administrations to the protests — such as Columbia calling for remote learning as officials negotiate with anti-Israel protesters to decamp from their disruptive tent-cities on campus — as endemic of a wider problem at the schools from an academic standpoint.

At issue: Can schools that rationalize non-stop protests while allowing course curriculum that imbibes students with a leftist interpretations of world events be trusted to produce quality job candidates?

The re-evaluation of the elite-school degree comes amid a broader crackdown on strident political dissent in the office environment.

One of the starkest examples came recently when Google fired more than 50 staffers who stormed offices in California and New York to protest the company’s contract with the Israeli government.

College curriculums also began to embrace required courses in so-called social justice themes, but they have been slow to reverse course.

Now, recruiters say, many that haven’t tapped down on violent protesters or moved their curriculum away from “woke” core courses are paying the price in terms of the perceived diminished value of the degrees they are handing out when students begin to look for jobs.

The problem, according to Gary Goldstein, chief executive officer of the Whitney Group, a prominent executive search firm, is that many high-profile schools in recent years have been getting funding from foreign sources, particularly in the Middle East, and were pressured to mold their curriculum to comport with the political sentiments of these benefactors.

“A lot of high-profile schools like the Ivies and places like MIT have been getting funding from Qatar and the Middle East and with that they have brought in professors who push DEI and teaching kids to view the world through oppressor and oppressed, which means Israel becomes the oppressor,” Goldstein told the Post.

Goldstein said the outgrowth of this type of instruction has been a backlash against some elite colleges where these anti-Israel protests are the most strident.

“I’m hearing from people they don’t want to send their kids to these places, but also from the banks that they’re leery about recruiting now from these highly visible schools and will look to places in the Midwest where you don’t see this type of activity,” he said.

Goldstein cited so-called “high-quality, second tier” schools outside the coasts as being the prime targets of corporate recruitment because the educational experience “hasn’t been so politicized.”

Crackhead Barney Trolls Piers Morgan Show in Whiteface-Diaper Getup: ‘I was Maimed’ by Alec Baldwin

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‘Paul Roland Bois(Breitbart)

Crackhead Barney, the performance artist and anti-Israel troll who recently harassed Alec Baldwin in coffee shop, went ballistic on Piers Morgan, claiming the actor “maimed” her when he smacked her phone away.

As Breitbart News reported this week, a social justice warrior named Crackhead Barney cornered Alec Baldwin in a coffee shop where she repeatedly asked him to say “Free Palestine” while heckling him for his role in the tragic shooting of Halyna Hutchins.

The clip shows the actor becoming increasingly irritated after a protester accosts him over the fatal Rust set shooting and asks him to say “free Palestine” and “f— Israel” on camera.

Baldwin, 66, rejected both demands from the ambush interviewer before asking a server to call police as the taunts go on.

The protester continues filming, at which point Baldwin says: “Can you do me one quick favor?”

During her appearance on Piers Morgan in which she satirically wore a neckbrace while wielding some crutches, Crackhead Barney said that Alec Baldwin “maimed” her. She also had her top pulled up to her neck with a pair of pasties covering her nipples.

“What did I do to Alec Baldwin? Piers, do you see the damage that Alec did to me?” she asked as she pointed to her crutches.

“Do you see the damage? Look at my arms! Look at my arms, Piers! Look at my neck! I was maimed by a white man on Monday!” she added.

When Piers Morgan doubted her claims, Crackhead Barney called him “another white devil.”

“You don’t have to shout at me, we can have a civil conversation,” Morgan told her.

“Piers f–king Morgan … What’s wrong with saying ‘Free Palestine’?” she asked. “Piers, can you say ‘Free, free Palestine’ for me?”

Paul Roland Bois directed the award-winning Christian tech thriller, EXEMPLUM, which can be viewed for FREE on YouTube or Tubi. “Better than Killers of the Flower Moon,” wrote Mark Judge. “You haven’t seen a story like this before,” wrote Christian Toto. A high-quality, ad-free rental can also be streamed on Google Play, Vimeo on Demand, or YouTube Movies. Follow on X @prolandfilms or Instagram @prolandfilms.

 

Columbia Student Protester Says ‘Zionists Don’t Deserve to Live’; Apologizes

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Joel B. Pollak

A student who reportedly is among the leaders of the anti-Israel encampment at Columbia University stated in a January livestream that “Zionists don’t deserve to live” any more than Nazis do.

Zionism is simply the belief that Jews have a right to a state in Israel. The vast majority of Jews are also Zionists.

The Daily Wire reported Thursday that Khymani James made the remarks during a university inquiry.

He acknowledged Thursday that he made the remarks in January before the encampment was established at Columbia, and apologized for his violent rhetoric.

The encampment at Columbia has been among the most militant of the dozens that have spring up at university campuses across the nation, with pro-terror and antisemitic rhetoric rampant.

Jewish students report being harassed by participants and excluded from entry, so much so that a Columbia rabbi encouraged them to leave campus for their own safety. The Columbia encampment has also tried, without any authority to do so, to keep out journalists.

Last week, Columbia removed the encampment with the help of the New York Police Department (NYPD). The activists returned, and now the Columbia administration is negotiating, backing off deadlines for students to leave.

Joel B. Pollak is Senior Editor-at-Large at Breitbart News and the host of Breitbart News Sunday on Sirius XM Patriot on Sunday evenings from 7 p.m. to 10 p.m. ET (4 p.m. to 7 p.m. PT). He is the author of the recent e-book, “The Zionist Conspiracy (and how to join it),” now available on Audible. He is also the author of the e-book, Neither Free nor Fair: The 2020 U.S. Presidential Election. He is a winner of the 2018 Robert Novak Journalism Alumni Fellowship. Follow him on Twitter at @joelpollak.

 

When praying at a Jewish holy site is a crime

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The compound of Joseph's Tomb in Shechem after it was vandalized by Palestinians, April 10, 2022. (Nasser Ishtayeh/Flash90)

By Moshe Phillips

When is it a crime for a Jew to pray at a Jewish holy site? When the Palestinian Authority’s police are in charge, that’s when.

Here’s what happened: a handful of Jews attempted to pray at the Tomb of Joseph, in Shechem (Nablus), on the Passover holiday—something that the Oslo Accords specifically permit.

Look at Appendix 4 of the Oslo II accord, which the Palestinian Authority and Israel signed in September 1995. It lists two sites in PA-governed territory as “Jewish Holy Sites”: “1. Joseph’s Tomb (Nablus); 2. Shalom Al Israel Synagogue (Jericho).”

Article V(2)(b) of the Oslo II agreement then explains that those sites “will be under the responsibility of the Palestinian Police,” who are required “to ensure free, unimpeded and secure access to the relevant Jewish holy site.”

The PA police are obligated “to ensure the peaceful use of such a site, to prevent any potential instances of disorder and to respond to any incident.”

Yet what we saw last week was the exact opposite. In a video shown on social media, the arrested Jewish worshippers can be seen sitting against a wall, surrounded by heavily armed PA policemen. They are shouting in Arabic and kicking the Jews.

Imagine for a moment that a group of Muslim worshippers tried to reach some Muslim religious site within Israel—a site to which access was guaranteed in an Israeli-Palestinian treaty.

And imagine if, instead of letting the worshippers go to their site, the Israeli police arrested them, kicked them, and screamed at them in Hebrew.

It would be the lead story on CNN all day long. It would be front page news around the world. The United Nations Security Council would have an emergency meeting to denounce Israel.

Now what was the response to PA police officers violently assaulting Jews for trying to exercise their Oslo-guaranteed right to pray at a Jewish holy site on a major Jewish holiday?

Silence, of course.

Silence from the international news media. Silence from the UN, and the so-called human rights groups. Silence from left-wing Jewish groups such as J Street, Americans for Peace Now, and Partners for Progressive Israel—all of whom would be shrieking in protest if Muslim worshippers were treated that way by the Israeli police.

Perhaps most disturbing is the silence of the Biden administration and its Special Envoy to Monitor and Combat Antisemitism, Deborah Lipstadt.

A year ago, the Biden administration published what it called its National Strategy to Counter Antisemitism. And Ambassador Lipstadt’s job, every single day, is to combat antisemitism.

Yet when Jews are arrested and assaulted by police officers for the “crime” of trying to pray at their holy site, these so-called fighters against antisemitism are silent.

The Biden administration’s awful silence sends a message to the Palestinian Authority that it can violently mistreat Jewish worshippers, with no consequences.

Biden continues to push for a Palestinian state, continues to pressure Israel to cease firing at terrorists, and continues sending hundreds of millions of dollars in U.S. taxpayers’ money to the Palestinian Arabs—including to the very PA police force that is abusing Jewish worshippers.

Just this past week, U.S. officials said they are considering imposing sanctions on an Israeli army unit that they claim has been too rough on Palestinian terrorist suspects.

Yet they did not say a word about the Palestinian Authority’s policemen who can be seen on video assaulting innocent Jewish worshippers. What an outrageous double standard!

 

Moshe Phillips is a commentator on Jewish affairs whose writings appear regularly in the American and Israeli press.

Unlocking the Fitness Potential of Cycling: A Journey from Leisure to Health

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shutterstock

Unlocking the Fitness Potential of Cycling: A Journey from Leisure to Health

Edited by: TJVNews.com

As spring unfolds its vibrant canvas, beckoning us outdoors with its gentle warmth and burgeoning beauty, there’s perhaps no better way to embrace the season’s splendor than atop a trusty bicycle. With the return of songbirds and the blossoming of daffodils, the allure of cycling becomes irresistible, as if your faithful 10-speed is whispering, “It’s time to ride.”

Yet, beyond the idyllic imagery of leisurely pedaling through sun-dappled lanes lies a profound truth: cycling offers far more than just a delightful way to spend a leisurely afternoon. According to a recently published report in the New York Times, It holds the key to enhancing your fitness prowess without subjecting your joints to undue strain, serving as a potent springboard to elevate your performance in higher-impact sports like running or tennis.

Seth Forman, a distinguished sports performance trainer based in New Jersey, attests to cycling’s rehabilitative prowess, particularly for individuals recovering from knee injuries. Drawing from his expertise, Forman emphasized to the NYT the transformative impact of cycling on cardiovascular health, a benefit that extends to lowering cancer mortality rates. However, despite its myriad virtues, cycling is not without its limitations.

“While cycling excels in cardiovascular conditioning, it may not suffice for bolstering bone health, as seen in weight-bearing sports like running,” Forman explained, when speaking with the NYT.  The crux lies in the fact that the bike’s support system mitigates the load-bearing stress crucial for bone density enhancement.

To bridge this gap and ensure comprehensive fitness development, Forman told the NYT of the importance of integrating resistance training into one’s regimen. By complementing cycling with targeted strength-building exercises, individuals can cultivate a holistic approach to fitness, fortifying both cardiovascular endurance and skeletal integrity.

Contrary to common misconceptions, embarking on a fitness-focused cycling journey doesn’t necessitate exorbitant investments in high-tech gear or specialized attire. Also speaking to the NYT was Marilyn Chychota, a seasoned triathlon coach hailing from Tucson, Arizona, and a former professional athlete.

Chychota is an advocate for a holistic approach to cycling, emphasizing the significance of proper bike sizing for optimal comfort and performance. The NYT report indicated that a visit to the local bike shop serves as the inaugural step in this transformative journey, ensuring that riders find their perfect fit as they establish a symbiotic bond with their bicycles.

In the quest for optimal performance and endurance, Chychota, a seasoned triathlon coach, shared invaluable strategies tailored to riders of all levels, guiding them towards success one revolution at a time, the NYT report noted.

Chychota advocates for a gradual approach, emphasizing the importance of consistency and progression. “Start by riding for approximately 20 minutes, three times a week, maintaining a steady tempo,” she advises, the NYT report said. Aim for a perceived exertion level of five out of ten, allowing for comfortable conversation while maintaining a moderate level of effort.

As your fitness improves, gradually extend the duration of one weekly ride by approximately 10 minutes, aiming to reach a milestone of 90 minutes over the course of three months. Concurrently, incrementally increase the duration of your remaining rides, capping them at around 45 minutes to an hour, the NYT report added. This structured approach ensures a gradual buildup of endurance and stamina, whether you’re a novice cyclist or a seasoned rider emerging from a winter hiatus.

Steve Johnson, a seasoned travel writer based in Minneapolis, echoes Chychota’s sentiment, emphasizing the importance of consistency in training. Indicated in the NYT report was that Johnson’s strategy revolves around starting with shorter, easier rides and maintaining a regular cycling schedule, gradually increasing both frequency and intensity as the season progresses. By adhering to this regimen, Johnson finds himself embarking on long, challenging rides with confidence and vigor as summer approaches.

In the bustling heart of Baltimore, nestled amidst the urban landscape, Joe Traill stands as a beacon for cycling enthusiasts. His eponymous establishment, Joe’s Bike Shop, serves as a haven for riders seeking expertise and guidance. With decades of experience under his belt, Traill shared invaluable insights into the world of cycling with the NYT, offering pearls of wisdom to novices and seasoned riders alike.

Central to Traill’s philosophy is the belief that a well-fitted bike lays the foundation for a fulfilling riding experience. For customers of Joe’s Bike Shop, the promise of personalized attention extends beyond the point of sale, with complimentary sizing adjustments ensuring optimal comfort and performance, as was reported by the NYT.  For those seeking a deeper level of customization, Traill advocates for the transformative potential of bike fittings. This more immersive option, typically starting at $100, encompasses a comprehensive assessment, including body measurements and flexibility analysis, tailored to unlock each rider’s full potential.

Navigating the diverse terrain of cycling options can be daunting, particularly for newcomers. As noted in the NYT report, Traill offers sage advice, encouraging riders to consider their preferred terrain before making a selection. For the undecided, he recommends the versatility of hybrid bikes, characterized by wider, more stable tires and flat handlebars, ideal for traversing both streets and trails with ease.

In an era marked by technological innovation, e-bikes emerge as a compelling alternative, especially for those residing in hilly locales or for those contemplating bike commuting. The NYT report indicated that Traill extolled the virtues of electric assistance, citing studies that indicate increased mileage and workout intensity among users. However, he issued a word of caution against online purchases, highlighting the potential safety hazards associated with off-brand versions.

Safety remains paramount in the realm of cycling, with Traill emphasizing the indispensable role of a quality helmet equipped with MIPS (Multiple Impact Protection System). The report in the NYT said that with prices starting at $50, investing in head protection ensures riders can confidently navigate the open road, shielded from potential harm.

As riders embark on their journey to elevate their cycling experience, Traill spoke of the significance of mastering the art of pedaling. With a focus on achieving a smooth pedal stroke, he advises starting in easy gears and gradually increasing cadence. The NYT report said that for those aspiring to reach new heights of performance, Traill recommends clipless pedals and specialized shoes, facilitating efficient power transfer throughout the entire pedal stroke. While initially daunting for beginners, the benefits of this advanced setup are undeniable, offering enhanced control and efficiency on the road.

For those seeking to elevate their fitness level, Chychota recommends incorporating hill training into their regimen. Once comfortable riding on flat terrain, tackling hills provides a dynamic challenge to push boundaries and enhance overall performance, the NYT report said.  Start with short climbs, pushing hard for one minute before returning to a comfortable pace. Gradually increase the duration and intensity of these hill repeats, aiming to conquer longer climbs with each session.

Interval training emerges as another key component in optimizing cycling performance. By incorporating short bursts of high-intensity effort interspersed with periods of recovery, riders can enhance their endurance and speed. Identify a pace around 90 percent of your maximum effort, sustainable for five minutes, and seek out flat stretches of road to execute these intervals.

Embarking on a journey to elevate your cycling prowess requires a strategic approach, one that challenges your limits while nurturing your growth. Chychota shared with the NYT her meticulously crafted weekly progression, designed to sculpt you into a formidable cyclist, capable of conquering any terrain with confidence and finesse.

Week 1 sets the stage for your transformation, introducing you to the rhythm of interval training. Begin with five rounds of alternating between 30 seconds of intense effort and one minute of easier pedaling. Embrace the challenge, but don’t hesitate to repeat this week’s workout until you feel ready to advance.

As you stride into Week 2, intensify the challenge with eight rounds of 30 seconds of fast-paced cycling followed by 30 seconds of recovery. Embrace the pulse-pounding intensity of these intervals as you push your limits and embrace the thrill of progress.

Week 3 introduces a new dimension to your training regimen, with two sets of eight rounds of 30 seconds of fast cycling interspersed with 30 seconds of recovery. Amp up the intensity and stamina, with five minutes of easy pedaling between each set, allowing for brief respite before diving back into the fray.

Week 4 heralds a progression towards longer intervals, as you tackle eight rounds of one minute of fast-paced cycling, balanced by two minutes of easier pedaling. Feel the surge of power coursing through your veins as you navigate the shifting landscape of intensity and recovery.

Week 5 invites you to push the boundaries further, with five rounds of two minutes of fast cycling punctuated by two minutes of recovery. Embrace the sustained effort, feeling the exhilarating rush of momentum as you propel yourself towards peak performance.

As Week 6 dawns, embrace the pinnacle of your transformation, with five rounds of three minutes of fast cycling followed by three minutes of recovery. Feel the synergy of strength and endurance intertwining within you, propelling you towards newfound heights of cycling excellence.

Upon completing this rigorous six-week progression, you emerge as a formidable cyclist, primed to conquer any challenge that lies ahead. Yet, even as you revel in your newfound fitness, remember to incorporate these workouts into your routine, ensuring continued growth and development.

Marilyn Chychota and Joe Traill, stalwarts of the cycling community, offer words of encouragement and wisdom, reminding you to start low and slow, but also to embrace the joy and exhilaration that cycling brings. Indeed, cycling isn’t merely a form of exercise—it’s a journey of self-discovery, empowerment, and boundless adventure. So saddle up, embrace the challenge, and let the rhythm of the road propel you towards greatness.

Remembering the Warsaw Ghetto Uprising & Honoring Those Who Continue the Fight Against Anti-Semitism

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Like the Jews of the Warsaw Ghetto, the Jews of ancient Egypt suffered from kotzer ruach. Photo Credit: Yad Vashem

Remembering the Warsaw Ghetto Uprising & Honoring Those Who Continue the Fight Against Anti-Semitism

Edited by: TJVNews.com

To commemorate the 81st anniversary of the Warsaw Ghetto Uprising, over 700 Staten Island public school students and educators watched Rising Up: Young Holocaust Heroes, at the majestic St. George Theater, Staten Island. Organized by the Wagner College Holocaust Center, the day encourages students of all faiths to stand up against anti-Semitism and prejudice. In addition to the performance, awards were presented to three outstanding individuals who have inspired thousands of youth with their commitment to Holocaust education.

Among those in the audience was Dani Roth, the granddaughter of one of the survivors Rachel Roth, who lived through the Warsaw Ghetto Uprising, Majdanek and Auschwitz. The play traces the pre-war childhood relationships, the growing discrimination of the Nazi era, and the courage of six survivors in Germany, Poland, Slovakia, Hungary and Romania. This is an impactful way to honor the memory of the six million Jews killed in the Holocaust, by bringing attention to the courage of their families and the heroism of those who resisted culturally, spiritually and with armed resistance. The actors onstage are Wagner College students drawn from those of all faiths and ethnicities who expressed how deeply touched they were to learn about the survivors.

Three awards were presented to recognize those who are doing work to fight hate in our communities. Rabbi Mendy Mirocznik, president of the Council of Jewish Organizations of Staten Island (COJO), was recognized with the Community-Building Award. Mirocznik serves as the executive vice-president of the Rabbinical Alliance of America. He is also a board member of the Bridge Multi-Cultural Project, of the Jewish Community Relations Council of New York and the Alan and Joan Bernikow JCC.  Imam Tahir Kukaj of the Albanian-Islamic Cultural Center, presented his award with words emphasizing the value of unity, solidarity and shared spiritual values in these difficult times.

Borough Arts Director Jessica Goffredo-Engelhart EdD,  in the Arts Office at the New York City Department of Education, was recognized for her help in advancing the annual Wagner College Holocaust Art and Poetry competition. An educator for over twenty years, she is currently part of a national coalition of arts administrators leading Connected Arts Networks (CAN)– a grant to strengthen culturally responsive practices and leadership skills in order to better serve students.

In honor of the 30th anniversary of the genocide against the Tutsi in Rwanda, which began April 7th, 1994, Provie Umugwaneza Nkurunziza, a human rights advocate, author, and the youngest person ever to be appointed to serve on the Holocaust, Genocide, and Anti-Semitism Advisory Commission in Texas, received an award. She will be studying at the prestigious Seminar against Anti-Semitism in Oxford this summer.

 

 

These individuals have inspired thousands of youth with their commitment to anti-bias and Holocaust work. One of the young audience members noticed the awards were shaped like a tear, which she associated with the sadness and horrors of the Holocaust. A scene in the play also has a survivor, Romi Cohn, discussing how his family encouraged him to flee from Slovakia so one family member would be alive to say Kaddish after the war.

Keynote speakers were NYC Human Rights Commissioner Annabel Palma and District Attorney Michael McMahon.  This program was made possible by a Community Projects Grant awarded by the NYC Office for the Prevention of Hate Crimes and the NYC Commission on Human Rights, with generous support from District Attorney Michael McMahon. District 31 Superintendent Marion Wilson also presented one of the awards.

Lori Weintrob, director of the Wagner College Holocaust Center, explained the goals of the performance was to provoke deeper understanding of how the Holocaust happened and to promote empathy: “The arts can showcase resistance and resilience –our Wagner College student actors have memorized and learned by heart the exact words of six survivors who live or lived in our borough, your neighbors. When you hear these words from eyewitnesses, you too become an eyewitness to tragedy.” Director Mickey Tennenbaum, adjunct professor of theater at Wagner College, is a child of a survivor. “Rising Up” is a musical, with songs and words of prayer in English, Yiddish and Hebrew sung by an interfaith cast. The play was written by Theresa McCarthy, Lori Weintrob and Martin Moran, an Obie Award winner.

The Warsaw Ghetto Uprising began on the eve of Passover, April 19, 1943, a time where 50,000 remaining Jews resisted German troops and police that entered the ghetto to deport its surviving inhabitants. Among its leaders were Mordecai Anielewicz, Yitzchak Zuckerman and Zivia Lubetkin, the highest ranking female leader. Lubetkin is quoted in the play as a unifying force: “The feeling that there was a community of people who cared about each other, who shared ideas and values in common, made it possible for each of us to do what he or she did. This was the source of our strength…” After the war, Lubetkin and Zuckerman married and moved to Israel, where they founded Kibbutz Ha’Lachamot, the Ghetto Fighters House.

In attendance were schools from PS 1, PS 35, Tottenville High School, IS 61, PS 29, PS 53, Our Lady of Good Counsel and members of Wagner College as well as distinguished from the community. Other sponsors of the event include the Staten Island Advance/silive.com, United Federation of Teachers, Council of Jewish Organizations of Staten Island, Jay Chazanoff, Alan and Joan Bernikow JCC and the Jewish Community Relations Council (JCRC).

The Wagner College Holocaust Center, founded 2014, has connected over 20,000 youth face-to-face with Holocaust survivors on Staten Island and in the tri-state area.

Ilhan Omar’s Daughter Back at Columbia U After Suspension; Joins Anti-Israel Protesters

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Ilhan Omar’s Daughter Back at Columbia U After Suspension; Joins Anti-Israel Protesters

Edited by: Fern Sidman

In a highly visible display of solidarity, Congresswoman Ilhan Omar’s daughter returned to Columbia University’s campus, under the protective wing of her mother, to rally alongside fellow anti-Israel protesters, as was reported by the New York Post on Thursday, As the deadline loomed for the university and demonstrators to reach a resolution regarding the encampment, the presence of the congresswoman and her daughter added a new dimension to the ongoing saga.

Isra Hirsi, 21, daughter of Rep. Ilhan Omar, stood shoulder to shoulder with her fellow protesters, lending her voice to the chorus of dissent echoing across the Morningside Heights campus. The Post report said that under the watchful gaze of her congresswoman mother, Hirsi posed for photos and offered vocal support to the demonstrators who had erected dozens of tents near the heart of the university grounds.

Rep. Ilhan Omar, a prominent figure within the far-left “Squad,” took to social media to express her admiration for the student activists, lauding their “bravery and courage” in the face of adversity. According to the Post report, in a tweet, she shared her firsthand experience of witnessing the Columbia University anti-war encampment, vehemently rejecting what she termed “right-wing attacks” and affirming the protesters’ commitment to “peace and justice.”

The high-profile visit by Rep. Omar and her daughter called attention to the escalating tensions surrounding the encampment, with both university officials and protesters locked in a tense standoff. Indicated in the Post report was that despite the looming deadline for dismantling the tent city, Columbia officials remained tight-lipped during a press conference, offering no indication of progress towards a resolution.

Ben Chang, Columbia’s vice president of communications, reiterated the divide between the university administration and the protesters, emphasizing the existence of divergent demands and the formal negotiation process underway, as per the report in the Post. The absence of concrete developments only served to heighten the suspense surrounding the encampment, leaving observers on edge as the deadline approached. With discussions underway to address the basis for dismantling the encampment, the specter of further unrest looms large, casting a shadow over the ivy league institution.

Chang expressed hope that ongoing discussions would yield a resolution, echoing President Minouche Shafik’s sentiments regarding the need for successful dialogue. However, the Post report said that Chang also hinted at the possibility of exploring alternative options should negotiations falter.

A glimmer of progress emerged as a small group of school faculty and administrators engaged in dialogue with student organizers to address the basis for dismantling the encampment and ensuring compliance with university policies moving forward, the Post report affirmed.

Hirsi, a junior at Barnard College, emerged as a central figure in the unfolding drama, her presence serving as a lightning rod for controversy. The information provided in the Post report indicated that Hirsi’s involvement in the unauthorized protest last Thursday led to her arrest, along with at least two other students, and subsequent suspension from Barnard College. In the aftermath, Hirsi recounted her ordeal, expressing frustration over her expulsion from campus and the ensuing repercussions.

Columbia’s efforts to maintain control over campus access have yielded mixed results, with Hirsi’s return to campus raising eyebrows and prompting questions about the effectiveness of security measures. As per the Post report, the revelation that a prominent Israeli professor, Shai Davidai, was barred from campus due to concerns for his safety further spotlights the heightened tensions surrounding the encampment.

Uncertainty shrouds the circumstances of Hirsi’s return to campus, with questions lingering over whether her ID had been reactivated or if she was granted access as part of her mother’s entourage, the Post report noted. The lack of clarity surrounding her presence raises concerns about compliance with university policies, particularly given her suspended status.

Criticism of the university’s handling of the situation has mounted, with prominent pro-Israel campaigners condemning Hirsi’s presence on campus. According to the Post report, Eden Yadegar, President of Students Supporting Israel Columbia, questioned the university’s decision to allow suspended students to participate in the encampment, highlighting a potential breach of the university’s conditions for protest participation.

Amidst the scrutiny, university officials clarified that elected officials requesting access to the campus are permitted to do so, a standard protocol that extends to media representatives and other authorized individuals, the report added. The revelation that public relations representatives were escorting media and others onto the closed campus during specified hours sheds light on the intricacies of campus access amidst heightened security measures.

Recent developments have intensified scrutiny of Columbia’s response to the protests, with accusations of capitulation to anti-Israel demonstrators. The Post report explained that the decision to extend deadlines for clearing the campus, made twice within the week, has drawn criticism and raised questions about the university’s stance on enforcing its policies.

A statement issued by the university in the early hours of Wednesday announced a 48-hour extension of the deadline as discussions with demonstrators continued.

Tensions flared outside Columbia University’s entrances on Broadway and Amsterdam Avenue as approximately 100 pro-Israeli protesters gathered amidst a massive police presence on Thursday evening, according to the information in the Post report.

Amidst the sea of demonstrators, two men wielding mixed American and Israeli flags made a dramatic statement by climbing the locked gates at Amsterdam and 116th Street, symbolizing a fervent display of support for Israel amidst the ongoing protests, as was detailed in the Post report. Their actions added a palpable sense of urgency to the proceedings, further amplifying the charged atmosphere.

However, amidst the pro-Israeli contingent, a distinct voice of dissent emerged in the form of a group of approximately 20 Hassidic Jews, who stood in solidarity with the Hamas cause while denouncing Zionism. Noted in the Post report, the notoriously anti-Zionist Neturei Karta faction led by Chain Ruben, 30, sought to delineate the distinction between Judaism as a religious faith and Zionism as a nationalist ideology.

Ruben articulated the fundamental tenets of Jewish belief, emphasizing the divine mandate for Jewish exile and the prohibition against forcibly establishing a Jewish state, the Post report said.

Beside Ruben stood Nachman Lieberman, 15, whose held aloft a sign that boldly declared, “Judaism condemns the state of ‘Israel’ and its atrocities,” the report in the Post mentioned.  The message encapsulated the group’s staunch opposition to the actions of the Israeli government as their vehemently anti-Zionist posture was flagrantly on display for public consumption.

Rabbi Yosef Rosenberg also echoed their sentiments, emphasizing Judaism’s inherent prohibition against violence and injustice.

Provost Angela Olinto’s announcement on Monday night, detailing plans for the last classes of the spring semester to be hybrid, aimed to address the challenges posed by restricted campus access and student apprehensions about safety, as was reported by the Post. However, for some students, the hybrid schedule served as a stark reminder of the disruption caused by protests that have engulfed the university in recent weeks.

Noa Fay, a 23-year-old Barnard senior, expressed exasperation at the prolonged unrest, lamenting the impact on her and her peers’ ability to enjoy their final days on campus and graduate on time, the Post report affirmed.  Coming on the heels of a tumultuous year marked by the COVID-19 pandemic, the continued chaos fueled by self-induced protests only adds to the distress, Fay observed.

“The Class of 2024 already started college online at the height of the COVID-19 pandemic,” Fay remarked to the Post.  Her comments shed light on the sense of disillusionment among students who had hoped for a return to normalcy as they neared the end of their academic journey. The Post report added that the self-imposed nature of the current turmoil compounds the frustration, as students grapple with the realization that the disruptions are of their own making.

Echoing Fay’s sentiments, an 18-year-old freshman, who chose to remain anonymous, criticized the protests as “selfish” and “out of control.” According to the information in the Post report, the student expressed frustration over the impact on campus life, lamenting the intrusion of tents and demonstrations into the academic environment. For many students, the protests represent a departure from the traditional college experience they had envisioned, disrupting the sense of community and camaraderie that defines campus life.

 

Asylum Seeker Who Killed British Retiree Says He Was Seeking Revenge for the People of Gaza

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This photo provided by the Counter Terrorism Police North East on Thursday, April 25, 2024 shows Ahmed Alid. An asylum seeker from Morocco who went on a vicious rampage following the Oct. 7 Hamas attack that triggered the Israel-Hamas war has been convicted of murder for stabbing a 70-year-old man in the streets of an English seaside town. Ahmed Alid was convicted Thursday in Teesside Crown Court of stabbing Terence Carney six times on Oct. 15 in Hartlepool. He was also convicted of attempted murder for hacking at his housemate and for assaulting two police officers. (Counter Terrorism Police North East via AP)

(AP) — An asylum seeker from Morocco who went on a vicious rampage following the Oct. 7 Hamas attack that triggered the Israel-Hamas war was convicted Thursday of murder for stabbing a 70-year-old man in the streets of an English seaside town.

 

Ahmed Alid, 45, stabbed Terence Carney six times on Oct. 15 in the center of Hartlepool minutes after he hacked at a sleeping housemate while shouting “Allahu Akbar,” or “God is great” in Arabic.

The attack came eight days after Hamas militants stormed into Israel on Oct. 7 and Alid told police he had done it “for the people of Gaza.” He swore he would have killed more if he had a machine gun and other weapons, prosecutor Jonathan Sandiford said in Teesside Crown Court.

Alid was also convicted of attempted murder for the attack on Javed Nouri, who shared the house in northeast England with him and other asylum seekers. Alid was upset Nouri had converted to Christianity.

Housemates told police that Alid began carrying a knife after watching TV coverage of the Hamas attacks and Israel’s subsequent bombing of Gaza.

Alid laughed when he saw footage of killings by Hamas, alarming his housemate, Nouri told police.

“Every time they would kill somebody, he would praise God,” Nouri said. “I was very upset from that night and I have seen something terrible and frightening in his eyes.”

Nouri had complained to housing officials, the Home Office and police and Alid was warned he could lose his housing.

Alid told police he justified killing an innocent man because Britain helped create the “Zionist entity” of Israel and Israel had “killed innocent children.”

“They killed children and I killed an old man,” he said.

During his interview with two women detectives, Alid became agitated and attacked them. A panic button in the interview room, however, didn’t work properly and other officers only intervened after Alid’s defense lawyer phoned an emergency number for help.

He was convicted of additional counts for assaulting the officers.

Alid had denied the charges against him. Although he acknowledged the stabbings, he said he had no intent to kill or cause serious harm.

Sentencing is scheduled May 17.

 

SHOCK REPORT: ICC mulling Israeli arrest warrants with US consent

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The International Court of Justice in The Hague. Source: Wikimedia Commons.

(JNS) — The International Criminal Court in The Hague would not be considering issuing arrest warrants for senior Israeli officials without the approval of the United States, according to a Channel 12 report on Tuesday, citing senior sources associated with the ICC.

“The sources at The Hague said that it is impossible that the chief prosecutor would have decided on such a dramatic step, in a war that is still ongoing, with very little evidence, if he had not at least had a ‘green light’ from the Americans. If this is true, this is another and unprecedented low in relations between Israel and the U.S., at a very sensitive time, on the eve of the ground entry to Rafah,” wrote Israeli journalist Amit Segal.’

ICC chief prosecutor Karim Ahmad Khan has served in his position since Feb. 12, 2021, when he was elected with American support. The Channel 12 article notes that since then, he has closed two cases that “greatly troubled the Americans”—on undeclared detention related to Afghanistan in Europe and to war crimes allegedly committed in Afghanistan.

Channel 12 reported last week about Israeli concerns that high-ranking officials, including Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu, could be subject to arrest warrants over the prosecution of the war against Hamas in Gaza.

According to the report, an emergency meeting was held at Netanyahu’s office on April 16 in the presence of Israeli Strategic Affairs Minister Ron Dermer, Justice Minister Yariv Levin and Foreign Minister Israel Katz.

The four decided to take “urgent action with international authorities” to prevent the arrest of Israelis abroad, according to the report.

The Palestinian Authority has already declared its acceptance of the jurisdiction of the ICC over alleged crimes committed by Israel. However, Israel does not recognize ICC jurisdiction regarding its conflict with the Palestinians.

The United States has also voiced strong objections to the Palestinians joining the ICC, with U.S. Secretary of State Antony Blinken previously expressing “serious concerns about the ICC’s attempts to exercise its jurisdiction over Israeli personnel.”

South African Foreign Minister Naledi Pandor has said that the ICC should have already issued an arrest warrant for Netanyahu “for war crimes committed against Palestinians in Gaza.”

Following a visit to southern Israel in the wake of Hamas’s Oct. 7 attacks, Khan said that the massacre of more than 1,200 people represented “some of the most serious international crimes that shock the conscience of humanity.”

Commenting on Israel’s military operation in the Gaza Strip since the terrorist attacks and the kidnapping of more than 250 people, Khan noted that the Israel Defense Forces “has trained lawyers who advise commanders and a robust system intended to ensure compliance with international humanitarian law.”

The prosecutor noted that “conflict in densely populated areas where fighters are alleged to be unlawfully embedded in the civilian population is inherently complex, but international humanitarian law must still apply and the Israeli military knows the law that must be applied.”

SHOCK REPORT: ICC mulling Israeli arrest warrants with US consent

 

Tensions Rise as “Intifada” Encampment Erupts at City College of New York

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Tensions Rise as “Intifada” Encampment Erupts at City College of New York

Edited by: Fern Sidman

Thursday night bore witness to escalating tensions at the newly established “intifada” encampment within the hallowed grounds of the City College of New York, as anti-Israel demonstrators clashed with school security personnel, capturing the attention of onlookers and igniting fervent debate, as was reported by The New York Post.

In a dramatic turn of events, captured on video by independent journalist Katie Smith, the encampment became a focal point of unrest as protesters surrounded a school security guard, chanting defiantly, “We will stay, we will stay!,” the Post report indicated. With hands raised in protest, the anti-Israel mob compelled the guard to retreat, walking backward towards a group of NYPD officers congregated nearby.

The footage depicts a tense standoff as protesters formed a human barrier, advancing towards the steps where law enforcement officers stood. According to the Post report, despite the escalating confrontation, no arrests were reported as of 6:30 p.m. Thursday, according to police sources.

The encampment, erected earlier that day on the grounds of the state-funded college, marked a symbolic gesture of solidarity with the pro-Hamas, pro-terror cause, with participants raising the Palestinian flag high above the quad, as per the information provided in the Post report. By afternoon, the campus was engulfed in a sea of Hamas flags and banners, signaling the fervent support for the terror movement that was responsible for the brutal massacre of 1200 Israelis and others on October 7th in southern Israel.

Indie reporter Talia Jane captured scenes of the campus adorned with Palestinian symbols, showcasing the magnitude of the demonstration. Detailed in the Post report was that as many as 300 protesters converged on the Convent Avenue campus, amplifying their voices in a unified call for continued terror against Israel.

“We have a right to control where our tuition goes, and it should never go towards oppressing any people anywhere!” declared Within Our Lifetime organizer Nerdeen Kiswani, addressing the crowd through a megaphone, according to the information contained in the Post report.  Kiswani’s speech, shared on the group’s social media platforms, resonated with the crowd, igniting a fervor of solidarity and determination to support terrorism targeting Israel.

The term “intifada,” historically associated with Palestinian uprisings against Israel, calls attention to the gravity of the moment, evoking memories of past struggles and the ongoing quest for “liberation.”

Against the backdrop of ongoing war that Hamas launched against Israel in October, demonstrators raised their voices in solidarity with the Hamas cause, demanding tangible action from university authorities.

Several signs adorned the encampment area, boldly proclaiming the call for divestment from Israel in response to what they have described as the escalating violence in Gaza, the Post report said.

While the demonstration remained mostly calm, the presence of NYPD officers monitoring the perimeter illustrated the underlying tension simmering beneath the surface. Despite the relative tranquility, the warning issued by Kiswani  loomed large, cautioning against any attempts to suppress the protest.

“Efforts to shut down the demonstration will be met with anger,” Kiswani declared, her words echoing through the crowd as a rallying cry, the Post reported.

In a video shared by Scootercaster, Kiswani’s message reverberated across social media platforms, amplifying the call to action and galvanizing support from allies across New York City. The prospect of mobilizing a broader community in solidarity with the Hamas cause served as a powerful deterrent against any potential suppression of the protest.

Amidst the standoff between demonstrators and authorities, one student organizer defiantly declared their intent to maintain the encampment, despite pressure from school public safety personnel and the NYPD. The Post report also said that in a video captured by Talia Jane, the organizer’s resolute stance encapsulated the unwavering determination of the protesters, signaling their refusal to yield to authorities.

The group CUNY4Palestine mobilized supporters to converge at City College at 4 p.m., responding to reports of CUNY Chancellor Felix Matos’ alleged threat to deploy the NYPD to quell the protest, according to the Post report. However, as of now, no definitive plans have been made to clear the campus, leaving the situation in limbo as the university observes its spring break until April 30.

The absence of concrete action from law enforcement adds an air of uncertainty to the unfolding events, as protesters continue to assert their presence and demand for action. Indicated in the Post report  was that while the composition of the demonstrators remains unclear, CUNY Professor James Hoff shed light on the diverse makeup of the crowd, noting the significant presence of faculty and union members among the protesters.

Meanwhile, across town at the Fashion Institute of Technology (FIT) in Chelsea, another wave of unrest unfolded on Thursday.  In a dramatic turn of events captured on video by Citizen Free Press, dozens of individuals, many adorned in Palestinian headscarves, stormed into a building on the campus premises, according to the Post.  As campus security grappled to maintain control, protesters managed to infiltrate the academic building, setting up a makeshift camp area in the lobby.

FIT, renowned as a hub for aspiring designers and fashion professionals, stands as a symbol of creativity and innovation. Yet, the Post report said that amidst the chaos of the protest, the institution finds itself thrust into the spotlight.

As authorities navigate the complexities of managing campus unrest, the specter of ongoing protests casts a shadow over the academic landscape of New York City. With tensions running high and emotions running deep, the coming days may well prove decisive in shaping the trajectory of these demonstrations and their broader implications for the city’s academic institutions and beyond.

USC Cancels Main Graduation Ceremony After Anti-Israel Protests

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David Lee / Flickr / CC / Cropped

By Joel B. Pollak

The University of Southern California (USC) has canceled its main graduation ceremony due to apparent security concerns after anti-Israel protesters tried to encamp and were removed by Los Angeles Police Department this week.

As Breitbart News reported, anti-Israel protesters had tried to occupy the campus, as demonstrators have done at other universities in an apparently well-coordinated and well-funded campaign. In addition, USC canceled the speech of its valedictorian after she was found to have supported the annihilation of the State of Israel in online posts.

In a statement, USC said (original emphasis):

As in previous years, the university will be hosting dozens of commencement events, including all the traditional individual school commencement ceremonies where students cross the stage, have their names announced, are photographed, and receive their diplomas. In keeping with tradition, we will be hosting all doctoral hooding ceremonies, special celebrations, and departmental activities and receptions.

With the new safety measures in place this year, the time needed to process the large number of guests coming to campus will increase substantially. As a result, we will not be able to host the main stage ceremony that traditionally brings 65,000 students, families, and friends to our campus all at the same time and during a short window from 8:30 a.m. to 10 a.m.

We understand that this is disappointing; however, we are adding many new activities and celebrations to make this commencement academically meaningful, memorable, and uniquely USC, including places to gather with family, friends, faculty, and staff, the celebratory releasing of the doves, and performances by the Trojan Marching Band.

Students are continuing their protests, despite their encampment having been cleared, according to the Daily Trojan.

Joel B. Pollak is Senior Editor-at-Large at Breitbart News and the host of Breitbart News Sunday on Sirius XM Patriot on Sunday evenings from 7 p.m. to 10 p.m. ET (4 p.m. to 7 p.m. PT). He is the author of the recent e-book, “The Zionist Conspiracy (and how to join it),” now available on Audible. He is also the author of the e-book, Neither Free nor Fair: The 2020 U.S. Presidential Election. He is a winner of the 2018 Robert Novak Journalism Alumni Fellowship. Follow him on Twitter at @joelpollak.

‘Pro-Palestine’ campus mobs think Jew-hatred is progressive

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shutterstock

Jonathan S. Tobin – JNS
Ideas that reduce complex problems into simple mantras are always popular. But those

that cloak a political ideology in the sort of language and symbolism in sync with the cultural fashions of the movement and allow people to imagine themselves on the right side of history can spawn world-changing movements. When young people especially are indoctrinated with such notions—the idea of correcting a historical wrong—the results can produce the shocking surge that’s unfolding right now on U.S. college campuses.

 

The spectacle of a critical mass of this current generation of American college students—egged on by many of their professors and even administrators—chanting slogans about erasing the State of Israel from the map (“from the river to the sea”), cheering on Islamist terror against Jews everywhere (“intifada revolution” and “globalize the intifada”) and speaking openly about banning the presence of “Zionists” from their midst, if not condoning violence against them, has shaken many Americans. That is especially true for liberal Jews and others who believe that antisemitism is primarily if not solely a problem on the political right.

Yet the most important part of this story is what hasn’t happened. Instead of a united nation responding to these expressions of hate and bigotry with one voice, many declarations are being heard in defense of what are, for all intents and purposes, a burgeoning mass movement supporting the Hamas terrorist movement that carried out the manifold atrocities in southern Israel on Oct. 7.

Toxic leftist idea

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How is it possible for what is supposed to be the best and the brightest of American students—those who attend Harvard, Yale, Columbia, Cornell and many other elite universities where the “pro-Palestine” protests have sprung up—to embrace such a profoundly evil cause?

The simple answer for what should be seen as responsible points to the intellectual fashion of the day, which, for lack of a better term, we are forced to call “woke” ideologies. The toxic ideas of critical race theory and intersectionality, which teach that the world is permanently divided between “white” oppressors and people of color who are their victims, have decided that Israel and the Jews belong to the former, and Hamas and its mass of Palestinian supporters are among the latter.

These ideas have been mainstreamed of late in America’s educational system and culture. Since the moral panic about race that occurred in the Black Lives Matter summer after a Minneapolis police officer killed George Floyd in May 2020, they have become the new orthodoxy against which dissent is not permitted in U.S. leading institutions.

While some of us have been pointing out for years that the BLM movement and the ideas behind it grant a permission slip for antisemitism, this has only become obvious to most people in the last six months. To the horror of many Jews, the largest mass slaughter of Jews since the Holocaust didn’t engender sympathy for Israel or the Jews. Instead, it provided the spark for a surge in antisemitism around the world almost immediately after Oct. 7.

Many Jews believed they could always count on enlightened liberal opinion in this country not only to condemn expressions of right-wing Jew-hatred in the strongest terms but to also isolate it. Instead, they have watched with amazement and concern as the mobs engaging in antisemitic invective have been defended or rationalized in mainstream liberal media like The New York Times and MSNBC as idealists or, at worst, emotional kids whose actions are an understandable reaction to Israeli atrocities. In doing so, those who are taking this line aren’t just repeating and spreading Hamas propaganda and blatant falsehoods. They are accepting the premise that opposition to the existence of the one Jewish state on the planet is somehow the natural political position of those who call themselves progressives.

 

‘Very fine people’

Indeed, much like the BLM riots that wreaked havoc in American cities in the summer of 2020, the campus protests are being described as “mostly peaceful.” The narrative about the campus mobs in much of the corporate media is that they are merely “pro-Palestine” and that any antisemitism is merely the excessive behavior of a few marginal people who don’t represent the true spirit of the protests.

Almost as troubling is the fact that even when the antisemitic nature of the protests is recognized, the core problem is ignored. It’s not just that those taking part are engaging in demonstrations where Israel and its supporters are demonized, Jewish rights erased and Jews are being threatened. It’s that the people doing this don’t think they are wrong. They are convinced that they are speaking up for a righteous cause. Not only is that false premise being reinforced by mainstream press coverage, but it is also being upheld by leaders of the political left.

Indeed, the most outrageous example of that didn’t come from Rep. Ilhan Omar (D-Minn.), who is notorious for her own antisemitic statements and who showed up on the Columbia campus this week to show solidarity with the “pro-Palestine” mob in the company of her daughter, a student at Barnard College who had been suspended for her role in violating the school’s rules.

The best encouragement the students received was from President Joe Biden, who, when asked about antisemitism on college campuses, condemned it but then added that he was just as concerned about “those who don’t understand what’s going on with the Palestinians.” It was, as Alan Dershowitz and Andrew Stein wrote in The Wall Street Journal, a “very fine people” moment for the president.

That referenced the infamous claim that former President Donald Trump had said that there were some “very fine people” among those who gathered in Charlottesville, Va., in August 2017 for the neo-Nazi “Unite the Right” rally. Of course, Trump didn’t say that since he was referencing those who opposed the taking down of Confederate statues, and not Nazis or members of the Ku Klux Klan.

While that distinction was ignored in the media scramble to condemn Trump, Biden is largely getting a pass for his own effort to treat the cause that the antisemitic agitators are supporting as valid. The point being is that much of the media and leftist opinion are treating those yelling slurs at Jews as “very fine people” who are just going a little too far in their advocacy.

 

In the wake of Columbia University president Minouche Shafik’s ambivalence about enforcing the school’s rules against illegal demonstrations and hate speech, the narrative in the liberal media has again flipped with The New York Times concentrating on what they see as a wrongheaded decision to call in the New York City Police Department to remove the pro-Hamas encampment (though the tents returned the next day). Indeed, the paper’s urban affairs columnist Ginia Bellafante wrote that the main problem isn’t campus antisemitism but the willingness of administrators to punish the antisemites, who she and those reporting in the news section analogized to the anti-Vietnam war and anti-South African apartheid demonstrators of the past.

A movement steeped in ignorance

What is lacking in the coverage and most of the discourse is that—as interviews with them show—most of the students even at a school like Columbia can’t really explain why they are against Israel except by mindlessly repeating slogans about racism and oppression that have nothing to do with the facts on the ground in the Middle East or patent falsehoods about “genocide” in Gaza. They don’t know the history of the conflict and seem to think that Israelis and Jews are, as Palestinian propagandists claim, settler/colonialists in the one country in the world where Jews are, in fact, the indigenous people. Their demands for university divestment from Israel are based on intersectional ideology in which the century-old Arab war to deny Jewish rights is falsely depicted as analogous to the civil-rights movement in the United States.

The ignorance of these young adults is pathetic, as is their absurd cosplaying in which the wearing of keffiyehs has become campus terrorist chic. Lacking their own strong identity, they are adopting one that they perceive will give them some cachet as supporters of an embattled though fashionable cause. But having been spoon-fed the same lies that spawned the BLM movement throughout their educational experience, in which antisemitism has been redefined as progressivism, no one should be surprised by any of this.

Nor should we accept the claim that they are merely demonstrating sympathy for Palestinians or shock at human-rights violations. Far greater losses of life in wars in the Congo or Sudan—and an actual genocide in Western China where Beijing has put an estimated 1 million Muslim Uyghurs in concentration camps—haven’t moved them to utter a single word. If they really were for peace or the theoretical cause of a two-state solution to the Israeli-Palestinian conflict, they would be in favor of eradicating Hamas, which is opposed to any peace that doesn’t involve the destruction of Israel and the genocide of its people.

The sad truth is that massive numbers of students at elite schools and elsewhere have been taught to adopt the Hamas Charter, whether they understand what they are supporting or not. If you think that Zionism—the national liberation movement of the Jewish people—is racism, you are denying rights to Jews that no one would think to deny to anyone else. That is antisemitism. If you are advocating for a ceasefire that would allow Hamas to get away with mass murder, you are supporting Hamas. And if you think Israel is illegitimate and should be destroyed, you are also supporting Hamas terrorists, and their genocidal plans and actions.

Tolerating the intolerable

 

People who advocate for hateful ideologies—whether they are directed at African-Americans, Jews or anyone else—have a First Amendment right to express their views. But they don’t have a right to be tolerated in educational institutions or treated as principled dissenters in the Times. We all know that there is zero tolerance for neo-Nazis or other right-wing extremist Jew-haters at American universities or in the liberal media. But because these institutions have been captured by woke ideologues and mainstream politicians like Biden fear their wrath, their moral equivalents on the left demonstrating on college campuses to “free Palestine” are tolerated, rationalized, excused and even lauded as heroes. In doing so, we are being asked to tolerate the intolerable.

To be “pro-Palestine” today is not to stand up for oppressed people. To the contrary, it is an expression of solidarity with latter-day Nazis and a willingness to mainstream hatred of the Jewish people, not just Israeli policies. But to condemn them is not enough. The only way to explain what has happened and to do something about it is to roll back the woke tide and purge schools, cultural institutions and the mainstream media of those spreading racialist ideas that foment this toxic hatred. Until the “progressive” ideas at the heart of the problem are dismantled, all the hand-wringing and expressions of concern about campus antisemitism will be meaningless.

Jonathan S. Tobin is editor-in-chief of JNS (Jewish News Syndicate). Follow him: @jonathans_tobin.

Mass exodus of Gazans from Rafah as IDF operation looms

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Palestinians in Rafah, in the southern Gaza Strip, on October 30, 2023. (Abed Rahim Khatib/Flash90)

By David Rosenberg, World Israel News

As many as 200,000 Gazans have evacuated Rafah over the past few weeks ahead of a much-anticipated Israeli ground operation in the southern Gaza city, an IDF spokesperson said Thursday.

Rafah, a city which straddles the Egyptian-Gaza border, had some 200,000 residents on the Gaza side of the frontier prior to October 7th, but swelled to nearly 1.5 million following the Hamas invasion of Israel and subsequent IDF military operation.

With the IDF making final preparations for the Rafah operation, the population of the city has fallen sharply, with 150,000-200,000 Gazans evacuating since April 7th.

Most of the evacuees have relocated either the al-Muwasi, a Bedouin enclave adjacent to Gush Katif – the heart of Jewish settlement in Gaza prior to 2005 – central Gaza, or Khan Yunis, another city in southern Gaza, near Rafah.

IDF forces were withdrawn from Khan Yunis earlier this month, following extensive operations in the city, which had once served as the headquarters of Hamas’ top commander in Gaza, Yahya Sinwar.

BIDEN PREFERS SINWAR TO NETANYAHU, SAYS ISRAELI MINISTER
The Israeli military is encouraging Gazans to evacuate Rafah ahead of the impending ground operation, in the hopes of minimizing civilian causalities.

The IDF has built up a stockpile of over 40,000 tents to distribute to Gazans leaving Rafah, with the aim of establishing tent cities away from the area of planned ground incursion.

Rafah, the last Gaza city firmly under Hamas control, is home to four battalions, according to Israeli intelligence, the final operational Hamas battalions out of 24 pre-October 7th.

The Biden operation has reportedly authorized an Israeli operation within the city, after good-faith efforts by Israel to establish a ceasefire and hostage release deal were reportedly rejected by Hamas, Channel 12 News reported.

There are some indications some of Rafah’s remaining population will be housed temporarily in tent cities established in Egypt’s Sinai Peninsula, despite prior refusal by Cairo to open its frontier to Gazan civilians.

Satellite imagery has revealed that Egypt is setting up a massive tent city in the Sinai, indicating a change in Cairo’s position.

NYPD Official Responds To Ocasio-Cortez Rant On ‘Violent’ Police ‘Units’

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AOC is not the only ideological machine that has weakened the control of the elected Democratic Party county leaders over the last decade. Photo Credit: AP

(Daily Caller)  New York City Police Department (NYPD) Chief of Patrol John Chell responded Thursday to a rant by a Congresswoman about “violent” police “units” being deployed to Columbia University.

Democratic New York Rep. Alexandria Ocasio-Cortez (AOC) tweeted Tuesday complaining that Columbia University made “the horrific decision to mobilize NYPD on their own students.” She alleged that “the units called in have some of the most violent reputations on the force” and quote-tweeted a video displaying that the department’s counterterrorism units were present on the campus.

NYPD’s Chief of Patrol took exception to AOC’s characterization of the use of the police force on campus online. “Columbia decided to hold its students accountable to the laws of the school. They are seeing the consequences of their actions … I was with those “units” last Thursday that you describe as having, “the most violent reputations.” These “units” removed students with great care and professionalism, not a single incident was reported,” Chell wrote.

“The only incidents that day on campus were the students’ hateful anti-Semitic speech and vile language towards our cops. I am sure you agree any hateful speech is unacceptable. You should rethink your comments to a simple thank you to the NYPD and hate has no place in our society. Maybe you should walk around Columbia and NYU and listen to their remarks of pure hatred. I will ensure those “units” will protect you as they do for all NYers 24/7/365,” the police officer added.

Columbia University’s campus has been rocked by pro-Palestine protests since April 17 that have been characterized by Republican Speaker of the House Mike Johnson as “threatening and intimidating” to the Jewish students in a Fox News interview. The university has been greatly affected by the protests as they have created hybrid classes to deal with the volume of protests and have sent in the police to arrest students who set up encampments on campus, The Associated Press reported.

Ex-Israeli ambassador to US calls for FBI probe of pro-Hamas campus protests

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Former Israeli Ambassador to the US Michael Oren (AP/Ed Andrieski)

By World Israel News Staff

A former Israeli ambassador to the U.S. and ex-Knesset Member has called on the FBI to probe the ongoing pro-Hamas demonstrations on college campuses across the U.S., amid claims that Qatar and George Soros are bankrolling the protests.

Michael Oren, a New York-born historian tapped to serve as Israel’s top envoy to the U.S. in 2009 before entering politics and serving in the Knesset with the centrist Kulanu faction, spoke with The Media Line in an article published Thursday regarding the origins of the nascent pro-Hamas demonstrations at his alma mater, Columbia University.

While campus demonstrations against Israel and in favor of Hamas have been held since the October 7th invasion of Israel, on April 17th, militant anti-Israel activists established the Gaza Solidarity Encampment on the Columbia University campus, demanding the school divest from Israel.

The rise of support for the Hamas terror organization on college campuses has highlight the financial links between American institutions of higher learning and Qatar, the oil-rich Arab Gulf state which currently hosts much of Hamas’ leadership in exile and which has served as the primary patron of the terror group for years.

According to a 2022 report by the Network Contagion Research Institute, Qatar – a small, sparsely populated state with just over 300,000 citizens – is the most prolific foreign donor to American universities, funding them to the tune of $4.7 billion from 2001 to 2021.

“We are being occupied by radical Islamist theology that has been imported from the Middle East to the tune of billions of dollars from Qatar, Brooke Goldstein, executive director of The Lawfare Project, told Fox News Wednesday.

“How is this happening and how is it that they are so coordinated? They’re all chanting the same slogans. Who is paying for the buses? Who is paying for the private planes that are bringing in the outside agitators?”

The campus protests have brought together a plethora of far-left groups, some of which have enjoyed financial backing from prominent mega-donors including billionaire financier George Soros, whose Open Society Network has given hundreds of thousands of dollars to the radical anti-Israel Jewish Voice for Peace.

In his interview with The Media Line, Oren castigated the campus protests as “intolerable, unacceptable, and exceedingly dangerous,” accusing left-wing campus groups of working as “Trojan horses for antisemitism.”

Noting reports of financial ties between the anti-Israel campus protests and donors including Qatar and far-left organizations, Oren urged the FBI to investigate the origins of the demonstrations.

“These demonstrations are orchestrated and funded from outside. These aren’t spontaneous demonstrations.”

Rejecting claims that the protests are protected free speech, Oren said incitement to violence and support of terrorism “is illegal in America.”

“These people need to be prosecuted, but in the end, this isn’t a job for local police.”