HomeSchool Reform NewsColumbia in Crisis: Anti-Israel Encampment Overtakes Campus Lawn, In-Person Classes Canceled

Columbia in Crisis: Anti-Israel Encampment Overtakes Campus Lawn, In-Person Classes Canceled

Anti-Israel protesters at Columbia University continue to operate an “encampment” on campus days after 100 students were arrested, and in one instance praised Hamas and called for the terrorist organization to “strike” Tel Aviv.

The protest was organized by Students for Justice in Palestine at Columbia, Columbia University Apartheid Divest, and several others. They began a tent encampment on the Columbia lawn on Wednesday just before university leadership testified at a Congressional hearing on anti-Semitism.

Police arrested over 100 people on Thursday for alleged trespassing and Columbia issued suspensions, as Campus Reform reported.

Protests over the weekend ramped up, and in one instance, Jewish students walking by the protest were yelled at and told to “Go back to Europe” and “go back to Poland.”

”You have no culture” and “All you do is colonize,” were yelled by protesters.

In one instance, protesters yelled in Arabic “Oh Hamas, oh loved one, hit/strike Tel Aviv,” video on social media showed.

In another video posted to X, the protesters could be heard yelling “We have Zionists who have entered the camp.”

”We are going to create a human chain..so that they do not pass this point and infringe upon our privacy and try to disrupt our community,” the protesters shouted.

”We are going to slowly walk and take a step froward so that we can start to push them out of the camp,” they shouted.

One protester at Columbia held a sign reading “Al-Qasam’s next targets” with an arrow pointing to a group of individuals holding American flags.

In a statement on Monday, Columbia University President Minouche Shafik said that all classes will be held virtually on Monday, adding that university administrators will be meeting with the protesters.

”During the coming days, a working group of Deans, university administrators and faculty members will try to bring this crisis to a resolution. That includes continuing discussions with the student protestors and identifying actions we can take as a community to enable us to peacefully complete the term and return to respectful engagement with each other,” said Shafik. “Over the past days, there have been too many examples of intimidating and harassing behavior on our campus. Antisemitic language, like any other language that is used to hurt and frighten people, is unacceptable and appropriate action will be taken.”

Originally published by Campus Reform. Republished with permission.

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Adam Sabes
Adam Sabes
Adam Sabes is the Deputy Editor. He is a former writer at Fox News Digital. Previously, he was an associate editor at Campus Reform and graduated from Mississippi State University. Adam was also a Mississippi Senior Campus Correspondent for Campus Reform.

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