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Columbia University president and board chairs to testify before House committee investigating anti-Semitism – Campus Reform

Posted By on March 13, 2024

Leaders of Columbia University will testify at a House Committee on Education and the Workforce hearing on April 17.

The House committee announced on March 11 that Columbia University President Nemat (Minouche) Shafik along with Board of Trustees Co-Chairs Claire Shipman and David Greenwald will appear at the hearing, titled Columbia in Crisis: Columbia Universitys Response to Antisemitism.

Rep. Virginia Foxx (R-NC) explained in a statement why a hearing is needed with Columbias leaders.

Some of the worst cases of antisemitic assaults, harassment, and vandalism on campus have occurred at Columbia University, Foxx wrote. Due to the severe and pervasive nature of these cases, and the Columbia administrations failure to enforce its own policies to protect Jewish students, the Committee must hear from Columbias leadership in person to learn how the school is addressing antisemitism on its campus.

[RELATED: Columbia launches investigation into Jewish prof who criticized schools response to anti-Semitism]

During a roundtable on anti-Semitism hosted by the committee on Feb. 29, Columbia undergraduate student Eden Yadegar said, [w]e have been attacked with sticks outside of our library. We have been surrounded by angry mobs. And we have been threatened to keep f***ing running.

Columbia University is currently under investigation by the committee, which has requested several documents, including the following:

- All reports of antisemitic acts or incidents and related documents and communications since January 1, 2021, including but not limited to all reports of antisemitic acts, incidents, or discrimination made to university offices.

- Documents sufficient to show any Columbia disciplinary, academic, personnel, administrative, or other processes through which allegations of hate crimes, discrimination, bias, or harassment are responded to, including but not limited to, any written policies, procedures, guidance, handbooks, rubrics, and/or tables of penalties

[RELATED: Dirty Jew. Monster. Colonizer. Jewish students share anti-Semitic campus encounters before Congress]

- Documents sufficient to show Columbias policies and procedures that ensure and preserve access to safe and uninterrupted learning environments and respond to and address reported violations, including through law enforcement, investigative, and disciplinary processes.

A spokesperson for Columbia University told Columbia Spectator that Columbia is committed to combating antisemitism and we welcome the opportunity to discuss our work to protect and support Jewish students and keep our community safe.

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Columbia University president and board chairs to testify before House committee investigating anti-Semitism - Campus Reform

House Presses MIT To Provide Records on Its Response to Campus Anti-Semitism – Washington Free Beacon

Posted By on March 13, 2024

Rep. Virginia Foxx (L) and MIT president Sally Kornbluth (Win McNamee, Kevin Dietsch/Getty Images)

The House Committee on Education and the Workforce is pressing the Massachusetts Institute of Technology to provide internal documents regarding its response to campus anti-Semitism, which committee chairwoman Virginia Foxx (R., N.C.) panned as dangerously inadequate.

Foxx's letter, sent Friday to MIT president Sally Kornbluth and MIT corporation chair Mark Gorenberg, marks an escalation in the committee's investigation into the university. While the committee announced that investigation in December, this is the first time it has asked MIT leaders to turn over documents. Foxx is seeking internal communications between MIT leaders on the school's disciplinary decisions, documents that show MIT's foreign funding, and other records.

"We have grave concerns regarding the inadequacy of MIT's response to antisemitism on its campus," Foxx wrote. "MIT's hypocrisy and selective enforcement of Institute rules exposes the intellectual and moral bankruptcy of its leadership's rationalizations for their inaction towards antisemitism on campus."

Foxx went on to outline high-profile examples of anti-Semitism seen on MIT's campus, using a number of Washington Free Beacon reports to do so.

In November, for example, anti-Israel students at MIT held an unsanctioned protest in a popular campus building that leads to classrooms and other faculty offices. When MIT staff warned participants they would be suspended if they remained in the area, they refused. After the demonstration, Kornbluth watered down her threat, with the student protesters receiving a "non-academic suspension" that allowed them to keep attending class. Kornbluth said she was concerned that a harsher punishment could have prompted the deportation of foreign students.

MIT went on to launch a "Standing Together Against Hate" speaker series aimed at addressing "real tension between some groups and individuals." One of the school's hand-picked speakers, Boston University antibigotry fellow Dalia Mogahed, endorsed Hamas terrorism as an act of lawful "resistance," the Free Beacon reported in February.

Prior to MIT's launch of "Standing Together Against Hate," Kornbluth tapped a group of Jewish faculty members to advise the school on the initiative. While the participants said they were "hopeful" that the move would help them "more effectively influence the decision making to reduce the tensions on campus," they disbanded the advisory group in a matter of weeks, saying MIT failed to seek out their advice altogether.

An MIT spokeswoman said the school's leaders "received the committee's letter and are examining it."

"MIT is committed to providing a response to the committee's questions," the spokeswoman said. "We don't have any further comment at this time."

Foxx's document request comes just weeks after the Republican hit Harvard University with a congressional subpoena in a similar investigation. Harvard failed to produce documents related to its handling of anti-Semitic incidents on campus, prompting Foxx to serve the Ivy League with subpoenas seeking internal documents.

While Harvard did turn over documents in relation to the subpoena, Foxx called those records "useless," saying they were heavily redacted. Foxx said the committee is "weighing an appropriate response to Harvard's malfeasance" as a result.

"Harvard has absolutely failed to comply in good faith with the Committee's subpoena for information about antisemitism on its campus," she said. "I don't know if it's arrogance, ineptness, or indifference that's guiding Harvard. Regardless, its actions to date are shameful."

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House Presses MIT To Provide Records on Its Response to Campus Anti-Semitism - Washington Free Beacon

Is ‘Globalize the Intifada’ an Incitement to Violence? Columbia’s Anti-Semitism Task Force Won’t Say – Washington Free Beacon

Posted By on March 13, 2024

In a new report on Columbia University's protest policies, the Ivy League school's Task Force on Antisemitism declined to say whether calls for "intifada" violate school rules, saying that while some students "feel strongly" that the chant invokes genocide, others feel strongly that it does not.

The report, released Monday, is the task force's first attempt to provide recommendations to Columbia's leaders regarding their response to rising campus anti-Semitism. Student protesters at Columbia have advocated for terror against Israelis. During a pair of January rallies, students cheered on the Iran-backed Houthi terrorists and chanted, "From New York to Gaza, globalize the intifada," and "From the river to the sea, Palestine will be Arab."

The term "intifada" references violent Palestinian uprisings in Israel that featured terror attacks on civilians, including suicide bombings at bus stations and night clubs. Columbia's rules bar students from inciting violence "against members of our community." Still, Columbia's Task Force on Antisemitism said it would not provide guidance on whether phrases such as "Globalize the Intifada" violate those rules, instead encouraging the university's "legal team" to provide "more guidance on this issue."

"Many have heard chants at protests like 'Globalize the Intifada' and 'Death to the Zionist State' as calls for violence against them and their families," the task force wrote in its report. "The University also has said that calls for genocide, like other incitement to violence, violate the rules."

"While we agree with this principle, the application of it should be clarified," the task force continued. "Many of the chants at recent Columbia protests are viewed differently by different members of the Columbia community: some feel strongly that these are calls to genocide, while others feel strongly that they are not. Since this ultimately is a matter of legal compliance, we do not offer a detailed analysis here."

The report comes months after debate around campus calls for "intifada" rocked the Ivy League.

During a December congressional hearing, the leaders of Harvard University and the University of Pennsylvania offered testimony about their responses to campus anti-Semitism. Then-Harvard president Claudine Gay, along with then-Penn president Liz Magill, repeatedly argued that calls for "intifada" may not violate school rules.

"It can be, depending on the context," Gay said when asked if "calling for the genocide of Jews violate[s] Harvard's rules of bullying and harassment."

The answer contributed to Gay's resignation in early January. Just weeks later, Harvard launched an anti-Semitism task force of its own, which the school said would explore "current manifestations of bias." Similar task forces exist at Penn and the Massachusetts Institute of Technology.

Columbia's task force, though, is the first to provide its school's leaders with formal recommendations. Some pro-Israel leaders on campus criticized the task force for declining to offer guidance on calls for "intifada," arguing that its first report should have gone further.

Columbia junior and Students Supporting Israel president Eden Yadegar, for example, told the Washington Free Beacon that while she is grateful for the task force's work, the first report should have weighed in on which chants violate school rules.

"No other marginalized group would be expected to cede agency over their own identity, and that includes defining forms of racism and prejudice against them," she said, adding that she hopes the task force "will take on the necessary role of condemning speech that incites violence against Jews for what it is: antisemitism."

Columbia Business School assistant professor Shai Davidai echoed Yadegar's rhetoric, telling the Times of Israel that while the task force "put a lot of work" into its first report, its recommendations fall flat.

"I'm so frustrated, and it depresses me," he said. "How am I supposed to face the Jewish students who, on a weekly basis, contact me with issues and problems and things that are happening, and tell them that this task force is working so hard on policies about protests?"

Neither Columbia nor its Task Force on Antisemitism responded to a request for comment.

While the task force did not weigh in on calls for "intifada," it did provide recommendations related to the location of campus protests. The task force's report expresses support for a "'speaker's corner' approach" that would allow protests in designated areas away from academic buildings.

The suggestion is a likely response to anti-Israel protests held in academic buildings at Columbia, which have disrupted classes. In November, student demonstrators took over the Columbia Law School lobby for hours, using a megaphone to broadcast demands that included the establishment of a "Center for Palestinian Legal Studies."

But that protest was unauthorized, and Columbia administrators stood by as it unfolded. The ordeal likely explains the task force's criticism of Columbia's "enforcement during demonstrations," which the report says has "fallen short."

"While we generally agree with the language of the University's rules, we have serious concerns about their enforcement," the report says. "First, the University has regularly failed to stop violations of rules as they occur. Second, there also have been challenges in imposing discipline after the fact."

The task force is led by political science professor Ester Fuchs, Columbia Journalism School dean emeritus Nicholas Lemann, and Columbia Law School dean emeritus David Schizer.

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Is 'Globalize the Intifada' an Incitement to Violence? Columbia's Anti-Semitism Task Force Won't Say - Washington Free Beacon

Israel’s ‘anti-Zionists’ brave police beatings, smears to demand end to war – Al Jazeera English

Posted By on March 13, 2024

Tel Aviv/West Jerusalem In 2015, Maya, a Jewish Israeli, travelled to Greece to help Syrian refugees. At the time, she was an exchange student in Germany and she had been deeply moved by the pictures she saw of desperate people arriving there in small boats.

That was where she met Palestinians who had been born in Syria after their parents and grandparents fled there during the founding of her own country in 1948.

They told her about the Nakba or catastrophe in which 750,000 Palestinians were expelled from their homes to make way for the newly established Israel. Maya, 33, who had been taught that her country was born through an independence war against hostile Arab neighbours, decided that she needed to unlearn what she had learned.

I never heard about the right of return, or Palestinian refugees, she told Al Jazeera.

I had to get out of Israel to start learning about Israel. It was the only way I could puncture holes in what I was taught.

Maya, who asked that her full name not be used for fear of reprisals, is one of a small number of Israeli Jewish activists who identify as anti-Zionists or non-Zionists.

According to the Anti-Defamation League, a pro-Israeli group with a stated mission of fighting anti-Semitism and other forms of racism in the United States, Zionism means supporting a Jewish state established for the protection of Jews worldwide.

However, many anti-Zionists like Maya and the people she works with view Zionism as a Jewish supremacist movement which has ethnically cleansed most of historic Palestine and systematically discriminates against the Palestinians who remain, either as citizens of Israel or residents of the occupied territories.

But since Hamass deadly attack on Israeli civilians and military outposts on October 7, in which 1,139 people were killed and nearly 250 taken captive, Israeli anti-Zionists have been accused of treason for speaking about Palestinian human rights.

Many have called for a permanent ceasefire in Gaza to stop what they view as collective punishment and genocide of the Palestinian people.

I think [anti-Zionists] always claim that Jewish supremacy is not the answer and it is not the answer to the [October 7] killings, Maya said.

Israelis dont understand how the Palestinian story is all about the Nakba, refugees and the right of return. If we are not able to deal with that then we are not going anywhere.

Since October 7, Israeli anti-Zionists have described living in a hostile political and social environment. Many say the police have violently cracked down on anti-war protests, while others have received threats from far-right-wing Israelis.

Roee, who, like Maya, did not give his last name for fear of reprisals from Israeli society or authorities, is also a Jewish Israeli activist. In October last year, he attended a small demonstration of a couple of dozen people a few days after Israel began bombing Gaza. The demonstrators were calling on Hamas to free all Israeli captives and on Israel to stop the war.

The police pushed all of us [out] violently in just two minutes, Roee, 28, told Al Jazeera at a cafe in West Jerusalem.

Weeks later, Roee and his friend, Noa, who also did not want her full name to be revealed, attended another silent demonstration outside a police station in Jerusalem. They put tape over their mouths to denounce the sweeping arrests of Palestinian citizens of Israel who had also called for an end to the war on Gaza.

But again, police chased down the Israeli protesters and beat them with batons.

I think it is very clear that the police recognise us. It doesnt matter the signs we hold. They know us. They know we are leftists and that we are traitors or whatever they call us, Noa told Al Jazeera.

Many Israeli antiwar activists have also been smeared or doxxed a term given to people whose identities and addresses are made known on social media by those hoping to intimidate them into silence.

Maya said that a right-wing activist had accused her romantic partner of cooperating with Hamas by informing them of the whereabouts of Israeli positions in Gaza. The activist published photos of her partner on Instagram with captions detailing the fabricated accusations.

We were afraid that our address would be exposed, but luckily it wasnt. Even before October 7, [these groups of extreme right-wing people] tried to obtain addresses of people to dox them and taunt them. Some of our friends had to leave their apartments. That was our main worry, Maya said.

While most Israelis are required to enlist in the army after high school, antiwar activists have refused to take part in their countrys continuing occupation of the West Bank, where raids and arrests have been intensified since October, or in the war on Gaza. Two young Israelis who publicly refused to join the army are now serving short sentences in military prison.

Einat Gerlitz, a non-Zionist and a member of Mesarvot, a non-profit organisation providing social and legal support to Israeli conscientious objectors, said that more people may have refused military service since the war on Gaza began, because not everyone goes public.

The army does not release the numbers because the armys interest is to make sure [refusing service] is not a topic spoken about in the public sphere. The government and army work really hard to glorify army service, so they want minimal attention on conscientious objectors, the 20-year-old said.

While she, herself, is happy to be public about her views she spent 87 days in prison in 2022 for refusing to serve in the Israeli army (IDF) she added that many others do not go public for fear of social backlash or reprisals.

Gerlitz added that the October 7 attack did not make her reconsider her peace activism, but she is very concerned for friends and peers who were quickly deployed to Gaza.

I was worried for them, but I was also worried about some of the commands that they may need to fulfil, she told Al Jazeera, referring to her worries that soldiers may be ordered to commit atrocities or violate international law.

Over the past five months, Israeli soldiers have razed entire neighbourhoods in Gaza, bombed universities, hospitals and places of worship, and shot at crowds of starving Palestinians lining up for food aid.

Rights groups say that these attacks amount to war crimes and may collectively amount to a campaign of genocide.

Many anti-Zionist Israelis say that their aim is to make fellow Israelis recognise the humanity of the Palestinians.

However, they say it has been difficult to counter the messaging of Israeli politicians, some of whom have called Palestinians in Gaza animals, subhuman or barbarians in order to rally support for the war. Some of these statements were singled out by the International Court of Justice (ICJ) which issued an emergency order in January on the genocide case brought against Israel by South Africa.

Israeli society also expresses little empathy for Palestinians in Gaza, several Israeli activists told Al Jazeera. They explained they believe this is partly due to Israeli media rarely reporting on the armys probable war crimes, nor on the catastrophic humanitarian crisis brought on by Israels war.

Maya recalls going to a demonstration in Tel Aviv to call for a permanent ceasefire in Gaza in late October. About 50 people attended, with many holding up photos of children killed by the Israeli army. But when Israeli children saw the photos, they claimed they were fake.

[Young Israeli kids] pointed at a photo of a father holding a dead baby in Gaza and said, How can you believe this? Its not real. He is acting, Maya said.

[Another child] pointed to a different dead baby and said, This is a doll.

Addam, an anti-Zionist Israeli and a graffiti artist, who did not disclose his full name, was also at the protest. He said that an Israeli woman called the demonstrators traitors and said that her own brother had died fighting for Israel in Gaza.

While Addam was heartbroken to hear about her loss, he said he believes that the government is weaponising Israeli grief to commit atrocities in Gaza. He added that he tries to humanise Palestinians through his art and spoke about one project where he photographed the physical scars that Palestinians and Israelis bore from past conflicts.

Once there is empathy, it creates an entirely different foundation to begin engaging in reality, he told Al Jazeera. It should be a given that people in Gaza are human beings with families, dreams and jobs.

But, for many factors, there is this ongoing process [in Israel] of dehumanising Palestinians.

Originally posted here:

Israel's 'anti-Zionists' brave police beatings, smears to demand end to war - Al Jazeera English

Political science professor Ron Hassner locks himself in his office to protest antisemitism on campus – Daily Californian

Posted By on March 13, 2024

Since Thursday evening, Chancellors Professor of Political Science Ron Hassner has locked himself in his office and is holding all classes on Zoom in protest of antisemitism on UC Berkeleys campus.

Hassner, whose course WAR! quickly fills up each fall, said his sit-in protest was unrelated to the Israel-Hamas war. He called it a quiet and harmless protest that inconveniences only himself: He is sleeping on the floor of his office and has not showered in days.

Our Jewish students don't feel safe walking across the campus so I won't walk across it either, Hassner said in an email. Inside and outside classrooms, Jewish students have been subjected to abuse. It's got to stop.

He has requested that campus leadership ensure the safety of Jewish students on campus and mandate Islamophobia and antisemitism training for resident assistants and registered student organizations.

Additionally, Hassner has asked that individuals prevented from speaking at UC Berkeley receive an apology from campus and are reinvited, regardless of perspective. He criticized protests such as the Zellerbach Playhouse protest on Feb. 26 that endanger the safety of students or campus property.

My goal is not to spread the protest or provoke, Hassner said in the email. My goal is to provide a quiet home on campus for students who want to hold their heads high. And perhaps gently persuade our campus leaders that it's time for decisive action against anti-Semitism.

Students have visited the office to offer support and food to Hassner and some faculty members are joining him in teaching remotely. Many other faculty members are supporting students by marching with them, meeting with them, teaching them, encouraging them.

Hassner expressed approval of Chancellor Carol Christs recent statement about UC Berkeleys free speech principles and the canceled guest lecture Feb. 26. Now, he said, he expects Christ to act. Christ has assured him that she is doing everything in her power to resolve his concerns, Hassner said.

The University remains committed to fostering an environment conducive to robust free speech and in which all members of its community feel that they may engage in campus life without fear of harassment, said campus spokesperson Dan Mogulof in an email. The administration is committed to confronting antisemitism and holds Professor Hassner in great esteem and it is in conversation with him about his concerns.

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Political science professor Ron Hassner locks himself in his office to protest antisemitism on campus - Daily Californian

New Jersey synagogue will allegedly auction off occupied Palestinian land – Yahoo News

Posted By on March 5, 2024

March 3 (UPI) -- Palestinian groups are calling for supporters to protest an event at a New Jersey synagogue marketing the sale of homes in the West Bank.

A review of homes listed to be showcased in the real estate event by My Home In Israel Real Estate shows cottages in Efrat, a settlement in the West Bank. The cottages are listed for $1.3 million. The event is expected to take place on March 10 at Keter Torah Synagogue in Teaneck, N.J.

Palestinian groups had encouraged supporters to protest the event, calling it an auction. Juda Engelmayer, a spokesperson for the synagogue, told UPI that the place of worship has been rented by a group of developers to hold the event.

"That said, it's solely educational and informational, discussing the options, tax and financial implications for U.S. citizens buying property abroad," Engelmayer said. "No sales happen there and it's not an auction of any sort."

Engelmayer specified that the event does not just market homes in the West Bank, but across Israel.

"It is not a tax sale, not a government auction of abandoned property, and not an attempt to sell stolen land to Americans," he said.

A review of homes being offered for sale shows that some are seemingly just outside of the 1949 Armistice Line that delineates the border between Israel and the Palestinian territory. Israeli settlements inside those borders are considered illegal by the United States and the international community.

"A synagogue in Teaneck will be hosting a real estate sale auctioning off Occupied Palestinian land. This event takes place every other year -- and it has for YEARS," Teaneck for Palestine said in a post on Instagram.

The group criticized the town's council for having passed a resolution claiming that the town stands with Israel.

"The truth is this is NOT where the people of Teaneck stand!! We are not just anti-Zionist, but PRO-PALESTINE," the group said. "Our actions and demands are always led by our love and solidarity for the people of Palestine! Join us in a protest against the illegal sale of stolen Palestinian land!"

This story has been updated to clarify that the event is not an auction and to include statements made on behalf of Keter Torah Synagogue.

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New Jersey synagogue will allegedly auction off occupied Palestinian land - Yahoo News

Man with nail gun charged after confrontation with pro-Palestinian protesters near Toronto-area synagogue – CBC.ca

Posted By on March 5, 2024

Toronto

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Posted: March 03, 2024 Last Updated: 8 Hours Ago

A man has been charged after a confrontation with pro-Palestinian demonstrators near a synagogue in Thornhill, Ont., Sunday morning, police said.

York Regional Police said they were called to Clark Avenue West and South Promenade around 9:45 a.m. after someone reported being assaulted with a weapon by a man, according to a news release issued on Sunday night.

Officers spoke withwitnesses who said a man had stopped his vehicle near pro-Palestinian demonstrators and began "shouting obscenities at them, while becoming confrontational with three of the protestors.

"At one point,one of the victims told police the suspect discharged a nail gun that he was carrying," reads the release from police.

No injuries have been reported, police said.

The accused, a 27-year-old man from Vaughan, Ont., is facing several charges, including assault, assault with a weapon, possessing a weapondangerous to the public and mischief.

Officers said the investigation is ongoing. Police areasking anyone with information or footage to contact investigators or submit a tip anonymously to Crime Stoppers.

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Man with nail gun charged after confrontation with pro-Palestinian protesters near Toronto-area synagogue - CBC.ca

CAIR-NJ, AMP-NJ Condemn Planned Sale of Occupied Palestinian Land at Teaneck Synagogue, Call for Federal … – Council on American-Islamic Relations

Posted By on March 5, 2024

The New Jersey chapter of the Council on American-Islamic Relations (CAIR-NJ), the nations largest Muslim civil rights and advocacy organization, along with the New Jersey chapter of American Muslims for Palestine (AMP-NJ) today condemned a planned real estate event to allegedly sell illegally-occupied Palestinian land at a Teaneck synagogue.

The groups also called for a federal probe into the planned event to prevent what may constitute illegal activity from occurring.

The event, reportedly organized by My Home in Israel Real Estate, a group based in Occupied Palestine, is set to occur on March 10 at a local synagogue.

Peaceful demonstrations organized by local organizing and interfaith groups are expected to occur to express opposition to the event.CAIR-NJ encourages any New Jersey residents who participate in such peaceful demonstrations to obey all laws and follow the directions of law enforcement.

In a statement,CAIR-NJ Communications Manager Dina Sayedahmedsaid:

Houses of worship should be sacred spaces, and it is deeply concerning to see anyone use a house of worship to allegedly flout international law by selling off stolen land.

Numerous resolutions, including UN Security Council resolutions in 1979, 1980, and 2016, and the prevailing international opinion hold that Israeli settlements in the West Bank, East Jerusalem, and the Golan Heights are a violation of international law. In fact, just days ago, the White House said that new Israeli settlements in Occupied Palestine are illegal and inconsistent with international law.

Teanecks Muslim and Jewish communities have both expressed concern with the sale taking place in their township. We call on federal authorities to act immediately and launch an investigation into this planned event.

In a statement,AMP-NJ Chairperson Wassim Kanaansaid:

We have been mobilizing our communities en masse to protest against a foreign groups alleged illegal looting and selling of Palestinian territory.

Weve also written to and called the New Jersey Attorney Generals office.

We are watching Israel commit genocide in Gaza and pillage Palestinians homes in the West Bank and Jerusalem. These are both stark violations of international law.Mayor Mike Pagan must condemn these horrors and federal investigators must act immediately to protect Teaneck from potentially taking part in Israels reported violations of international law.

SEE:Teaneck Resident Speaks Out Against Planned Occupied Territory Sale in Teaneck Synagogue

More than 30,000 Palestinians in Gaza, mostly women and children, have been killed by Israel. An additional 420 Palestinians, including 110 children, in the West Bank have been killed by Israel since October 7, 2023.

SEE:Israel-Gaza war in maps and charts: Live tracker

Together, CAIR-NJ, AMP-NJ, and other coalition partners continue to stand in unwavering solidarity with Palestinians and their right to freedom.

CAIRs mission is to protect civil rights, enhance understanding of Islam, promote justice, and empower American Muslims.

END

CONTACT:CAIR-NJ Communications Manager Dina Sayedahmed, dsayedahmed@cair.com, 551-221-5592

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CAIR-NJ, AMP-NJ Condemn Planned Sale of Occupied Palestinian Land at Teaneck Synagogue, Call for Federal ... - Council on American-Islamic Relations

Man charged following altercation near Thornhill synagogue: police – CP24

Posted By on March 5, 2024

A 27-year-old man has been arrested and charged after allegedly bringing a nail gun to a demonstration in Thornhill on Sunday, police say.

It happened inthe area of Clark Avenue West and South Promenade.

York Regional Police (YRP) said they were called to that area at about 9:45 a.m.after a victim reported being assaulted with a weapon by a male suspect.

According to police, an altercation broke out regarding the conflict in the Middle East.

"Through investigation, officers identified several witnesses who stated that a male had stopped his vehicle near pro-Palestinian demonstrators and began shouting obscenities at them, while becoming confrontational with three of the protestors," YRP said.

"At one point, one of the victims told police the suspect discharged a nail gun that he was carrying."

No injuries have been reported.

Those in attendance said that the demonstration was organized in protest of a real estate event hosted by the Home In Israel Real Estate Group.CTV News Toronto has reached out to the organization, along with parent company Keller Williams, but has not received a response.

Those present said the man was acting aggressively towards demonstrators.

Police previously said the action was peaceful and attended by about 100 individuals. They did say that people were still able to enter and exit the synagogue, and that both sides were separated.

In a video shared widely on social media and reviewed by CTV News Toronto, a man holding what appears to be a nail gun can be seen grabbing a person wearing a keffiyeh.

Ilan-Reuben Abramov, 27, of Vaughan, has been charged wth one count each of possess weapons dangerous to the public, assault with a weapon, and mischief, and two counts of assault.

Investigation is ongoing, there is no risk to public safety at this time, police said in a statement shared to X.

"Any witnesses who have not yet spoken to investigators are urged to come forward as soon as possible, along with anyone who has video footage, including dashcam, cell phone, or security recordings from the area around the time of the incident," they said in a release.

Anyone with information about this incident is asked to contact the #4 District Criminal Investigations Bureau at 1-866-876-5423, ext. 7441, or Crime Stoppers anonymously at 1-800-222-8477 (TIPS) or http://www.1800222tips.com.

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Man charged following altercation near Thornhill synagogue: police - CP24

Man, 27, is arrested after threatening to attack pro-Palestine protestors with a NAIL GUN outside Toronto syna – Daily Mail

Posted By on March 5, 2024

By Dominic Yeatman For Dailymail.Com 22:26 04 Mar 2024, updated 22:57 04 Mar 2024

A small demonstration outside an Israeli homes expo was plunged into violence when a man armed with a nail gun launched himself at the protesters.

The pro-Palestinians had gathered outside a Toronto synagogue where the Home In Israel real estate group was showcasing properties at an invite only event.

Footage shows the moment Ilan-Reuben Abramov, 27, drove up in his car, and got out with the nail gun, yelling every Palestinian will die.

He tried knocking phone cameras away, squared up to an elderly woman and was charged with assault with a weapon after one of the protesters claimed he fired the device at them.

'I thought it was a real gun and I thought my life was going to be over in that moment,' one of the protesters told CTV News, showing them holes in his jacket allegedly caused by the nails.

Police said the demonstration in the Thornhill district had been peaceful until Abramov arrived in his car.

Officers identified several witnesses who stated that a male had stopped his vehicle near pro-Palestinian demonstrators and began shouting obscenities at them, while becoming confrontational with three of the protestors, a spokesman for the York Regional Police said.

At one point, one of the victims told police the suspect discharged a nail gun that he was carrying.

The demonstrators claimed that the property group was selling homes on illegally occupied land in the West Bank and around 100 had turned out to protest on Sunday morning.

A counter-demonstration had been organized at the site which also hosts a synagogue, but police said both sides had been successfully kept apart and that people were freely able to enter and exit the synagogue.

You need to calm down and step back, one told Abramov as he approached.

You have a f***ing problem? he replied before shoving her.

You just shot that at me and you shot that at another guy! one is heard screaming as the heavily built man returned to his car.

Police said Abramov has been charged with assault, assault with a weapon, possessing a weapon dangerous to the public and mischief.

Investigation is ongoing, there is no risk to public safety at this time, they added in a statement shared to X.

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Man, 27, is arrested after threatening to attack pro-Palestine protestors with a NAIL GUN outside Toronto syna - Daily Mail


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