Hamas on campus: Students for Justice in Palestine
If a university allows material support for a terrorist organization, or discrimination against Jews, its federal financial assistance should be cancelled at once.
Many pro-Hamas demonstrations that have been taking place on US campuses since Hamas launched its war on Israel on October 7, when more than 3,000 Hamas terrorists invaded and raped, pillaged, murdered and kidnapped their way through the small communities of southern Israel, have reportedly been led by a radical organization known as National Students for Justice in Palestine (NSJP), which, according to a report in The Atlantic, announced a "national day of resistance".
The "Day of Resistance Toolkit" document describes the October 7 massacre, in which more than 1,200 defenseless Israeli women, children and men were brutally murdered, many of them raped, beheaded and burned alive, thusly:
The document states that the Israelis murdered on October 7, overwhelmingly civilian women, children and men, were not really "civilians" and therefore not deserving of protection:
Hamas routinely refers to all Israelis, wherever they live in Israel, as "settlers." To many Palestinians, Israel is just one big "settlement."
The toolkit document also provided students with guidance for organizing a local protest on October 12, talking points, and advice on how to handle media, complete with graphics to print out for banners: a photograph of Hamas terrorists celebrating October 7 on a captured Israeli tank and a drawing of the paragliders used by terrorists to invade Israel.
The document continues:
Hmm. It sounds as if NSJP has exactly the same goals as Hamas: the eradication of Israel and all its Jewish inhabitants. A coincidence? Not quite.
According to a 2018 monograph published to the Jerusalem Center for Public Affairs, NSJP was founded in 2010 by leaders of American Muslims for Palestine and the US Palestinian Community Network, two organizations linked to US-designated terror organizations.
It is doubtful that the majority of the students marching with Students for Justice in Palestine on campuses are aware of the NSJP's ties to Hamas, but the universities and colleges themselves should have an interest in investigating any illegal ties that student organizations on their campuses have. If not, state or federal authorities should: Since 1997, Hamas has been a designated by the US foreign terrorist organization, which it is forbidden to support. Thousands of university students across the US, however, now seem to be doing exactly that, by carrying Hamas slogans and shouting "from the river to the sea, Palestine will be free." That is most likely constitutionally protected free speech, but it is nevertheless a call for genocidal violence.
The Anti-Defamation League and the Louis D. Brandeis Center for Human Rights Under Law sent a letter on October 25 to nearly 200 university presidents, which argued that SJP "provides vocal and potentially material support to Hamas, a designated Foreign Terrorist Organization," and requested:
The letter added:
The letter cites the NSJP toolkit document:
Despite the massive demonstrations and support for Hamas on campuses, very few universities have acted to address or rebut SJP.
Material support for a terrorist organization is a serious matter, too dangerous to leave for university presidents to solve. They frequently appear more concerned about placating the radical elements on their campuses. Florida is the only state to have ordered state universities to ban SJP for supporting Hamas. The US as a whole, however, has a huge problem on its hands.
Many of these academic institutions receive federal funding. However, Title IV of the Civil Rights Act of 1964 "prohibits discrimination on the basis of race, color, and national origin in programs and activities receiving federal financial assistance." Title IV also covers "violations based on religion."
If a university allows material support for a terrorist organization, or discrimination against Jews, its federal financial assistance should be cancelled at once.