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https://www.algemeiner.com/2024/06/...-stanford-university-anti-zionist-protesters/
Felony burglary charges have been filed against the 13 Stanford University students who occupied school president Richard Saller’s office earlier this week, The Stanford Daily reported on Friday.
Anti-Israel activists associated with the campus group Students for Justice in Palestine (SJP) raided Saller’s office on Wednesday, locking themselves inside using, the Daily said, “bike locks, chains, ladders, and chairs.” The incident was part of a larger pro-Hamas demonstration in which SJP demanded that the university adopt the boycott, divestment, and sanctions (BDS) movement, which seeks to isolate Israel from the international community as the first step to its eventual elimination.
The felony charges came after Stanford announced that the occupiers of Saller’s office will be immediately suspended and, if any are seniors, barred from graduating and receiving their degrees. The protesters’ behavior — which included graffitiing “kill cops” and “De@th 2 Is@hell” on school property — prompted the sharp disciplinary response, provost Jenny Martinez explained in a statement on Wednesday.
“In addition to damage done inside the building, protesters committed extensive graffiti vandalism on the sandstone buildings and columns of the Main Quad this morning,” provost Jenny Martinez said. “This graffiti conveys vile and hateful sentiments that we condemn in the strongest terms. Whether the graffiti was created by members of the Stanford community or outsiders, we expect that the vast majority of our community joins us in rejecting this assault on our campus.”
The students — whom SJP has referred to as the “Stanford Thirteen” — face one of the toughest actions taken against anti-Israel protesters who, beginning in late April, commandeered sections of their campuses across the US and refused to leave unless school administrators adopted the BDS movement.
Since the demonstrations began, lawmakers have decried the forbearing manner in which the protesters were treated. Reports of amnesty granted to students accused of vandalism, assault, and in some cases essentially squatting on private property outraged critics who charged that school officials excused their behavior because they support the politics of the progressive left and the target of their actions were Jewish.
Stanford University is not the only elite school that resolved to punish the protesters by withholding their degrees. Harvard University reportedly did so also, levying the punishment against some 13 students who led a “Gaza Solidarity Encampment” at Harvard Yard. Stanford, however, stood out among elite schools for refusing to negotiate terms with the protesters, according to SJP, which called the rebuff “gravely insulting to Palestinians and pro-Palestinian students on campus.”
“Gaza Solidarity Encampments” on US college campuses have caused immense harm to Jewish students, according to civil rights groups, which have cited incidents of antisemitic harassment and assault.
Israeli Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu recently issued words of encouragement to them during a meeting with a delegation of them at his office in Israel.
“We’re facing a world struggle to fight slander against the Jewish people and the Jewish state,” Netanyahu told the group, which comprised current and recently graduated students from Tulane University, the Massachusetts Institute of Technology (MIT) — the prime minister’s alma mater, which he attended while serving in the Israel Defense Forces — Columbia University, Rutgers University, the University of Michigan, and Harvard University.
“The most important thing is you have to fight. And how do you fight lies? With truth,” he continued. “A lie can circle the earth 1,000 times before a single word of truth gets through, but we have no other choice. We fight by exposing the lies.”
US college campuses experienced an alarming spike in antisemitic incidents — including demonstrations calling for Israel’s destruction and the intimidation and harassment of Jewish students — after the Hamas terror group’s Oct. 7 attacks on Israel. In a two-month span, the Anti-Defamation League (ADL) recorded 470 antisemitic incidents on college campuses alone. During that same period, antisemitic incidents across the US skyrocketed by 323 percent compared to the prior year.
Felony burglary charges have been filed against the 13 Stanford University students who occupied school president Richard Saller’s office earlier this week, The Stanford Daily reported on Friday.
Anti-Israel activists associated with the campus group Students for Justice in Palestine (SJP) raided Saller’s office on Wednesday, locking themselves inside using, the Daily said, “bike locks, chains, ladders, and chairs.” The incident was part of a larger pro-Hamas demonstration in which SJP demanded that the university adopt the boycott, divestment, and sanctions (BDS) movement, which seeks to isolate Israel from the international community as the first step to its eventual elimination.
The felony charges came after Stanford announced that the occupiers of Saller’s office will be immediately suspended and, if any are seniors, barred from graduating and receiving their degrees. The protesters’ behavior — which included graffitiing “kill cops” and “De@th 2 Is@hell” on school property — prompted the sharp disciplinary response, provost Jenny Martinez explained in a statement on Wednesday.
“In addition to damage done inside the building, protesters committed extensive graffiti vandalism on the sandstone buildings and columns of the Main Quad this morning,” provost Jenny Martinez said. “This graffiti conveys vile and hateful sentiments that we condemn in the strongest terms. Whether the graffiti was created by members of the Stanford community or outsiders, we expect that the vast majority of our community joins us in rejecting this assault on our campus.”
The students — whom SJP has referred to as the “Stanford Thirteen” — face one of the toughest actions taken against anti-Israel protesters who, beginning in late April, commandeered sections of their campuses across the US and refused to leave unless school administrators adopted the BDS movement.
Since the demonstrations began, lawmakers have decried the forbearing manner in which the protesters were treated. Reports of amnesty granted to students accused of vandalism, assault, and in some cases essentially squatting on private property outraged critics who charged that school officials excused their behavior because they support the politics of the progressive left and the target of their actions were Jewish.
Stanford University is not the only elite school that resolved to punish the protesters by withholding their degrees. Harvard University reportedly did so also, levying the punishment against some 13 students who led a “Gaza Solidarity Encampment” at Harvard Yard. Stanford, however, stood out among elite schools for refusing to negotiate terms with the protesters, according to SJP, which called the rebuff “gravely insulting to Palestinians and pro-Palestinian students on campus.”
“Gaza Solidarity Encampments” on US college campuses have caused immense harm to Jewish students, according to civil rights groups, which have cited incidents of antisemitic harassment and assault.
Israeli Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu recently issued words of encouragement to them during a meeting with a delegation of them at his office in Israel.
“We’re facing a world struggle to fight slander against the Jewish people and the Jewish state,” Netanyahu told the group, which comprised current and recently graduated students from Tulane University, the Massachusetts Institute of Technology (MIT) — the prime minister’s alma mater, which he attended while serving in the Israel Defense Forces — Columbia University, Rutgers University, the University of Michigan, and Harvard University.
“The most important thing is you have to fight. And how do you fight lies? With truth,” he continued. “A lie can circle the earth 1,000 times before a single word of truth gets through, but we have no other choice. We fight by exposing the lies.”
US college campuses experienced an alarming spike in antisemitic incidents — including demonstrations calling for Israel’s destruction and the intimidation and harassment of Jewish students — after the Hamas terror group’s Oct. 7 attacks on Israel. In a two-month span, the Anti-Defamation League (ADL) recorded 470 antisemitic incidents on college campuses alone. During that same period, antisemitic incidents across the US skyrocketed by 323 percent compared to the prior year.