Over 100 Columbia professors sign letter defending students who supported Hamas’ ‘military action’
- Over 100 professors at Columbia University have signed a letter defending students who supported Hamas' 'military action' in Israel and called for protection from backlash on campus.
- The professors are demanding that the university protect demonstrators from doxxing efforts and halt its educational outposts in Israel in response to pro-Palestine demonstrations.
- The letter argues that students expressing support for Palestinians and criticizing Israel's occupation is not a radical or controversial opinion, as it aligns with the views of the United Nations and human rights organizations.
9 Articles
9 Articles
Amid Controversy, Columbia Professors Rally Behind Students Who Endorsed Hamas
Over 100 professors at Columbia University have expressed support for American students who faced criticism from academics and industry leaders due to their endorsement of Hamas' actions in Israel on October 7. The professors signed a letter Monday defending students and called on administrators to protect those students from “disturbing reverberations” on the Manhattan campus. “As scholars who are committed to robust inquiry about the most chal…
More than 100 Columbia University professors sign letter defending students who supported Hamas' 'military action' against Israel
More than 100 professors at Columbia University signed a letter on Monday that defended students who supported Hamas' terrorist tactics against Israel on October 7.The professors in question have reportedly called on administrators at the university to protect student demonstrators from getting doxxed from a truck that has apparently showed signs referring to them as "Columbia's Leading Antisemites," according to the New York Post.The developmen…
Columbia Faculty Downplay Hamas Terror Attack as 'Military Response'
Over 100 faculty at Columbia University signed an open letter characterizing Hamas's Oct. 7 terror attack on Israel as a "military response." The letter, published Saturday, was in support of a student statement issued days after the attacks that argued "oppression breeds resistance" and called the Israeli government "fascist, racist, and colonial," accusing it of "aggression, apartheid, and settler-colonization." "In our view," the faculty lett…
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