
Columbia Law School students told their Jewish classmates they should not advocate for the school to bring police to campus to ensure their safety because the presence of law enforcement âmakes students of color feel unsafe,â screenshots obtained by the Washington Free Beacon show.
In one message, second-year law student Aya Hashem admonished her Jewish counterparts for advocating for police presence on campus, saying it âmakes students of color feel unsafe and feel as though weâve learned nothing since George Floyd.â
âNo single groupâs safety is more important than anotherâs lol,â Hashem wrote in a message on Monday to a GroupMe chat group that includes all members of Columbia Law Schoolâs class of 2025.
âI shouldnât have to explain why POC especially black students do not want dozens of police officers in riot gear all over campus. Why are we pretending like we donât know that this country has a serious police brutality problem, where unarmed black people (especially men) are murdered indiscriminately by police officers???â
âYour safety shouldnât be predicated on making others unsafe,â she told her Jewish classmates. âThatâs not real safety at all.â
Another second-year law student, Deven Malone, echoed Hashemâs statements and suggested the anti-Semitism on display across the Manhattan campus was actually in part a result of the police presence.
âItâs worth noting,â he wrote, âthat the awful displays of anti-Semitism occurred Saturday, after hundreds of police officers had been deployed for campus for multiple days, raising the question of whether they are actually effective in promoting safety (at the expense of making plenty of students feel unsafe and uncomfortable).â
The messages, which garnered dozens of likes from members of the chat, come as Columbia continues to struggle with the anti-Semitic protests that have sown chaos in and around the schoolâs Manhattan campus. On Monday, university president Minouche Shafik moved classes online for the rest of the academic year.
That announcement came in the wake of protests in which Jewish students were subject to violent demonstrations.
When a group of Jewish students took an Israeli flag to campus Saturday night, pro-Hamas agitators stole it and tried to burn it. The Jewish students were assaulted, splashed with water, and followed by protesters, according to one of the students.
Video from Saturday evening also showed a keffiyeh-clad individual holding a sign that pointed toward a group of Jewish students with the caption âAl-Qassamâs Next Targets,â a reference to Hamasâs military wing, which carried out the terror attacks in Israel on Oct. 7. Another student live streamed a speech that called for âescalationâ and glorified the attacks.
Hashem, Malone, and Columbia Law School did not respond to request for comment.
Hashem, who attended school in Beirut, Lebanon, before attending Duke University as an undergraduate, is no stranger to anti-Israel activism at Columbia.
She participated in an anti-Israel protest in November that disrupted law school classes, in violation of school policy. Hashem is also a leader of the Middle Eastern Law Students Association, which signed an open letter, âOppression Breeds Resistance,â that blamed Israel for Hamasâs atrocities on Oct. 7.
Malone, meanwhile, serves as a âcampus ambassadorâ for Milbank LLP, a prominent white shoe law firm that signed a November letter calling on top law schools to combat âanti-Semitic harassment, vandalism and assaults on college campuses, including rallies calling for the death of Jews and the elimination of the State of Israel.â
âSuch anti-Semitic activities would not be tolerated at any of our firms,â the letter said.
Milbank did not respond to a request for comment.
Malone also worked as a State Department intern in the Office of Conservation and Water, according to a rĂ©sumĂ© posted to LinkedIn. As an undergraduate student, he was a member of Georgetown Universityâs âHoya Hive,â where he served as a beekeeper.
Last year, Malone expressed outrage over a group of Columbia law students who met with Supreme Court Justice Brett Kavanaugh. Malone said he was âdisappointedâ to see his school âplatforming an organization that leverages dark money to capture the courts,â a reference to the Federalist Society.
In addition to Hashem and Malone, anti-Semitic student protesters have received support from Columbia professors, dozens of whom held a Monday rally to express solidarity with students suspended for holding unauthorized protests. Attendees also lambasted Shafik for cracking down on them and called for her resignation.
The rally was followed by anti-Semitic chants, including âZionists you canât hide, we charge you with genocideâ and âThere is only one solution, intifada revolution.â
Original News Source â Washington Free Beacon
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