Piers Morgan Uncensored - Outrage at Columbia University
Episode Date: April 22, 2024The White House has condemned what it calls “blatantly antisemitic” statements at student protests against the war in Gaza. Fractious demonstrations at Columbia University in New York have rumbled... on for six days, while arrests have been made at other major colleges including Yale. Jewish students at Columbia have been warned to go home, with classes moved online. Some pro-Palestine protesters have been suspended. Critics say this is a free speech issue, conflating criticism of Israel with hatred of Jews. Others say it’s simply unacceptable that Jewish students do not feel safe. To debate, Piers is joined by the Editor of the Yale Free Press, Sahar Tartak, who was jabbed in the eye with a Palestinian flag by a protester. Arab-Israeli Journalist, Yoseph Haddad, who was assaulted at a protest at Columbia University Host of Breaking Points, Krystal Ball And author of Go Back to Where you Came From, Wajahat Ali YouTube: @PiersMorganUncensored X: @PiersUncensored TikTok: @piersmorganuncensored Insta: @piersmorganuncensored Hosted on Acast. See acast.com/privacy for more information. Learn more about your ad choices. Visit megaphone.fm/adchoices
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The White House has condemned what it calls blatantly anti-Semitic statements at student protests against the war in Gaza.
Fractious demonstrations at Columbia University in New York have rumbled on for six days, while arrests have been made at other major colleges, including Yale.
Jewish students at Columbia have been warned to go home, with classes moved online.
Some pro-Palestine protesters have been suspended.
Critics say this is a free speech issue, conflating criticism of Israel with hatred of Jews.
Others say it is simply unacceptable that Jewish students do not feel safe.
coming out to discuss all this are the editor of the Yale Free Press,
Sahar Tartak, who was jabbed in the eye with a Palestinian flag by a protester,
the Arab Israeli journalist, Yusuf Haddad, who was assaulted at a protest at Columbia University,
the host of Breaking Points, Crystal Ball, and author of Go Back to Where You Come From,
Vajahat Ali. Well, welcome to all of you.
Let me start with you, if I may, Sahar.
Tell me exactly what happened to you.
Sure. So I went to a large,
anti-Semitic campus rally on Saturday night to document the protest with another visibly
Jewish friend. He wears a black hat and sit-sit, which are ritual fringes and has a beard,
and I dress in ritually modest clothing and wear a star of David. And we were immediately
identified by protest organizers as, I guess, the enemy. And so they blockaded us by creating
a human blockade, as in standing in a line with their arms linked in front.
front of us and eventually Netanel and I were separated and so each of us were assigned separate
human blockades made of protest organizers that taunted us and waved flashlights in our face.
And as the other 500 anti-Semitic students at the rally noticed us and identified us, they joined
in on the taunting. And so I was encircled by 500 students who were singing and dancing
against the Jewish people in a circle
around this plaza at Yale,
basically the central plaza on our campus.
And as they taunted me
and waved their middle finger in my face
and waved their kaffaias in my face,
one of them took his Palestinian flag,
waved it in my face,
and then jabbed me in the left eye.
And you ended up going to hospital
for this?
I did.
So first, I tried to run after the assailant.
It was extremely disorienting.
and the human blockade continued to stand in front of me
to prevent me from holding the student accountable
and to protect the student from receiving consequences
for assaulting me.
And so then I went to the police who called an ambulance.
The EMT checked me out.
And then the EMT said we should take you to the hospital.
And so I went to the hospital.
Okay.
And we've got a little clip, I think.
It's not actually of you getting hit by the flag.
It's just of the general mellay.
Take a look at this.
This is the blockade that was going on at the time.
There's no sound with this clip,
but it shows a little sense of what was happening.
How scared were you about what was happening?
And in response to those who say that the vast majority of protesters
are not anti-Semitic
and are simply protesting about the Israeli government's response
to the Hamas terror attacks,
which they believe is massively done.
disproportionate. What do you say to that?
So with the question of how I was feeling, I think can also answer the second question.
The reason I felt so unsafe is because I know that these students want me dead and I know that
they know who I am. And how do I know this? Because they shout en masse, there is only one
solution into FATA revolution at these rallies. They shout about martyrs. They shout about
resistance is justified. I mean, after October 7th, I saw hundreds of peers, people from my classes,
shouting, resistance is justified, and celebrating the resistance's success is something that many
of them posted on social media. So with this in mind, of course I feel unsafe, because I know that
they support genocide against the Jewish people by terrorist organizations such as Hamas,
but not only by Hamas, there's another picture at this rally, and the rally has become a
multi-day event, which included an encampment, like a set of 40 or so tents taking over campus.
And one of the posters at this rally is a poster of Walid Dhaka, who with, he led a PFLP group to mutilate and murder a 19-year-old Israeli Jew.
Okay, let's bring in Vajah Ali.
This is very disconcerting seeing these scenes on college campuses in America.
I'm all for free speech.
It's the bedrock of Pearce Morgan Uncences, what we're all about.
But free speech should not involve Jewish students being terrorized with this kind of rhetoric,
which we've seen and heard it all with our own eyes and ears,
that there are people involved in these protests who are chanting things
which would present a real threat and danger to Jewish students.
It's unacceptable, isn't it?
It is unacceptable.
One, first of all, I would say happy Passover to all Jewish cousins around the world who are celebrating.
Hopefully there's peace and security for all our communities. I'll also say, like I said on your show before,
there's been a stunning spike in anti-Semitism and Islamophobia as a result of this war, which has a result in harassment, threats, doxing.
And in the case of three Palestinian students, they were shot, one is paralyzed, and a six-year-old Palestinian boy, Waddea was killed, his mother was stabbed.
In this particular case, right now, I feel really bad for our two guests who were subject to.
of violence who I'm sure are traumatized. I'm grateful that no one has any permanent damage or
injury. And I would hope that we can all agree here that anti-seminisman Islamophobia is a problem,
has no place in these protests. But we can also agree that we can have empathy for why people
are protesting. Overwhelming majority of them, by the way, are peaceful, according to law enforcement,
according to actual reporters on the ground who are not anti-Semitic. And many of these protesters,
by the way, are Jewish. And why are they protesting peers?
because they're protesting what they consider to be genocide, some do,
and the Israel killing 34,000 Palestinians.
You're absolutely disattached from reality.
Wait, wait, wait, 70,000.
I'm almost, I'll come to you in a moment.
Just let me finish.
It's not what it is.
I'm sorry.
Don't lie to the viewers.
Okay.
You said, let him make his point.
Don't be honest with you.
Just, I will come to you to respond in a moment.
Let him finish his point.
Jess, I'm about to finish.
I'm about to finish.
What are people protesting, including Jews?
Jewish students, they're protesting Israel's response to 1,200 people being killed by Hamas.
So we should have empathy for Israelis and the 1,200 people and their families have been killed
and the 34,000 Palestinians who have been killed, the 70,000 Palestinians who have been injured.
Here we go.
Over the 1 million people have been displaced.
And also, as we have seen, we can have empathy because there are kids who are amputated,
kids who have lost their eyes, their limbs.
We have seen starvation now, famine.
And this is why there's a growing peers, multi-faith and multiracial movement for peace.
And I think all of us should also be very wary, very wary of people who are weaponizing anti-Semitism.
People who are weaponizing anti-Semitism to crush this dissent, especially people like Elise Stefonic,
a Republican who promotes anti-Semitic conspiracy theories like the replacement theory and says nothing about Donald Trump,
who dine with the leading white nationalist and anti-Semite Nick Fuentes.
And just today, in the United States.
the morning again repeated the anti-Semitic conspiracy of a Soros witch hunt.
So let's all agree that anti-Semitism should not be weaponized.
Jews and Muslims should not be weaponized and used against each other.
And that anti-Semitism and Islamophobia have no place in the majority peaceful protests against the war.
You're to remind viewers you're an Arab-Israeli journalist.
You're assaulted at a protest at Columbia University on Thursday.
We have got a clip showing a little bit of this incident.
Commit suicide!
Commit suicide!
Run in traffic!
I'm not going anywhere.
I will keep reveal the truth about all of you.
Are you so close, man?
No, what up?
So we see you clearly there being struck by one of these protesters.
But you're getting very incensed by what you were hearing from Vajah.
So what do you want to say?
Look, first of all, you can see exactly who are the peaceful protest they are.
They want freedom of speech when it only come to one side.
But if it's our freedom of speech for me to come as an Arab who lives in Israel,
to show the reality about our life in Israel.
Now, yes, Israel is far from being perfect just like any other country in the world.
But between what they are telling and how they are presenting this conflict to the reality in Israel,
there is a huge gap which I cannot agree to.
Now, when I go and I was supposed to have a lecture at Columbia University,
that's why I was there.
And then I see this protest where they chanting from the river to the sea of Palestine
will be free. By the way, in Arabic, it sounds different. In Arabic, says from the
Maya to the Maya, Palestine Arabia. From the river to the sea, Palestine is an Arab. So even
further than that shows their idea on the fact that there is no room for the state of Israel,
the only two democracy in the Middle East. Add to that, that exactly the chant of
Intifada, I know what Intifada mean as an Arab. I know what Antifada mean, not just as a
the right translation of violent uprising.
Entifada means the more death of Jews, the more death of Arabs.
That's what intifada means, and they're chanting for that.
And when I ask, why you're chanting for this, it will lead to more death in the land of Israel.
It will lead more death in Gaza in the West Bank.
And they say to me, well, this is what we want.
Of course, that's what they want.
They eventually, at the end of that rally or at the end of that demonstration,
they go back, they go to their pub, they drink their beer, or they do whatever they want,
live in a democracy, they're not the one that suffer consequences in the Middle East. They're
just doing all this from here, very convenient. But you know, something that I found it very,
very unbelievable, you know, all of the time talking about the majority. Of course, there are peaceful
people. There are also people who are locals who are being brainwashed and don't realize
what they're chanting and don't even know which river to which sea and what is intifada mean.
But there are many protesters who are violent protesters. Just see how you, you, you, uh,
described me and how did you say my name with the fact that I was attacked.
You will never see someone from the Palestinian side says that he was attacked by a Jewish or pro-Israeli demonstrator.
This is the thing that people are trying always to take it for Islamophobia, to take it for antisemitism.
This is something very simple.
You have their group of people supporting terrorism.
And instead of the other group who are peacefully protesting coming against them
and say that they are not part of us.
They are protecting them.
They are trying to do absolutely everything to do within them.
Look at my attacker.
So the entire demonstration, he was without any cover.
The second he decided to attack me, he covered his face.
Why?
Why did he decide to cover face?
Because he knows that he is going to attack me.
Because he cannot handle the truth,
and he cannot handle it,
especially when it comes from someone who's an Arab
who lives in there and knows exactly the reality.
So don't let anybody fool anybody.
These are dangerous protesters, and the more the NYPD suffer that or tolerate that,
they're going to keep being more extreme and they're going to be physically more attacking.
There were cops over there, and they did not stop them from attack me.
Cups just three meters from me.
I mean, how can we even agree to something like that?
So I'm seeking for justice, and I've asked, and I've already appointed a lawyer
through the Lawfare Project to seek for justice.
We know the identity of the attack.
And we should see him in jail, and we should seek for justice as soon as possible
in order to prevent them for trying something like this again and again against other people.
Okay. I want to bring in, Crystal.
You replied on X to the White House statement about the protests at Columbia
by saying they are more upset about college students protesting and genocide
than a population of millions being starved to death.
I mean, I can, listen, I believe fundamentally in the right to free Democrats.
protest. I mean, it's the bedrock of any free
democratic country. But I don't believe in
violent hate rhetoric. And if you're a Jewish
student at one of these colleges, hearing some of these chants,
which we're all hearing, it's pretty terrifying, isn't it?
Well, here's what I would say. First of all,
I echo Wajahad in saying, I'm glad that both of our two
co-panelists are okay. And I certainly support
the call for justice for Yosef.
and I hope his assailant is in fact apprehended and accountability is meted out.
I think it's disgusting and frankly a cheap trick to use some isolated incidents
to smear an entire protest movement.
And I think it's very clear what's going on here.
A majority of young people and a majority of college students, majority of Biden voters,
believe that Israel is committing a genocide and that American taxpayer dollars are going to assist in that genocide.
They're outraged by that and they're protesting.
And by the way, they've won,
Yousef, I must let her speak.
Hold on, I listened to you.
And I'm not finished.
You don't protect Jews and Arabs.
You are clearly lying again and again.
You must let other guests speak.
Are you going to be allowed to speak here?
Am I going to be allowed to speak here?
Yes, you are.
So a majority of young people
believe that Israel is committing a genocide
and they are protesting that.
And by the way, they've won the argument.
If you look at now, it's,
60-40 against sending military aid to Israel.
It's a majority that disapprove in America of Israel's action with regards to the Gaza Strip.
So it's a cheap trick as old as time.
Use a few isolated incidents to try to smear an entire movement,
which has the benefit, number one, of attempting to delegitimize it,
and number two of distracting from the continued atrocities,
which are unfolding at the hands of the IDF in the Gaza Strip.
We just had multiple attacks on Rafa.
22 people killed, including 18 children.
We just had another mass grave discovered outside of a hospital in Con Unis.
But Rallin talking about that, we're talking about a few, you know, assholes at a protest.
Yeah, guess what?
Assholes exist.
I lament that as much as the next person.
But I don't remember this level of condemnation when it came to people with actual power saying,
hey, we should Josh Hawley, let's bounce the rubble in Gaza.
Lindsay Graham, let's level the place.
Max Miller, we're going to turn that into a.
a parking lot and on and on and on.
So this is, listen, I condemn anti-Semitism.
I certainly condemn violence, but let's be serious about who the villains are right now.
Would you agree that Hamas are villains?
Hang on, I'm asking a question.
Would you agree that Hamas are villains?
Terrorists.
And so is the Israeli government, given the number of civilians that they have intentionally targeted
and killed, including.
targeting with a complete siege,
which has triggered a famine in northern Gaza
and caused children to literally starve to death.
It's collective punishment.
There's just no denying it.
Okay. Sahar, let me bring you back.
This is absolutely lies, serious, but you cannot...
This is absolutely lies.
It's a lie on a line.
It's a narrative that I was adopted
by the terrorist organization, Hamas.
This is what they want.
I'm telling you, I'm speaking to Palestinians in Gaza.
I don't know if any of the people in this panel
have direct contact with Palestinians in Gaza.
I have many friends there, and I speak to them.
And I also shared many videos of Palestinians
who are calling the fact that Hamas are the one who is responsible,
Hamas hiding among them and hiding under the ground like cowards.
And it was Hamas who uses the hospitals and Hamas that uses mosques
and also churches as terror base.
There, the Palestinians are saying that,
and then you have some Americans come and say,
Otherwise, and talking about the family in Gaza, tons of aid was entered to Israel through Egypt, from also the UAE, from also Jordan.
Tons of aid, they are talking about showing how they are having food.
But those pictures you will not see, you will not see them, not even in CNN or any other media, because you don't want to adopt this.
Well, actually, actually, you said, actually, you said, by the way, if I may jump in.
Wait, wait.
No, no, hang on.
One of the reasons that we're not seeing what you're describing
is because the IDF won't let journalists go in and see what's going on.
So that is part of the problem.
But there can be no doubt there's a massive humanitarian crisis there,
all that people are starving to death.
There is enough TikTok videos.
Well, if the IDF has nothing to hide,
wait a second, don't all talk over each other.
Yusuf, if the IDF has nothing to hide,
There's enough videos.
If the IDF has nothing to hide,
let the media have complete free run.
Let them see it for themselves.
But they won't.
They won't.
And as far as I can say,
as far as I can send,
they should be allowed.
All I'm saying is that you can go to TikTok
on the Arab social media
and you will see the Palestinian themselves uploading it.
You don't have even television of the idea.
I would rather see,
I would rather see the media have unfettered access
to check what it.
is actually happening.
But I want to bring in...
Don't forget, hang on, please.
Youssef, don't just keep talking.
You said, that Gaza is a war zone because of Hamas.
Yeah, I want to bring it...
You said, yourself, you can't just talk over everybody.
I want to bring in Sahar, as I said earlier.
Sah, you've had it categorized
that it's just a few people in these crowds
who are chanting the bad stuff.
And yet you have said that, you know,
Jewish students feel very threatened.
I mean, how many people are you hearing
using these chants?
which are clear threats.
Right.
So it's a good question.
It's just not a few people.
I have seen hundreds of students that I have classes with
after October 7th.
We're talking October 9th,
chanting when people are occupied,
resistance is justified in direct reference
to the atrocities of October 7th.
And let's remember that we're talking about Hamas
coming into people's houses
and amputating mothers in front of their children
and gouging out.
father's eyes and that in the eyes of hundreds of my peers is justified and the and just this weekend
we're talking about hundreds of my peers shouting there is only one solution into fat a revolution
into fada is a call to genocide against jewish people this does not represent a minority and the
protest organizers that were human blockading me are at the forefront of their movement so it's
not random unaffiliated people that are creating this
unsafe environment. It's actually the students that identified me immediately are running these rallies
and decided that they were going to taunt and blockade me and restrict my freedom of movement
and then caused the other 500 people in the rally to behave towards me with hostility and violence.
They all passed by me. There's a video on my Twitter of students passing by me in a circle
as they encircled me. And they all, one after the other, taunted me. It was not to be. It was not
just like one of them taunted me. They all taunted me one after the other, waving things in my
face. Yeah. Okay. Okay. Let me just say that. I just think there's a conflation going on here
by a number of these protests. I don't know how many, because I haven't seen them physically myself,
but I'm hearing it's a significant number that they seem to be conflating what the Israeli
government is doing as a political decision, which is to wage this war on Hamas and the way they're waging it,
with Jewish people generally.
And when you start using rhetoric,
which threatens the lives of Jewish people,
surely we can all agree that's completely unacceptable, can we?
Absolutely.
And I'm glad you said that.
What you're hearing, what you're hearing, right?
So actually people on the ground, right,
reporters on the ground,
journalists on the ground,
are saying that these are peaceful protests.
They did not witnesses.
And on the ground, a lot of the protests,
About third of the protesters are Jewish.
And we're seeing Jewish Americans posting videos on TikTok, like Ahmed said,
what are you talking about?
Look at the Muslims praying, we're going to celebrate Shabbat.
It's a multi-faith and multiracial movement against what they consider to be a genocide.
They want peace.
But if you're chanting, okay, but if they're chanting about interfaida,
then they are chanting threats of genocide against the very people they claim are waging a genocide.
Are you suggesting that the Jewish students who are with these protesters are actually for their own genocide?
Do you agree with the State of Israel that yesterday tweeted that they're terrorists?
The State of Israel yesterday said that American students, a multiracial, multi-faith coalition across this country that is overwhelmingly peacefully protesting.
According to the Jewish students themselves, according to law enforcement, and according to the media, do you consider them to be terrorists?
I do not.
I think if people are chanting, if people are chanting about intifada, I do not.
Well, I think if you're chanting about intifada, and I've seen others talking proudly about backing Hamas, then yeah, you're supporting terrorism.
Who, who is supporting Hamas?
There's a few people isolated incidents, and yesterday, everyone should take solace in this, that yesterday, the students were organizing the protests in Colombia.
Can you just let me finish, I'm a month.
Yesterday, this will make you happy.
Yesterday, the protesters, the organizers yesterday,
condemned the ugly anti-Semitic statements.
Yesterday, just let me finish.
Yesterday, when it all came out, these four or five videos
that came out, guess who condemned them in full.
The protesters, and then they said they're not part of the protest,
they're outside the school.
And then the Jews inside the protest movement
are sending you videos saying that this does not represent us.
So I, for one, think that we should put the focus
on what are people saying?
They are against an ongoing collective punishment
against Palestinians that has killed over 34,000 people
thanks to direct and support and money from the United States.
They want ceasefire, they want peace,
and they went the end of an occupation.
I would think everyone here who believes in justice and peace
will be against an occupation
and against a war that has been an utter failure
for the past seven months
that has brought no security Israelis or Palestinians.
why do you not join me in Crystal
in saying an anti-antisemitism, anti-Islamophobia,
and for a ceasefire and the release of hostages?
Do you agree that these protesters
that include Jews are terrorists?
I do not.
Israel tweeted that.
And only after you release all the hostages,
we can talk about ceasefire, by the way.
Do you agree with Israel that these protesters are terrorists?
I really, I really find it very, very amusing
that you are saying,
that they are peaceful protesters while they're chanting intifada, entifada.
It's either you don't know what Mifada means,
or you are lying, or you are so brainwashed
that you cannot even see the truth in front of your eyes.
Antifada, Entifada, I'm asking you a simple question.
The moral of death of Jews and Arabs.
So, when you chant like this,
with the whole group chanting like this,
that is the chance.
So do you agree that they should not chant
enthada, enthada?
Are they terrorists?
Do you agree that they shouldn't chant Antifada, Intifada?
Are you agreeing that they shouldn't chant from the river to the sea?
Palestine will be free because that means the demolish of the state of Israel.
Do you agree that anybody who wears a symbol of Hamas?
Let me bring in a Christian.
Do you agree with all that?
Let me bring in Crystal.
Crystal.
Okay.
So first of all, Intifada means uprising from the river to the sea.
Somehow when it's, you know, Benjamin Nanjahu using.
that phraseology or holding up a map that literally shows Israel from the river to the sea with
no Palestinian. Somehow that's fine. Can you please, dude, just for a second? Okay. What do you mean
antifada means uprising? Have you seen antifada, calling for equal rights? Have you seen the second
antifada? You don't know anything. You are not from the Middle East. Suddenly that's over the line.
But let me just say, listen, people have a right to be offended by whatever they want to be
They have a right.
You have a right to be offended by that.
Let her speak, please, yourself.
That's his right.
But guess what?
She's not even saying anything about what the father means.
You can respond after.
Let her speak.
Unbelievable.
Free speech is not just about speech that is comfortable.
Free speech is also about speech that is uncomfortable.
And yes, even offensive, which is why, you know, Brian Mast, who said there's no such thing
as an innocent Palestinian civilian, a member of Congress who's in an actual position of power,
For the many Israeli officials who talked about Palestinians are human animals, no uninvolved
civilians, Amalek, all of these things.
I support their right to say it.
It's condemnable.
I think it's very revealing.
I think it is genocidal.
But free speech also protects statements that you find to be uncomfortable.
Yes, but here's, I think we know...
One last thing here.
Okay.
Let me just say one last thing.
I think we know that this isn't a genuine conversation about Jewish student safety,
because we see zero concern for the many Jewish students who are in fact at the center of these protests.
Somehow they're invisible.
It's really not ready.
It's not many.
Your right peers to point out that it is anti-Semitic to conflate all Jews with the state of Israel and with the policies of the state of Israel.
Yeah, but I would also ask you, all right, the crystal, I would ask you.
Nobody is saying that.
In fact, I'm not a Jew.
Hang on, Yusuf.
I'm not a Jew and I'm telling you.
Yeah.
I'm not a Jew.
I'm not a Jew.
And I say it, and I will say it all the time, never generalize a group of people.
Of course, they are part of the Jewish.
You said, you're Christian, right?
Hang on, hang on, someone.
Do not talk over each other.
You said, just to clarify, you said, to clarify for viewers, you said, to clarify for viewers, you are Arab-Israeli, but you're Christian.
Is that right?
Correct.
Okay.
So I wanted to ask, I want to ask Christal this.
I want to ask Crystal one question about interfaida.
Can you tell me about an interfaida that wasn't a violent uprising during the 75 years of this conflict?
Listen, you can support the non-violent parts of an uprising and condemn the violent parts.
That wasn't my question.
My question was, can you tell me of any interfaida in the 75 years of this conflict that hasn't involved a violent?
violent uprising. So that when somebody who is Jewish, here's the word intifada, they don't
automatically think violent uprising because they've all been violent. I think that's fair. Pierce,
I think that's a fair point. Now, the first intifada I would point out was overwhelmingly peaceful,
but that doesn't erase the fact that there were violent acts. That's why I said, listen,
if you're offended by the rally chance, that's okay. It's still free speech. But I think to smear this
entire protest group of saying they have violent intent. You can ask the NYPD chief who arrested
protesters at Colombia. He literally said they were all nonviolent. So I just think this is such a
clear attempt to distract from what's happening in Gaza and try to change a conversation and debate
that has been lost by those who would say, listen, Israel no matter what, and we're going to support
them and ship weapons no matter what. Well, I think, look, I would just say, before I come to Yousev,
I would say this, that Vajah, you do keep talking about peaceful protest,
but actually, if you are chanting things like Intifada
at a bunch of Jewish people,
then they are not going to see that as a message of peace.
They're going to see that as a direct threat on their lives.
So that's not a peaceful protest to me.
Well, the thing is this.
People also are terrified from the words Allahou Akbar.
It means something different.
Even the word martyrs when it comes to Islam means to those.
who are killed. This includes the children who have been killed, the women, the pregnant
moms who have been killed, the 34,000 people have been killed. We've seen the weaponization
of Islamophobia where certain words are deliberately mis-translated and misinterpreted. And we've
also seen, again, the overwhelming majority of these protesters are not saying these things.
We have videos of them. They include Jews. They include black people, white people, Christians, atheists.
That's just not true. They're saying it. They're saying it. They're saying it. This is absolutely a lie.
And this is exactly the problem. Terrorists.
By the way.
Please let me finish.
And by the way, Emma, I know you're on the losing side of the argument because you're always interrupting me in crystal.
Please just let me finish.
I'm asking you.
They were shouting all this chance.
Let me just finish.
They were calling me to commit suicide.
They attacked me physically and verbally.
Don't lie.
It wasn't one or two or three.
It was a large group of people.
And what you're trying to do is lying to the audience.
And I will not allow it.
Okay.
I said, you've made your point.
All right.
Don't lie.
I'm not.
I'm the one who was attacked.
You said, stop shouting everybody.
Don't try to sugar-goat.
Let him finish his point.
I'll come to you.
Just listen, Pierce, people on the ground, right?
You've said this before.
I've heard this.
People on the ground.
Reporters from NBC who were there.
Reporters from CNN, not anti-Sumites,
did not hear this.
They say overwhelmingly peaceful.
Jewish neighbors, Jewish faculty members,
Jewish students have said,
this is a mischaracterization of our community.
Campus Hallel,
Campus LL, the Center of Student Life in Colombia,
told students not to leave,
although they said that they want to feel safe
and they want...
Okay, I would say back to you.
I would say back to you...
Hang on.
I would say back to you that Rabbi Eli Bukler,
or Bukler, told students at Columbia on Sunday over WhatsApp,
the events of the last few days, especially last night,
have made it clear that Columbia University's public safety
and the NYPD cannot guarantee Jewish student safety
in the face of extreme anti-Semitism and anarchy.
It deeply pays me to say,
I would strongly recommend you return home as soon as possible
and remain home until the reality in and around campus
has dramatically improved.
It's not our job as Jews to ensure our own safety on campus.
No one should have to ensure it with a level of hatred,
let alone at school.
That's a rabbi at Columbia University.
These are not just peace-loving people,
spewing peaceful rhetoric.
There are people in these protests
who are making very threatening chance
towards Jewish people to the extent that rabbis are telling Jewish students to stay at home.
That's a complete outrage, isn't it?
And who responded after the rabbi, the Campus Hillel?
And if you know anything about Jewish American life, you should trust Campus Hallel's,
the center of Jewish American life.
Campus Hillel afterwards said, no Jewish students do not go home.
So Campus Hallel should be more trusted right now and the Jewish students who are, again,
part of this peaceful protest.
Because campus HAL wants to fight.
They don't want to run away from a fight.
looking at it as if it's not. The NYPD riot police was unleashed against these protesters.
And the police themselves said that these will peace were protesters.
For the extremists, you cannot. You cannot silence. That's why HALL don't want to go.
You cannot silence and shame a multi-faith and multiracial protest against Israel's collective
punishment against Palestinians. Let me bring, all right, let me bring, let me bring,
You can't.
Okay.
Let me bring back Saha.
Hang on.
Hang on.
If you talk over each other, nobody can hear either of you.
No one can hear either of you when you shout over each other.
I am the one who knows exactly what they are doing.
Okay, you said nobody will hear you when you shout over people.
So Saha, I want to just ask you, what are you going to do as a Jewish student now?
What will you do in the next few days and weeks?
Yeah, thank you for asking.
God willing, this evening, I'll be home and not on campus.
for the holiday of Passover.
And when I return to campus,
I've made a serious effort
to receive direct protection from the university
and have an escort on a regular basis.
But the university has, in the past, failed
and is continuing to not provide me
with that direct protection.
And so to be really quite honest with you,
I don't know what I will do.
Because I have seen hundreds of students
organized to call for the genocide of the genocide
genocide of me and my people and I have seen hundreds of students taunt visibly Jewish
students live and in person at these rallies. My peers are, I'm frightened by them to be frank
and I should be because I've been assaulted once and I don't see why it shouldn't happen again
because it's being organized and encouraged and protected by the rallies themselves and by the rally
organizers themselves. Again, when a student assault
me by jabbing me in the eye.
What happened afterwards was that the human blockade
of protest organizers,
of student leaders in these anti-Semitic rallies,
that blockade stopped me from finding out who my assailant was.
It's all about violence.
It's all about having a student assault another student
and then ensuring that they have immunity
because their face is covered in a kaffia
and because you let them run away.
This is how these protests are crafted
to create incidents of violence against
students like me and then say, oh, it wasn't us.
It was someone unaffiliated, but we protected them, but they're a student at the university,
but we let them into our rally and we let them stay at our rally.
It's a method, and it works, obviously.
Okay, we've got to leave it there.
I appreciate that passions are running high on either side, and I appreciate the spirited debate.
Thank you all very much.
Thank you.
