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Nov. 5 Campus Attacks: From Protest to Violence
Students for Justice in Palestine activists at the Toronto Metropolitan Univ. violently stormed an event featuring an Israeli speaker. Students Supporting Israel campus chapters routinely host Israeli veterans to discuss their experiences fighting Hamas terrorists. Activists used a drill bit to shatter a glass door, causing cuts and abrasions on multiple victims. SSI released a statement: “Broken glass. Blood everywhere. All because we’re Jewish – and tried to open dialogue.”
On the same day, about 40 anti-Israel activists disrupted a similar SSI event at Louisiana St. Univ. The students barged in banging pots and pans, shouting for Israel’s destruction. One protester boasted that they “greatly outnumbered the Zionist students.” About 1,000 miles away, the Univ. of Maryland student government unanimously passed a resolution calling to ban former Israeli soldiers from speaking on campus because their presence is “harmful to students and the community.”
Dalia Ziada – a liberal Egyptian Muslim – who works for a U.S. organization that studies anti-Jewish hate, recently posted: “Anti-Zionism is used as a politically correct cover for antisemitism, and antisemitism is the platform for anti-Americanism.”
Remembering Kristallnacht: When Words Became Violence
Eighty-six years ago, Nazi rhetoric turned into action. Long before the night of shattered glass – Kristallnacht – of Nov. 9, 1938, German Jews had already been pushed to society’s margins through propaganda, boycotts and laws that stripped away their rights and livelihoods.
State-run newspapers spread conspiracy theories blaming Jews for Germany’s defeat in World War I and for the country’s economic collapse. Schoolbooks and radio programs taught children to see Jews as subhuman. Businesses were marked, professional licenses revoked and citizens were discouraged from buying goods at Jewish-owned stores.
In a single night, Nazi forces, Hitler Youth and civilian mobs burned 1,400 synagogues, destroyed 7,000 Jewish-owned businesses and arrested 30,000 Jewish men who were sent to concentration camps. German authorities stood by as mobs looted businesses, torched synagogues and murdered nearly 100 Jews. The “Night of Broken Glass” shattered not only windows – the coordinated attacks began to shatter Jewish life across Europe.
Kristallnacht Commemoration Hijacked in Norway
Norway’s prime minister attended a recent Kristallnacht memorial event organized by anti-Israel organizations rather than a commemoration organized by the Oslo Jewish community. “I cannot recall a European leader engaging in Holocaust denigration like this,” stated Dani Dayan, chair of Israel’s Yad Vashem Holocaust Museum. “He misused the anniversary of the Pogrom to partner with those who seek to leave the Jewish people stateless and defenseless again.”
Eighty-six years after Kristallnacht, its lesson still stands: when societies tolerate propaganda and excuse hate – it never stops with just words.
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