Students from the University of Washington and Georgetown University from across the country gathered to praise Hamas terrorists who massacred 1,300 Israelis over the weekend, plunging the region into a bloody war.
At the University of Washington, several Jewish students were captured on video in tears as they begged an administrator to end the pro-Palestinian rally, during which students condoned violence against Israel and the Jewish people.
‘They want our people dead. They want to kill us,” a student sobs to an administrator who appears to listen, but indicates he can do nothing.
‘How do you allow this? Why don’t you stop this?’ she asked through uncontrollable tears. ‘Please end it. Please,” she begged.
The event on the red square of the campus it had been advertised by a radical student group who said their goal was to “elevate the righteous Palestinian resistance” and “condemn the settler-colonial state of Israel.”
Flyers for the event featured a drawing of a paraglider similar to the one that militant Hamas terrorists used last Saturday to fly into southern Israel and slaughter dozens of innocent concertgoers.
Georgetown’s Students for Justice in Palestine chapter put up flyers that read: “Glory to our Martyrs,” referring to the Hamas terrorists who massacred 1,300 Israelis this weekend
Another video, taken in the Red Square, shows pro-Israeli and pro-Palestinian protesters facing off as anger boils over on both sides and face-to-face confrontations break out.
At Georgetown University in Washington DC, students held a vigil for the Palestinian martyrs who died and killed Israelis this weekend.
“Glory to our martyrs,” read one sign hanging directly above the other, which read, “Justice = Peace.”
‘Do you support decolonization as an abstract academic theory? Or as a tangible event?’ read a sign written by the group Students for Justice in Palestine.
The students endorse the barbaric weekend attacks as a ‘tangible’ step towards ‘decolonization’.
Jonathan Neman, a Georgetown graduate and co-founder and CEO of Sweetgreen, commented on the post: “As a Georgetown alum, I find this very sad to see.”
Neman is among the CEOs who said he supported hedge fund billionaire Bill Ackman’s request that Harvard University unmask the identities of the students who signed a letter supporting the Palestinian cause — including the Hamas attacks — to ensure that they are never hired by his company.
Anti-Israel demonstrations have cropped up at virtually all elite US schools in the time since Hamas terrorists attacked the Jewish state in a coordinated land and air strike on Saturday morning.
The indiscriminate killing of women, children, the elderly and innocent men was accompanied by beheadings, the burning of families alive and the destruction of peaceful kibbutzim, destroying entire communities.

The NYPD responded to an attack in progress on Wednesday, October 11 around 6:10 PM. The row erupted after 19-year-old Maxwell Friedman was confronted about pulling down posters of Israelis kidnapped by Hamas.

An Israeli army self-propelled howitzer fires rounds near the Gaza border in southern Israel on October 11

‘Worse than ISIS’: photo of bloodied child’s bed, posted by Israeli Prime Minister Netanyahu

A house in ruins after an attack by Hamas militants on this kibbutz days earlier, killing dozens of civilians near the Gaza border
At the Ivy League University in New York City, Columbia, a 24-year-old Israeli student was physically assaulted on Wednesday evening.
At Yale University in New Haven, Connecticut, an associate professor applauded Hamas’ brutal attacks and called Saturday’s massacre an “extraordinary day.”
Shortly after the attacks began in Israel, Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu declared that the country was once again at war with its hostile neighbor and that the mission is to wipe every Hamas member off the face of the earth.
The IDF has since launched a number of counter-offensive attacks, including some 6,000 bombs launched into Gaza.
The death toll in Israel is reported to be 1,300, while that in Gaza has risen to around 1,500 since the fighting began. Many thousands on both sides of the conflict have also been injured.