Multiple leaders of anti-Israel protests on college campuses across the country have been revealed to be paid members of groups linked to George Soros.
Three of the leading figures in the pro-Palestinian camps at American universities are members of the Soros-funded American Campaign for Palestinian Rights (USCPR), as reported by The New York Post.
USCPR “community” fellows receive up to $7,800 for their work, while “on-campus” fellows receive between $2,880 and $3,660 for spending eight hours a week organizing “campaigns led by Palestinian organizations.”
The organization instructs its comrades to “rise up” and bring about “revolution,” while specifically telling them to reject “reform.”
He has received at least $300,000 from Soros’ Open Society Foundations since 2017.
Several leaders of anti-Israel protests across the country have been revealed to be employees of George Soros.
Former University of Texas Students for Justice in Palestine president Nidaa Lafi (center) was seen giving a speech at the campus camp on Wednesday.
Meanwhile, at Yale, USCPR member Craig Birckhead-Morton was arrested after occupying the Beinecke Plaza school on Monday.
In Berkeley, Berkeley Law Students for Justice in Palestine co-president Malak Afaneh (fourth from right) has been speaking at the campus protest this week.
One of them, former University of Texas Students for Justice in Palestine president Nidaa Lafi, was seen giving a speech at the campus camp on Wednesday.
Lafi is currently studying law at Southern Methodist University in Dallas after graduating from UT last year.
The former intern for the late Democratic Congressman Eddie Bernice Johnson was arrested in January for blocking the route of President Joe Biden’s motorcade in Dallas for the funeral of her former boss, Rep. Johnson.
Meanwhile, at Yale, USCPR member Craig Birckhead-Morton was arrested after occupying the Beinecke Plaza school on Monday.
He was an internal Democratic representative from Maryland. Juan Sarbanes.
In Berkeley, Berkeley Law Students for Justice in Palestine co-president Malak Afaneh is a familiar face in the pro-Palestine protests and has been speaking at the campus protest this week.
Afane previous headlines this month, when she was one of the students who hijacked a dinner with the dean of the law school and turned it into an anti-Israel rally.
The organization instructs its comrades to “rise up” and cause a “revolution,” while specifically telling them to reject “reform.”
The controversial protests on American campuses are organized by branches of the far-left group Students for Justice in Palestine (SJP), funded by Soros-related nonprofits.
She accused the dean’s wife of assaulting her after she was asked to leave the dean’s house.
The controversial protests on American campuses are organized by branches of the far-left group Students for Justice in Palestine (SJP), funded by Soros-related nonprofits.
Tensions continue to rise in Columbia, where hundreds of pro-Palestine protesters are demanding that the institution divest from companies with ties to Israel.
So far, more than 100 protesters have been arrested in the ‘Gaza Solidarity Camp’, which is made up of a coalition of 116 groups under the umbrella organization Columbia University Apartheid Divest.
Several of the coalition groups have received backing from left-wing donors, including a group currently under investigation for alleged fundraising for terrorist organizations.
One of the key actors in the coalition is Students for Justice in Palestine (SJP), which Gazette Reports emerged in support of the October 7 attack that killed 1,200 Israelis.
Tensions continue to rise at the Ivy League school, where hundreds of pro-Palestine protesters are demanding that the institution divest from companies with ties to Israel.
It has emerged that one of the groups in the camp, Students for Justice in Palestine, has links to another group under investigation for alleged fundraising for terrorists. SJP members, including this one in the photo, have been suspended for their participation in the camp.
The SJP receives funding from American Muslims for Palestine (AMP), according to the Anti-Defamation League, which describes AMP as an organization that holds “extreme anti-Israel views.”
Last year, Virginia Attorney General Jason Miyares announced that his office was investigating AMP over allegations that they may have been raising funds for terrorist organizations.
SJP is also a branch of the Westchester People’s Action Coalition that supports boycott, divestment and sanctions, the Green New Deal and other left-wing initiatives.
WESPAC is named “fiscal sponsor” of SJP, according to NGO Monitor, and has assets of more than $1,000,000.
Several of the group’s members are among those who have been excluded from participating in the sit-in.
Another central player in the camp is Jewish Voice for Peace, which has received millions from various donors, including George Soros’ Open Society Network.
Since 2016, the group has obtained at least $650,000 from Soros-backed organizations.
Other donors have included the Rockefeller Brothers Fund, whose director, Nicholas Burns, resigned in 2017 over his support of JVP.
Columbia was forced to cancel all in-person classes for the rest of the semester amid the turmoil.
Divest Apartheid Columbia University is made up of 116 groups and claims on its website that it represents thousands of students at nine schools.
Both JVP and SJP have been involved in solidarity protests at other universities, including NYU, Yale, MIT, and Harvard.
Columbia canceled in-person classes, dozens of protesters were arrested at New York University and Yale, and the gates of Harvard Yard were closed to the public on Monday as some of America’s most prestigious universities tried to calm campus tensions over the Israel’s war with Hamas.
Columbia University Apartheid Divest states on its website that it represents thousands of students at nine schools.
Other groups forming the coalition include the Young Democratic Socialists of America, Columbia Queer and Asian, the African Student Association, Columbia University Students for Human Rights and the Teachers College Abolition Collective.
The coalition began the sit-in after Columbia President Minouche Shafik’s testimony before Congress about anti-Semitism on campus.
The stunt entered its seventh day today and has already seen billionaire donors, including Robert Kraft, withdraw their funds and earn condemnation from the White House.
The coalition’s three demands focus on divesting all of Colombia’s finances, including profits from “Israeli apartheid, genocide and occupation in Palestine,” severing all ties with Israeli universities, and opposing “the appropriation of land, whether in Harlem, Lenapehoking or Palestine. ‘.
The group seeks a ceasefire in Gaza, where more than 34,000 Palestinians have been killed in retaliatory attacks by Israel.