JERUSALEM, Israel – Within just a few weeks, anti-Israel protests have expanded to occupy U.S. campuses coast to coast.
Given the overall coordination, officials are questioning whether these demonstrations go beyond a spontaneous student movement to a more well-funded outside operation.
Jack Landstein described what it’s becoming like to be a Jewish student on one campus.
“Being a Jewish student at the University of Michigan right now, it’s definitely a scary and uncomfortable time. There’s a lot of anti-Semitism on our campus and it’s extremely unsettling,” he admitted.
Landstein described some of what he’s witnessed
“So it’s a lot of chants from the river to the sea, Palestine will be free, intifada, intifada; bullhorns going through the school of business, go through the undergraduate library, making it very challenging for students to do work and focus. I sometimes worry about wearing my star of David outside of my shirt,” he explained.
Landstein is not alone.
Dr. Jay Greene, a senior research fellow and an educational policy expert at the Heritage Foundation, told CBN News the protesters have an unmistakable goal. “What they’re clearly doing is they’re very clearly signaling to Jewish students that they’re not welcome on campus, that they’re not being protected by the
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