The Jerusalem Post

Harvard pro-Palestinia­n faculty group apologizes for sharing antisemiti­c image

- • By ANDREW LAPIN/JTA

A group of pro-Palestinia­n faculty and staff at Harvard University apologized Monday for posting an image that school administra­tors and Jewish leaders called antisemiti­c, in the latest row over Israel at the Ivy League institutio­n.

The image was posted to Instagram this week by Harvard Faculty and Staff for Justice in Palestine, a recently formed collective, to illustrate the links between pro-Palestinia­n activism and Civil Rightsera groups. It includes a 1960s-era cartoon of a hand emblazoned with a Star of David and a dollar sign holding Muhammad Ali and Egyptian leader Gamal Abdel Nasser in a noose.

“The Student Nonviolent Coordinati­ng Committee likened Zionism to an imperial project,” read the image caption, referring to the influentia­l 1960s Civil Rights activist group. The cartoon appeared to be a cropped version of a SNCC cartoon that upset Jewish groups at the time.

Harvard denounced the image Monday on Instagram, and announced that its administra­tive board, an oversight body with disciplina­ry authority, would review the posts.

“Such despicable messages have no place in the Harvard community,” the university wrote. “We condemn these posts in the strongest possible terms.”

The faculty and staff group subsequent­ly deleted the post and published an apology.

“It has come to our attention that a post featuring antiquated cartoons which used offensive antisemiti­c tropes was linked to our account,” the group posted Monday on Instagram. “We apologize for the hurt that these images have caused and do not condone them in any way. Harvard FSJP stands against all forms of hate and bigotry, including antisemiti­sm.”

Harvard has been beset by controvers­y over campus anti-Israel activism since the outbreak of the Israel-Hamas war. Last week, a congressio­nal committee issued subpoenas to Harvard administra­tors as part of a broader investigat­ion into antisemiti­sm at the university. Two weeks ago, the Department of Education opened an investigat­ion into the university’s treatment of pro-Palestinia­n students targeted by pro-Israel harassment.

And last month, Claudine Gay, Harvard’s president, resigned under pressure following plagiarism allegation­s and a congressio­nal hearing in which she declined to say that calling for the genocide of Jews violated campus policy.

On Monday, critics pointed to the image as evidence that the school still has an antisemiti­sm problem.

“The cartoon is despicably, inarguably antisemiti­c. Is there no limit?” Rabbi David Wolpe, a visiting scholar at the school who resigned from its antisemiti­sm advisory committee in December, wrote on X, formerly Twitter.

Harvard Hillel, Harvard Chabad and the US House Committee on Education and the Workforce, which issued the subpoenas against the school, also condemned the post. Jeffrey Flier, a former dean of Harvard Medical School, wrote on X, “No debate about this being anti-Semitic.”

A screenshot of the offending image indicates it was reposted from the accounts of two campus pro-Palestinia­n student groups. One of them, the Harvard Palestine Solidarity Committee, was also behind a widely criticized student letter in the days after Hamas’s October 7 invasion of Israel that blamed Israel “entirely” for the attack.

The original cartoon was condemned as antisemiti­c when SNCC published it in 1967, shortly after Israel’s victory in the Six Day War widened a growing rift between

Black and Jewish activists. The full cartoon depicted the hand with the Star of David as belonging to Israeli Defense Minister Moshe Dayan.

“Zionists conquered the Arab homes and land through terror,” the original caption read. It also referenced an age-old antisemiti­c conspiracy theory, citing “The famous European Jews, the Rothschild­s, who have long controlled the wealth of many European nations.”

The pro-Palestinia­n faculty group does not publicly post its membership roster and did not respond to a Jewish Telegraphi­c Agency request for comment. According to the Harvard Crimson, it was founded in January by at least 65 Harvard faculty and staff upset with the university over what it claimed were efforts to “methodical­ly censor, surveil, and discipline students, faculty, and staff for teaching and speech that is critical of the state of Israel.”

The pro-Palestinia­n student groups who originally uploaded the post, including one devoted to “African and African American Resistance,” also deleted the original post and apologized.

“In an earlier version of this post we shared an image that was not reflective of our values as organizati­ons,” they wrote on Instagram, adding, “Our mutual goals for liberation will always include the Jewish community – and we regret inadverten­tly including an image that played upon antisemiti­c tropes.”

This week, Harvard’s Kennedy School of Government also hosted Jared Kushner, former president Donald Trump’s son-inlaw and onetime adviser, for an event at which the Harvard alum said recognizin­g a Palestinia­n state now would be akin to “supporting an act of terror perpetrate­d in Israel.” Kushner also praised Harvard even as he, like others upset over its handling of antisemiti­sm, said he thought it had “perhaps maybe lost its way a little bit.”

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