Posted on 10/10/2023 1:15:39 PM PDT by lightman
In the wake of Hamas’ brutal surprise attack against Israel, 34 Harvard student organizations recently signed a joint statement blaming Israel for the attack and expressing support for Palestine.
“We, the undersigned student organizations, hold the Israeli regime entirely responsible for all unfolding violence,” the letter read.
“The apartheid regime is the only one to blame. Israeli violence has structured every aspect of Palestinian existence for 75 years.”
To date, the Hamas invasion has killed over 900 Israeli citizens, and at least 11 American citizens. Reports of Hamas raping Israeli women, and videos of militants holding Israeli children in cages, have flooded social media. In one violent spectacle, Hamas militants paraded the naked, dead body of a German woman through the streets of Gaza in the back of a vehicle.
In some cases, Hamas terrorists even uploaded images or videos of their victims on the victims’ own social media accounts.
Despite such horrific brutality, the Harvard student groups offered Hamas their public support and blamed Israel for the murder and rape of its own citizens.
Townhall has identified the student leaders of several of those groups. Their names are listed below.
Graduate Student Leaders Whose Groups Support the Hamas Invasion
Harvard Muslim Law School Association
Hussain Awan ’25 (Co-President)
Hussain Awan is a second-year student at Harvard Law School. This past July, Awan worked as a law clerk at the Supreme Court of Pakistan, under Justice Syed Mansoor Ali Shah.
Before that, Awan worked in Tunisia as a legal intern for the International Institute for Democracy and Electoral Assistance (IDEA). IDEA is an “intergovernmental organization (IGO) with a mandate to support sustainable democracy worldwide.” IDEA also received $320,000 from George Soros’ Open Society Foundation between 2016 and 2017.
Reema Doleh ’25 (Co-President)
Reema Doleh is a second-year student at Harvard Law School. This past summer, Doleh worked as a legal intern for Legal Services NYC. Before that, she worked as a paralegal in Manhattan District Attorney Alvin Bragg’s office from January 2022 to July 2022.
Ariq Hatibie ’24 (Executive Board Member)
Ariq Hatibie is a third-year student at Harvard Law School. Hatibie is currently the Editor in Chief of the Harvard Human Rights Journal.
This past summer, Hatibie worked as a summer associate at White & Case LLP. The previous summer, Hatibie worked as a legal intern for TRIAL International, a Soros-funded legal group which claims to fight against “impunity for international crimes and supporting victims in their quest for justice.”
Additionally, Hatibie works as a research assistant for Harvard Law Professor Salma Waheedi. In 2022, Waheedi signed a letter with Harvard faculty expressing “solidarity with the Palestinian people in their struggle for freedom and self-determination.”
In the letter, Waheedi and her colleagues claim “Unwavering US financial, military, and political support has fueled an apartheid system that institutionalizes the domination and repression of Palestinians.”
Waheedi currently teaches a course on “Law, Human Rights, and Social Justice in Israel-Palestine.”
Saeed Ahmad ’24 (Executive Board Member)
Saeed Ahmad is third-year student at Harvard Law School. He currently works as a Research Assistant to Professor Intisar Rabb, in Harvard’s Program in Islamic Law.
This past summer, Ahmad worked as a Summer Law Clerk at the Supreme Court of Pakistan, under Justice Syed Mansoor Ali Shah. After graduation, Ahmad will work as an associate for the prestigious law firm Sidley Austin LLP, according to his LinkedIn.
Saeed is also a member of the Harvard South Asian Law Students Association, another student group that signed the statement supporting Hamas.
Hejir Rashidzadeh ’25 (Executive Board Member)
Hejir Rashidzadeh is a second-year student at Harvard Law School. This past summer, Rashidzadeh worked as an associate at Alston & Bird, a prestigious law firm known for its intellectual property work.
Hurya Ahmed ’25 (Vice President of Communications)
Hurya Ahmed is a second-year student at Harvard Law School. This past summer, Ahmed interned with the United States Securities and Exchange Commission from June 2023 to August 2023.
Undergraduate Student Leaders Whose Groups Support the Hamas Invasion
African American Resistance Organization
Leadership
Kojo Acheampong ’26 (Co-Founder) Kiersten B. Hash ’25 (Co-Founder) Amari M. Butler ’25 (Co-Founder) Clyve Lawrence ’25 (Co-Founder) Prince A. Williams ’25 (Co-Founder)
Harvard Islamic Society
Leadership
Maryam Tourk ‘25 (Co-President)
Harvard Undergraduate Ghungroo
Leadership
Hana Rehman '25 (Director) Jasleen Kaur ’25 (Director) Karina Mahida ‘25 (Director)
Harvard Undergraduate Nepali Students Association
Leadership
Anusha Adhikari ’26 (Co-President) Ishan Tiwari ‘25 (Co-President) Samaga Pokharel ‘26 (Communications VP) Kashish Bastola ’26 (Advocacy VP) Aashish Palikhey ‘26 (Finance VP)
They say lists are dangerous. I say lists are great fun and needed. Whomever is keeping the master list please put these names at about the midpoint.
Sick. And maybe these terrorist supporters should be on a watchlist? 🤔
Which US Court has trials under Islamic Law?
It would be interesting to see what happens if their addresses were released.
They might not like it if their lives were disrupted.
The ages old and still on-going charade that the Ivy League schools are anything special has to be ended. A graduate of a decent State University is just as competent on average and a lot more bearable on an interpersonal level.
An individual who worked his or her way through a state university knows more about the world and how it works than some Ivy League scholarships leech.
Many still think the US is the 1980’s US.
It is not.
I joined the USAF in 2001. I would not join now.
A country without borders isn’t a country.
Demographics is destiny.
That’s what 4chan is for.
Lol. Not one American among them. Deport immediately.
Ivy League MBAs are important due to who you meet, not what you learn.
The same books are used in numerous schools.
It’s the competition of getting in, and then the connections one makes.
I WOULD NEVER HIRE ANY OF THEM EITHER
WHY are ANY OF THESE CRETINS EVEN IN THE USA?????
I joined the USAF in 2001. I would not join now.
A country without borders isn’t a country.
Demographics is destiny.
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Same here. I joined the navy in 1991. You couldn’t pay me to join now and I would do everything in my power to keep my kids from joining.
Not long from now the value of a “harvard” education will be valued less than one from Penn College - or an equivalent trade school.
You did it to yourselves, Hahhhhvaaaad. Is there a way PDJT II can deplete their endowment so that they can stop damaging our country I wonder?
They use illegal immigration like they use everything else - as a means to gain more power.
They have captured every institution, so everything becomes a power struggle within institutions, for control.
And the way to gain power within these institutions is to always be more to the left.
Nothing will change until we have Regime Collapse. Institutional recapture or reform is impossible.
It sucks. Joining was the turning point in my life.
Agreed.
Once you realize that Democrats feel that both the US and Israel are on stolen land with no right to exist, their actions make sense.
They came here to get an education, and they’ll use it against us when they leave. Wait, they’re using it against us now.
Yes photos would help with the unmasking before they infest a business.
Let these immoral pricks know about this: https://twitter.com/CovfefeKatie/status/1711107398428225754
and also about the 40 babies found murdered in a village, many beheaded;
and also about the grandmother who was murdered in her home, and the savages took a picture of her dead body and posted it on FaceBook.
Anyone who could back these scumbags is, themselves, a scumbag.
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