Cornell University, Campus Police Investigating ‘Horrendous’ Antisemitic Threats Made Toward Jewish Students

Police are investigating several posts calling for violence against Jewish students attending Cornell University in New York.
Cornell University, Campus Police Investigating ‘Horrendous’ Antisemitic Threats Made Toward Jewish Students
Cornell University in Ithaca, New York, on June 9, 1995. BOB STRONG/AFP via Getty Images
Stephen Katte
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Cornell University Police Department (CUPD) are actively investigating online posts on a website unaffiliated with Cornell University containing threats of violence directed at Jewish students across the New York-based campus.

A Jewish student group at the university, Cornell Hillel, released an Oct. 29 statement calling attention to threats directed toward the building at 104 West, which houses the kosher and multicultural dining hall. Threats were also made against Jewish students, faculty, and staff.

“The Cornell University administration has been made aware of this concerning language, and the Cornell Police Department is monitoring the situation and is on-site at 104 West to provide additional security as a precaution,” the student group said.

“At this time, we advise that students and staff avoid the building out of an abundance of caution. We will continue to provide updates as additional information becomes available.”

In an Oct. 29 statement, Cornell University president Martha Pollack said the series of antisemitic messages threatening violence to the university Jewish community was “horrendous.”

“Threats of violence are absolutely intolerable, and we will work to ensure that the person or people who posted them are punished to the full extent of the law,” Ms. Pollack said.

“Our immediate focus is on keeping the community safe; we will continue to prioritize that,” she added.

According to Ms. Pollack, CUPD will remain on-site to ensure students and community members are safe. The FBI has also been notified of a potential hate crime.

The CUPD has said the evidence they have found so far suggests the “targeted locations were intentionally selected because of the perpetrator’s bias.”
The police have also called for the community to come forward with any information that might help them with their inquiries.

Jewish Students Feel Terrified, Abandoned

Cornell student leader Annie Vail took to X, the platform formerly known as Twitter, to share screenshots of some of the messages on a Cornell discussion forum calling for extreme violence against Jewish people. She also revealed that Jewish students are scared to leave their rooms in the wake of the threats.

Another Cornell student, Zoe Bernstein, and the president of the student group “Cornellians For Israel” told the Jerusalem Post that the climate on campus had been increasingly tense since everyone returned on Oct. 10 after the Fall break.

Terrorist organization Hamas attacked Israel on Oct. 7, killing over 1,400 people in Israel and taking several hundred hostages back to the Gaza Strip.
Israel responded with a declaration of war and has been launching military retaliation strikes against Hamas targets in the Gaza strip since. According to the Hamas-run health ministry in Gaza, over 8,000 have been killed—a figure which Israel says includes many individuals belonging to Hamas.

Ms. Bernstein says it’s “terrifying to be a Jewish college student right now” and that the shared sentiment among students across campuses right now is they have been abandoned.

“We feel as though, if any other minority group was experiencing half of what we have since October 7th, their cries for help and support would have been heeded and addressed more promptly, and with greater force and decisiveness than what we have experienced,” he said.

According to Ms. Bernstein, sidewalks on campus were vandalized with antisemitic, accusatory graffiti on Oct. 25. The university’s newspaper, The Cornell Review, covered the story.
Pushing back against the anti-Israel rhetoric, the Israeli government screened an Oct. 23 graphic and unedited video of the atrocities committed by Hamas terrorists during their Oct. 7 attack. The footage was collated from various sources, including body cameras worn by Hamas terrorists, vehicle dashboard cameras, social media accounts, and cellphone videos.
So far, the footage of the massacre has only been seen in its entirety by journalists and other key personnel in Israel. The attendees of Israeli government’s press conference were not allowed to record the video compilation out of respect for the dead.

Universities Already in Hot Water

Universities across the United States have found themselves in hot water over comments made by staff and students regarding the war. Several Harvard student organizations in the United States had backtracked on support for an Oct. 8 open letter justifying the actions of Hamas in its war against Israel after intense backlash.

Authored and publicly released by the Harvard Undergraduate Palestine Solidarity Committee (PSC) through its Instagram page, the letter was co-signed by more than 30 other student organizations and stated they held “the Israeli regime entirely responsible for all unfolding violence.”

People demonstrate calling for a cease-fire amid war between Israel and Hamas, at Grand Central Station in New York City on Oct. 27, 2023. (KENA BETANCUR/AFP via Getty Images)
People demonstrate calling for a cease-fire amid war between Israel and Hamas, at Grand Central Station in New York City on Oct. 27, 2023. KENA BETANCUR/AFP via Getty Images

Russell Rickford, an associate professor of history at Cornell University, went viral on Oct. 15 for a rant that saw him say he was initially “exhilarated” by Hamas’s attack on Israel.

His remarks were met with strong opposition from Ms. Pollack and Board of Trustees Chair Kraig Kayser who released a joint statement saying Mr. Rickford’s views do “not reflect Cornell’s values.”

“This is a reprehensible comment that demonstrates no regard whatsoever for humanity,” the statement read. “The University is taking this incident seriously and is currently reviewing it consistent with our procedures.”

His entire speech was reported in the Cornell Review, as was his apology following the backlash.
Stanford University president Richard Saller also had to release an Oct. 11 statement after a “Non faculty instructor” reportedly downplayed the Holocaust and singled out students “based on their backgrounds and identities.” In response, the instructor in question was removed from teaching duties pending an investigation.
According to Mr. Saller, the university had also been receiving complaints about banners, signs, and chalking on campus that express views that many found offensive.
“Thus, many of the banners and signs have been removed, because they were in places where they are not allowed,” Mr. Saller said.
“Moreover, it is worth remembering that while a climate of free expression requires breathing room, our aspiration as a community is for respectful and substantive discourse.”
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