Hamas hostage posters have been defaced throughout Harvard University, including disgusting graffiti referencing pedophile Jeffrey Epstein and blaming Israel for the Sept. 11 terrorist attacks. There is.
A poster for the youngest hostage, Kfir Bibas, who turned one year old last week, also had a despicable message: “He still has a head.”
“On the eve of the start of the new semester at Harvard University, all the Jewish hostage posters on campus were defaced with vile anti-Semitism,” says Harvard Divinity School student Alexander “Shabbos” Kestenbaum. Posted in X.
“Jews are neither safe nor welcome at Harvard,” he claimed.
The message on Vivas' poster was a disturbing reference to reports that an infant was beheaded in a massacre of about 1,200 people on October 7, when Hamas took 253 hostages.
Hamas had previously claimed, without providing evidence, that the ginger-haired child was killed along with his four-year-old brother Ariel and mother Shiri. His family still believes they are still alive.
A poster for Gad Hagai, 73, whose body is still being held by terrorists, says, “I knew Epstein personally,” but it was taken from a Manhattan prison in 2019. The lie was a reference to pedophile Jeffrey Epstein, who died by suicide while awaiting trial.
Another poster featuring Haggai's wife, Judith Weinstein Haggai, 70, of New York, shows her glasses shaded black.
“I'm blind, but I see Israel did 9/11,” a message is written on her head.
“Google dancing Israelis” is scrawled on the poster of Noah Al-Ghamani, 26. Noah Algamani became the face of the hostage crisis after he was caught on video being kidnapped from the Nova Music Festival.
The message references a 9/11 conspiracy theory involving five Israeli men known as the “Dancing Israelis” that a New Jersey woman witnessed on the roof of a white van in an apartment complex's parking lot.
Police arrested the group after they were found in possession of foreign passports and a box cutter knife, but they were released without charge after it was determined that they were working for a delivery company. According to ABC News.
Other defaced posters at Harvard included that of Romi Gonen, a 23-year-old woman who was also abducted from the music festival.
Her image has “Of course, Jean” scrawled on it, a phrase from “The Brady Bunch” that has evolved into a negative meme suggesting someone is lying.
Kestenbaum is one of six Jewish Harvard students suing the Ivy League school for discrimination for “not intervening and protecting us” amid rampant anti-Semitism after the Oct. 7 attacks. He is one of the students at the university.
The student, who is the only student named in the federal discrimination lawsuit, told the Post how he encountered anti-Israel demonstrators calling for a “global intifada” on his way to class one day. .
The intifada refers to the Palestinian uprisings, particularly from 1987 to 1993 and from 2000 to 2005, that left thousands of people dead.
Harvard University allowed students and faculty accused of engaging in anti-Semitic acts to remain on campus, and also provided “burritos and candy” to anti-Israel protesters, according to the complaint. It is said that there was.
Kestenbaum said Jewish students are afraid to return to campus for the spring semester because nothing has changed at the university.
The Post has reached out to Harvard University for comment.





