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‘Draw a line in the sand, but don’t draw a swastika,’ Kraft foundation tells campus protesters

<i>Cooper Neill/Getty Images/File via CNN Newsource</i><br/>New England Patriots owner Robert Kraft at AT&T Stadium on October 1
Cooper Neill/Getty Images/File via CNN Newsource
New England Patriots owner Robert Kraft at AT&T Stadium on October 1

By Elisabeth Buchwald, CNN

New York (CNN) — People watching NBA playoff games on Tuesday night will view a new ad purchased by Robert Kraft’s Foundation to Combat Antisemitism telling them, “Don’t bring hate to the protest.”

“Scream until you’re red in the face. But don’t scream at the Jewish kid walking to class,” the 30-second ad states, featuring photos from protests since October 7th. “Draw a line in the sand, but don’t draw a swastika.”

The ad comes as antisemitism surges in America, particularly on college campuses where students protesting the Israel-Hamas war have, in some instances, harassed and physically assaulted Jewish students and faculty.

Kraft, the billionaire businessman who owns the New England Patriots and graduated from Columbia University, the epicenter of the wave of pro-Palestine protests on campuses, recently suggested that he could withhold donating to the university “until corrective action is taken.”

The ad is part of a new campaign he launched through his foundation to combat “Jewish hate and all hate,” according to a statement he made last week.

“Political issues should be debated – peaceful protests are a part of that. But there cannot be hate speech or intimidation,” Tara Levine, president of Kraft’s foundation said in a statement to CNN. “Our ad shows when protests create dialogue, but also when they cross the line into hate.”

Kraft similarly purchased a Super Bowl ad this year to highlight antisemitism, however, the ad did not focus specifically on campus protests.

University administrators have been in hot water over their responses to encampments on campuses. University of Chicago’s president Paul Alivisatos was the latest to authorize police to clear an encampment on Tuesday. Such actions have received considerable backlash over concerns of free speech suppression.

But administrators have said the protests have disrupted life on campus, threatened students’ security and broke school rules.

Biden to adress antisemitism

Ahead of the ad airing Tuesday night, President Joe Biden is set to deliver an address in Washington for the Holocaust Memorial Museum’s Days of Remembrance ceremony.

In the speech, he will address the long history of antisemitism and issue what one senior administration official familiar with the remarks described as a “call to action” on combatting antisemitism.

The campus protests, however, will not be a major section of the president’s remarks. Biden addressed campus turmoil last week after Columbia University’s Hamilton Hall was broken into as students and outside agitators barricaded themselves inside.

“Vandalism, trespassing, breaking windows, shutting down campuses, forcing the cancelation of classes and graduation – none of this is a peaceful protest,” the president said last week.

Police clear encampments

As university administrators continue to grapple with ongoing protests on campus, and some have chosen to call local law enforcement to clear encampments.

Charlotte Mecklenburg and University of North Carolina Charlotte campus police on Tuesday morning swept the small encampment that had been in place at UNC Charlotte’s campus since late-April and one person was arrested and charged with disorderly conduct and resisting arrest, according to the university.

Police also began clearing a protest encampment at the University of Chicago Tuesday morning. As the operation continued, police cordoned off the main entrance to the quad as protesters chanted. All of the protesters left without incident police made no arrests, the university said.

“Safety concerns have mounted over the last few days, and the risks were increasing too rapidly for the status quo to hold,” said university president Paul Alivisatos in a statement Tuesday. “This morning, the University intervened to end the encampment.”

MIT students given interim suspension notices

Dozens of students from Massachusetts Institute of Technology will receive interim suspensions from the school, according to the school’s Chancellor.

“As a consequence of events that have already occurred, dozens of interim suspensions and referrals to the Committee on Discipline are now in process,” MIT Chancellor Melissa Nobles wrote in a letter to students.

The actions by MIT were “necessary to ensure the safety of our community,” Nobles added.

MIT had previously ordered students to leave the encampment yesterday afternoon, according to a letter from MIT President.

Some defied the order according to an encampment spokesperson.

On Monday evening after the deadline passed protesters knocked down barriers surrounding the encampment, CNN affiliate WCVB reported.

MIT said that police were at the camp Monday but did not make any arrests, according to Kimberly Allen a spokesperson for MIT told CNN in an email.

The encampment remains on the university’s campus as of Tuesday afternoon, according to Francesca Riccio-Ackerman, an MIT student and Encampment Media Liaison.

Tents remain up, and the size of the encampment has increased since yesterday, Riccio-Ackerman told CNN.

CNN has reached out to MIT for the current status of the encampment but has not heard back.

An Israel Day event, to celebrate the formation of the State of Israel, is scheduled to take place later Tuesday in the same location as the encampment.

The-CNN-Wire
™ & © 2024 Cable News Network, Inc., a Warner Bros. Discovery Company. All rights reserved.

CNN’s MJ Lee, Andy Rose, Dianne Gallagher, Isabel Rosales and Devon M. Sayers contributed to this report.

Article Topic Follows: CNN - Business/Consumer

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