Columbia University Settles Lawsuit Alleging Failure to Protect Jewish Students
by Dion J. Pierre

Grimacing pro-Hamas activist partakes in an anti-Israel demonstration at the Columbia University campus, in New York City, US, Feb. 2, 2024. REUTERS/David Dee Delgado
Columbia University has settled a lawsuit in which it was accused by a student of neglecting its obligation to foster a safe learning environment amid riotous pro-Hamas protests that were held at the school throughout the final weeks of the academic year.
The resolution of the case, first reported by Reuters, calls for Columbia to hire a “Safe Passage Liaison” who will monitor protests and “walking escorts” who will accompany students whose safety is threatened around the campus. Other details of the settlement include “accommodations” for students whose academic lives are disrupted by protests and new security policies for controlling access to school property.
“We’re pleased we’ve been able to come to a resolution and remain committed to our number one priority: the safety of our campus so that all of our students can successfully pursue their education and meet their academic goals,” the university said on Wednesday in a statement shared with The Algemeiner.
A lawyer for the student who brought the suit — referred to as “C.S.” in court documents — heralded its outcome, saying it “sets the bar for how Columbia must protect its students.” He added, “The next step for Columbia is just as important: we’re looking toward a return to a real debate on campus.”
Filed in April, when anti-Zionist students first erected and began living in a “Gaza Solidarity Encampment” on the campus’ South Lawn, the complaint painted a damning portrait of Columbia’s handling of a situation that quickly exploded into a conflagration in which Jewish students were physically and verbally assaulted, outsiders infiltrated the campus, and protesters cheered terrorism while destroying school property.
Its main contention was that Columbia grossly erred in establishing virtual learning instead of enforcing school rules that prohibit unauthorized protests and clearing the encampment.
“By shifting to a hybrid model, Columbia acknowledges that it cannot guarantee and has taken no or, at best, insufficient steps to ensure the safety of its Jewish students,” the complaint alleged. “This response reflects a troubling reality: the campus environment has deteriorated to the point where the risk of violence and harassment is too high to maintain normal academic operations … This shift to hybrid learning also sends a troubling message: that violence and threats are effective in disrupting the educational experience and will not be met with immediate consequences, if at all.”
Columbia University faces other lawsuits alleging that it stood by while Jewish students endured maltreatment after Hamas’ massacre across southern Israel on Oct. 7.
Another, filed in the US District Court of Southern New York in February by the StandWithUs Center for Legal Justice (SCLJ), recounted dozens of antisemitic incidents that occurred after Oct. 7 which the university allegedly failed to respond to adequately because of anti-Jewish, as well as anti-Zionist, bias.
“F—k the Jews,” “Death to Jews,” “Jews will not defeat us,” and “From water to water, Palestine will be Arab” were among the chants shouted by students on campus grounds after the tragedy, violating the school’s code of conduct and never facing consequences, the complaint said. Faculty engaged in similar behavior. On Oct. 8, professor Joseph Massad published in Electronic Intifada an essay cheering Hamas’ atrocities, which included slaughtering children and raping women, as “awesome” and describing men who paraglided into a music festival to kill young people as “the air force of the Palestinian resistance.”
The complaint went on to allege that after bullying Jewish students and rubbing their noses in the carnage Hamas wrought on their people, pro-Hamas students were still unsatisfied and resulted to violence. They beat up five Jewish students in Columbia’s Butler Library. Another attacked a Jewish students with a stick, lacerating his head and breaking his finger, after being asked to return missing persons posters she had stolen.
Litigation in that case is ongoing.
The New York branch of the American Civil Liberties Union is also suing Columbia University because it suspended an anti-Zionist student group, Students for Justice in Palestine (SJP), whose members allegedly perpetrated the numerous antisemitic incidents reported by Jewish students. Filed in March, it described the members of SJP, an organization linked to Islamist terrorist organizations, as victims.
“These student groups were peacefully speaking out on a critical global conflict, only to have Columbia University ignore their own longstanding, existing rules and abruptly suspend the organizations,” Donna Lieberman, executive director of the New York Civil Liberties Union, said in a statement announcing the action. “That’s retaliatory, it’s targeted, and it flies in the face of the free speech principles that institutes of higher learning should be defending. Students protesting at private colleges still have the right to fair, equal treatment — and we are ready to fight that battle in court.”
Follow Dion J. Pierre @DionJPierre.
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