Outgoing Cornell University president Martha Pollack, who will leave office at the end of June, was criticized this week for issuing a statement which praised pro-Hamas protesters and painted their detractors as bigots.
Pollack’s remarks followed a student group’s ending a “Gaza Solidarity Encampment” it had erected on campus and lived in for three weeks. In them she expressed “gratitude” for the students’ conduct and said they “minimized the disruption caused” to university business despite that Jewish students complained that their rhetoric was discriminatory, inciting, and disruptive.
Pollack then launched a volley of seemingly underhanded comments at Jews and pro-Israel activists who opposed the demonstration, saying, “The participants in the encampment shared that members of our Jewish community who have criticized Israel have been targeted with the slur ‘kapo,’ which not only is deeply offensive but also trivializes the memory of the Holocaust.”
She continued, “Other students involved in the encampment shared experiences of being called ‘terrorists’ over the past few months in an expression of anti-Arab discrimination and hatred. No matter one’s political beliefs, using such rhetoric, which questions the basis of someone’s religious, cultural, ancestral, or any form of identity is unacceptable, and I implore everyone in our community to think carefully about their words.”
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