A petition to remove a Yale professor from her post after she sent out a number of tweets supporting and celebrating the Hamas terror attacks in Israel has garnered 35,000 signatures.
The petitiontitled ‘Remove Zareena Grewal from Yale faculty for promoting LIES and VIOLENCE’, refers to a series of tweets sent by Grewal, a professor of Ethnicity, Race and Migration in the wake of the barbaric attacks in Israel the weekend.
On October 7, Grewal wrote: ‘My heart is in my throat. Prayers for Palestinians. Israeli (sic) is a murderous, genocidal settler state and Palestinians have every right to resist through armed struggle, solidarity. #FreePalestine.’
Several days later, as the depravity of the Hamas attacks became clear, Grewal wrote in response to a tweet from Israeli Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu: ‘No government on earth is as genocidal as this settler colonial state.’
She also retweeted posts in recent days claiming that Israel has a ‘crazy bloodlust’ and that those who support the Jewish state would have posted ‘I stand with slave owners’ during rebellions.’
Zareena Grewal has posted many times in support of Palestinian terrorists since the brutal attacks began on Saturday
The petition has now collected at least 35,000 signatures two days after it was posted
On October 8, Grewal retweeted a video of a news report about the brutal Hamas attacks with the caption: ‘It was such an extraordinary day!’
In a student-written article to the Yale Daily News, the school defended Grewal’s right to exercise free speech.
A spokesperson for the Ivy League institution said: ‘Yale is committed to freedom of expression, and the comments posted on Professor Grewal’s personal accounts represent her own views.’
It is not clear whether Yale will take action or conduct a review of Grewal’s messages.
The school’s Jewish chaplain, Jason Rubenstein, told the outlet that he “wants the Yale administration, while not compromising on freedom of expression and academic freedom, to also respond to these statements for what they are: fundamental challenges for the ethos of belonging at Yale.’
“We would like this professor — and everyone at Yale — to state what should be obvious: that she cherishes and will protect every member of the Yale community, including Jews along with everyone else,” he said.
Rubenstein went on to point out that Hamas has taken the lives of members of the Yale community, including Matthew Eisenfeld of the class of ’93, who died in a 1996 Hamas bombing in Jerusalem, and Eitan Neeman, clinical fellow at the medical school that was killed by Palestinian terrorists over the weekend.
“When a member of the Yale community—faculty or student—raises their voice in support of Hamas, we think not of geopolitics, but of the fact that this person is advocating for an organization that not only declares its intent around members of our community, but did it,” he said.
The petition, written as a member of the class of 2025, has received approximately 35,000 signatures (as of 7:00 p.m. Thursday night) in the two days it’s been up.
It read, in part: ‘Condoning violence, advocating a terrorist organization, and historical revisionism and inaccuracies are all ideas contrary to the values of Yale University.’
Grewal ‘proved unequivocally that she has no right to be in her current role or in the field of education if she war crimes against civilians to be acts of resistance.’
More than 34,000 people have signed a petition demanding that Yale University remove Grewal from its faculty
An Israeli army self-propelled howitzer fires rounds near the border with Gaza in southern Israel on October 11.
A house left in ruins after an attack by Hamas militants on this kibbutz days earlier when dozens of civilians were killed near the border with Gaza.
‘Worse than ISIS’: Photo of bloodied child’s bed posted by Israeli Prime Minister Netanyahu
According to her university biographyGrewal is a “historical anthropologist and a documentary filmmaker whose research focuses on race, gender, religion, nationalism, and transnationalism across a broad spectrum of American Muslim communities.”
Her first book is described as “an ethnography of transnational Muslim networks connecting American mosques to Islamic movements in the post-colonial Middle East through debates about the reformation of Islam.”
In her X (formerly Twitter) bio, she describes herself as a ‘Yale prof’ and ‘radical Muslim.’
She probably recently, limited access to her tweets.
On Saturday, Iran-backed Palestinian terrorists stormed Israel in a coordinated attack that has so far claimed the lives of 1,200 Israelis, some of whom were raped, burned alive and mercilessly beheaded by Hamas operatives.
Israeli Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu declared war soon after, and on Thursday the IDF counteroffensive was in full swing. This has so far involved the aggressive bombing of Gaza, as well as rockets sent into Syria and Lebanon.
Gaza is preparing for a possible ground offensive that will further escalate the conflict. Netanyahu vowed revenge for his people and death to all agents of Hamas.