Israel supporters rally at Columbia after Ivy League prez drops deadline for tent protesters to leave

Several hundred pro-Israel protesters rallied outside Columbia University on Friday after the university signaled it had given up trying to clear out the tent encampments and dropped a demand that hundreds of protesters clear out this week.

The group, waving Israeli and American flags, lined Broadway while chanting “Bring them home now!” and “Let my people go” — demands for Hamas to free hostages taken in its Oct. 7 terror siege — as NYPD officers looked on.

Several attendees held large milk cartons emblazoned with pictures and names of the hostages who are still being held in the Gaza Strip.

A protester replaced the graffiti reading “Free Palestine” with “Free Hostages.” DANIEL WILLIAM MCKNIGHT
A protester replaced the graffiti reading “Free Palestine” with “Free Hostages.” DANIEL WILLIAM MCKNIGHT
Pro-Israel supporters waving American and Israeli flags outside Columbia’s campus.
Pro-Israel supporters waving American and Israeli flags outside Columbia’s campus.

Hours before the Friday morning protest, Columbia officials backtracked on the deadline for the students to leave the encampment on the university’s lawn — caving in as the protesters refused to leave and drew out negotiations with administrators.

An 11 p.m. Thursday update from Columbia made no mention of a Friday deadline, which the administration initially announced following an extension of an earlier demand to leave by midnight Wednesday.

On Friday morning, the anti-Israel protesters hobnobbed with “Squad” Reps. Alexandria Ocasio-Cortez (D-NY) and Jamaal Bowman (D-NY), who stopped by the tent setup but exited out the Amsterdam Avenue gates — apparently bypassing the pro-Israel demonstrators altogether.

“The people who are making those tents, I don’t know if most of them realize what they’re protesting against,” a rabbi told The Post of the student protesters in the encampment.

“I have 13 grandchildren in Israel … they are constantly having to leave wherever they are because an indiscriminate missile is being sent their way,” the rabbi added.

“You cannot live this way. Israel has been living this way for years. And [Hamas] said they would like to do it again!” he lamented.

Demonstrators held signs with pictures and names of the remaining hostages in the Gaza Strip. Getty Images
Demonstrators held signs with pictures and names of the remaining hostages in the Gaza Strip. Getty Images

One pro-Israel protester was spotted spray-painting over graffiti that read “Free Palestine” with the phrase “Free hostages,” while another man papered over both phrases with small stickers of the hostage posters.

Many of the protesters wore shirts with slogans including “Free our hostages” and held blue signs that read “#EndJewHatred.”

A man in a Columbia shirt wore an Israeli flag as a cape and clutched a handmade sign that read “#MeToo UNless you’re a Jew,” referring to the United Nations’ seeming reluctance to acknowledge the sexual violence inflicted on Israeli women on Oct. 7.

The NYPD looked on while several hundred protesters occupied the sidewalk. DANIEL WILLIAM MCKNIGHT
The NYPD looked on while several hundred protesters occupied the sidewalk. DANIEL WILLIAM MCKNIGHT

“Me being here is helping the Jewish community here that is feeling that they are not safe. It’s showing support for my people,” 13-year-old Ethan Friedman told The Post.

Assemblyman Jake Blumencranz (R-Long Island) said he “would like to see the governor finally deploy the National Guard” at the school.

“It’s disgusting to see the reality that the students have to face every single day while trying to get an education at the school they paid for,” he scoffed.


Follow The Post’s coverage of the anti-Israel protests at Columbia University:


Some of the protesters held large milk cartons with the hostages’ photos emblazoned on them. DANIEL WILLIAM MCKNIGHT
Some of the protesters held large milk cartons with the hostages’ photos emblazoned on them. DANIEL WILLIAM MCKNIGHT

The scene Friday was more peaceful than on Thursday night, when the United March for Israel unleashed chaos at the campus gates.

At one point, a pro-Israel protester moved toward a counterdemonstration and yelled, “You want to get raped, you want to get murdered?,” according to the Columbia Spectator.

Anti-Israel protesters also confronted a pro-Israel supporter with shouts of, “Go back to Europe!,” prompting a shoving match that nearly erupted into a sidewalk brawl, according to a video from indie reporter Oliya Scootercaster.

One protester held a sign that read “#MeToo UNless you’re a Jew.” DANIEL WILLIAM MCKNIGHT
One protester held a sign that read “#MeToo UNless you’re a Jew.” DANIEL WILLIAM MCKNIGHT
The scene Friday was more peaceful than on Thursday night, when the United March for Israel unleashed chaos at the campus gates. NYPJ
The scene Friday was more peaceful than on Thursday night, when the United March for Israel unleashed chaos at the campus gates. NYPJ
At one point, a pro-Israel protester moved toward a counterdemonstration and yelled, “You want to get raped, you want to get murdered?,” according to the Columbia Spectator. NYPJ
At one point, a pro-Israel protester moved toward a counterdemonstration and yelled, “You want to get raped, you want to get murdered?,” according to the Columbia Spectator. NYPJ
Anti-Israel protesters also confronted a pro-Israel supporter with shouts of, “Go back to Europe!,” prompting a shoving match that nearly erupted into a sidewalk brawl, according to a video from indie reporter Oliya Scootercaster. NYPJ
Anti-Israel protesters also confronted a pro-Israel supporter with shouts of, “Go back to Europe!,” prompting a shoving match that nearly erupted into a sidewalk brawl, according to a video from indie reporter Oliya Scootercaster. NYPJ

The event — which was framed as a “unity march of Christians and Jews” by the Columbia Jewish Alumni Association — featured music from Christian musician Sean Feuct, the Spectator said.

“I felt more scared out here at the gates than I felt on campus all week — it was really terrifying,” one student said of the clash between the two sides.