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After Speaker Calls Oct. 7 a ‘Beautiful Day’ and Other Offenses, UNC Center One of Many Set to Close
In May, Students for Justice in Palestine poured red paint which resembles spilled blood on the steps of the South Building, an office for administrative staff and the chancellor at the University of North Carolina at Chapel Hill. Photo: UNCSJP/Screenshot
Several media outlets are reporting that the University of North Carolina (UNC) at Chapel Hill ’s Center for Middle East and Islamic Studies is scheduled to close in 2026. This comes as welcome news to all those who seek a fair and equitable environment on campus.
In 2021, this UNC center published a webinar that featured a map of the Middle East and Africa which erased Israel and replaced it with “Palestinian Occupied Territories.”
At one point, the webinar presenter spoke for more than six minutes while attendees looked at a slide saying “Free Palestine.”
In 2023, the same UNC center co-sponsored a notorious anti-Israel event in which one of the speakers, Dr. Rania Masri, said: “Oct. 7 for many of us from the region was a beautiful day.” Masri went on to fawn over Hamas paragliders and called for “the eradication of Zionism.” I attended the event. Not a single panelist, moderator, or UNC professor objected or even looked concerned. Several panelists openly agreed with Masri.
Within a week of my report of the event, the UNC Provost at that time sent a scathing letter to the current director of the UNC Center for Middle East and Islamic Studies, along with other faculty members:
I am not used to hearing members of the academy appear to be enthusiastic about violence against innocent human beings. Yet I see a recurring theme in the classroom, in seminars, in public statements, in emails I receive, and in the public square in which some scholars are unapologetic (at the least) about the rapes and murders of their fellow human beings. Do we have a contingent of faculty who think these things are necessary?…One thing is clear: from the outside, the academy appears to be fostering a banal kind of evil.
UNC repeatedly apologized for the “appalling remarks” made at the event. Months later, I met with a top UNC leader who had listened to the event recording I provided and appeared genuinely concerned and pained.
In 2019, the UNC Center for Middle East and Islamic Studies hosted and co-sponsored the Conflict Over Gaza conference, which made international news for featuring an antisemitic rap performance.
I attended a day of this three day Israel-bashing event. A large screen in the conference lobby played a photo collage on repeat, celebrating and glorifying Palestinian terrorism against Israel. I personally witnessed an invited anti-Israel panelist refuse to speak with a Jewish student from nearby Duke University who attended. It was appalling.
A panelist was asked by a local synagogue leader to contrast the Palestinian experience with the plight of more than 800,000 Jews who were expelled and exiled from Arab lands and Iran in the 20th century, with no “right of return” — along with Jordan’s expulsion of Jews from Jerusalem in 1948.
I was sitting close to the stage and heard the speaker talk off-microphone and tell the other panelists that she wasn’t interested in answering the question. Then, with audible disgust, the speaker told the audience it was a “dehumanizing” question.
I was in contact with Jewish UNC students and asked them why they did not attend. The students expressed they felt neither welcomed nor included, and they were fully aware of what lay ahead: three days dedicated to demonizing Israel.
Approximately two weeks after the event, antisemitic posters were found at the UNC library, which many viewed as a natural consequence of this antisemitic conference.
UNC ended up publicly apologizing for “inexcusable” comments made at this conference. One of the event organizers expressed a heartfelt apology to me during our in-person meeting.
In response to an antisemitism complaint filed with the US Department of Education stemming from this conference, UNC entered into a Resolution Agreement with the Department’s Office of Civil Rights, requiring UNC “to ensure that students enrolled in the university are not subjected to a hostile environment.”
The expected closure of the UNC Center for Middle East and Islamic Studies is a positive development that hopefully reduces the hate, antisemitism, and anti-Israel demonization that has been normalized at the university for years.
Peter Reitzes writes about antisemitism in North Carolina and beyond.
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Exclusive: Israeli Officials Harshly Critical of Steve Witkoff’s Influence on US Policy on Gaza, Iran, i24NEWS Told
US Middle East envoy Steve Witkoff, Washington, DC, Jan. 20, 2025. Photo: REUTERS/Carlos Barria
i24 News – Amid growing disagreements with the Trump administration over the composition of the Board of Peace for Gaza and the question of a strike on Iran, officials in Israel point to a key figure behind decisions seen as running counter to Israeli interests: Special Envoy Steve Witkoff.
The officials mention sustained dissatisfaction with Witkoff. Sources close to the PM Netanyahu told i24NEWS on Saturday evening: “For several months now, the feeling has been that envoy Steve Witkoff has strong ties, for his own reasons, across the Middle East, and that at times the Israeli interest does not truly prevail in his decision-making.”
This criticism relates both to the proposed inclusion of Turkey and Qatar in Gaza’s governing bodies and to the Iranian threat. A senior Israeli official put it bluntly: “If it turns out that he is among those blocking a strike on Iran, that is far more than a coincidence.”
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EU Warns of Downward Spiral After Trump Threatens Tariffs Over Greenland
European Union flags flutter outside the EU Commission headquarters in Brussels, Belgium, on June 17, 2022. Photo: Reuters/Yves Herman
European Union leaders on Saturday warned of a “dangerous downward spiral” over US President Donald Trump‘s vow to implement increasing tariffs on European allies until the US is allowed to buy Greenland.
“Tariffs would undermine transatlantic relations and risk a dangerous downward spiral. Europe will remain united, coordinated, and committed to upholding its sovereignty,” European Commission President Ursula von der Leyen and EU Council President Antonio Costa said in posts on X.
The bloc’s top diplomat Kaja Kallas said tariffs would hurt prosperity on both sides of the Atlantic, while distracting the EU from its “core task” of ending Russia’s war in Ukraine.
“China and Russia must be having a field day. They are the ones who benefit from divisions among allies,” Kallas said on X.
“Tariffs risk making Europe and the United States poorer and undermine our shared prosperity. If Greenland’s security is at risk, we can address this inside NATO.”
Ambassadors from the European Union’s 27 countries will convene on Sunday for an emergency meeting to discuss their response to the tariff threat.
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Israel Says US Gaza Executive Board Composition Against Its Policy
FILE PHOTO: Displaced Palestinians shelter at a tent camp in Khan Younis, southern Gaza Strip, January 14, 2026. REUTERS/Haseeb Alwazeer/File Photo
Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu’s office said on Saturday that this week’s Trump administration announcement on the composition of a Gaza executive board was not coordinated with Israel and ran counter to government policy.
It said Foreign Minister Gideon Saar would raise the issue with US Secretary of State Marco Rubio.
The statement did not specify what part of the board’s composition contradicted Israeli policy. An Israeli government spokesperson declined to comment.
The board, unveiled by the White House on Friday, includes Turkish Foreign Minister Hakan Fidan. Israel has repeatedly opposed any Turkish role in Gaza.
Other members of the executive board include Sigrid Kaag, the U.N. special coordinator for the Middle East peace process; an Israeli‑Cypriot billionaire; and a minister from the United Arab Emirates, which established relations with Israel in 2020.
Washington this week also announced the start of the second phase of President Donald Trump’s plan, announced in September, to end the war in Gaza. This includes creating a transitional technocratic Palestinian administration in the enclave.
The first members of the so-called Board of Peace – to be chaired by Trump and tasked with supervising Gaza’s temporary governance – were also named. Members include Rubio, billionaire developer Steve Witkoff and Trump’s son-in-law Jared Kushner.
