Hamas hostage posters defaced at Harvard with sick Jeffrey Epstein, 9/11 conspiracy theories

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Hamas hostage posters defaced at Harvard with sick Jeffrey Epstein, 9/11 conspiracy theories

Hamas hostage posters have been defaced across Harvard University — with images showing sick graffiti referencing pedophile Jeffrey Epstein and blaming Israel for the September 11 terrorist attacks.

Even the youngest hostage poster, Kfir Bibas, who turned 1 last week, has been tagged with a vile message that reads, “Stay.”

“The night before Harvard started the new semester, every Jewish hostage poster on campus was defaced with vile anti-Semitism,” Harvard Divinity School student Alexander “Shabbos” Kestenbaum posted on X.

“Jews are not safe and not welcome at Harvard,” he claimed

The message on the poster for Kfir refers to reports that babies were beheaded during the slaughter of some 1,200 people on Oct. 7, when Hamas also took 253 hostages.

Hamas previously claimed that the ginger-haired child was killed along with his 4-year-old brother, Ariel, and his mother, Shiri, without providing evidence.

His family still believes they are alive.

A poster of Hamas hostage Kfir Bibas, who is only 1 year old, was defaced with vile messages at Harvard. Shabbos Kestenbaum/X

A poster of Gad Haggai, 73, whose body is still being held by terrorists, reads, “I know Epstein personally,” a lie referring to pedophile Jeffrey Epstein, who died of suicide while awaiting trial in a Manhattan jail cell in 2019.

Another poster featuring Haggai’s wife, Judith Weinstein Haggai, a 70-year-old New Yorker, shows her glasses tinted black.

“I’m blind and I can see Israel doing 9/11,” read the message covering his head.

A message about Jeffrey Epstein was scrawled on a poster of the murdered Gad Haggai’s hostage. Shabbos Kestenbaum/X

“Google the dancing Israelis” was written on a poster of Noa Argamani, the 26-year-old who became the face of the hostage crisis when video showed him kidnapped from the Nova music festival.

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The message refers to a 9/11 conspiracy theory involving five Israeli men dubbed the “dancing Israelis,” who were observed by a New Jersey woman on the roof of a white van in the parking lot of her apartment building.

Police arrested the group after they were found with foreign passports and box cutters – but they were released without charge when it was determined they worked for a delivery company, according to ABC News.

One poster contained a 9/11 conspiracy theory about “dancing Israel.” Shabbos Kestenbaum/X

Among the other vandalized posters at Harvard was one of Romi Gonen, a 23-year-old woman who had also been kidnapped from a music festival.

“Sure, Jan,” was written on her image, a catchphrase from “The Brady Bunch” that has evolved into a derogatory meme that suggests someone is lying.

Kestenbaum is one of six Jewish Harvard students suing the Ivy League school for discrimination over its “reluctance … to step in and protect us” amid rampant antisemitism following the Oct. 7 attacks.

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The student, the only one named in the federal discrimination lawsuit, told The Post about how he was confronted one day on his way to class by anti-Israel protesters who called for “a global intifada.”

Intifada refers to the Palestinian uprising, specifically from 1987 to 1993 and 2000 to about 2005, which resulted in thousands of deaths.

According to the lawsuit, Harvard has allowed students and faculty accused of engaging in antisemitic acts to remain on campus – even once pelting anti-Israel protesters “with burritos and candy.”

Kestenbaum said Jewish students are afraid to return to campus for the spring semester because nothing has changed at the university.

The Post has reached out to Harvard for comment.

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Source: thtrangdai.edu.vn/en/