Muna Jayyusi
Muna Jayyusi participated in the pro-Hamas encampment at UofT from May 2024 to July 2024. Jayyusi has spread anti-Semitism, expressed support for terrorism and called for Israel’s destruction.
Jayyusi posted Instagram videos from the encampment on May 3, 2024, and from a protest march to the encampment on May 4, 2024. She also posted on Instagram a July 3, 2024 video of another protest march, the last day of the encampment.
On May 11, 2024, Jayyusi posted on Instagram videos from a protest march titled: “76 YEARS OF NAKBA / RESISTANCE UNTIL RETURN,” which ended at the UofT encampment.
The term “Nakba” is generally translated as “catastrophe” in Arabic, referring to the outcome of the 1948 Arab-Israeli War. It is a term used to delegitimize the creation of the State of Israel by drawing a comparison to the Holocaust, known in Hebrew as the Shoah, meaning “catastrophe.”
Among Palestinians and anti-Israel activists, the term “resistance” is a euphemism for nationalistic terror and is used to glorify and encourage anti-Israel and anti-Semitic violence.
UofT is located in Toronto, Ontario, Canada.
Muna Jayyusi’s Participation in the Pro-Hamas Encampment at the University of Toronto (UofT)

On May 2, 2024, activists from the UofT Occupy for Palestine (Occupy UofT) group “stormed down” [00:00:24] the fencing around UofT’s Kings College Circle and set up a pro-Hamas encampment, which they called the “People’s Circle for Palestine.”
That day, Occupy UofT called on “community members to…help us defend our encampment” at an emergency rally in the evening. Protesters chanted [00:02:59] for “intifada” and celebrated “resistance” [00:02:45]. Both terms are calls for terrorism. The activists also chanted [00:01:28; 00:02:21] for Israel’s destruction multiple times.
One speaker, Nabil Jalbout, said [00:09:02]: “...we are not fighting for peace, we are fighting for liberation, because ‘peace’ is a white man's word.” Another speaker, Ahmad Jarrar Hajahmad, claimed [00:05:52]: “All these Israeli and Zionist entities fill all these politicians with money in their pockets…we already know who runs this system…”
Signs displayed at the encampment said: “LONG LIVE THE INTIFADA” and “LIBERATION FOR ALL REQUIRES RESISTANCE FROM ALL.”
On May 4, 2024, anti-Israel protesters at the encampment assaulted a Jewish man, punching him in the stomach as they forcibly took his Israeli flag. The attackers told the man [00:01:02]: “God bless the armed resistance,” and: “Go back to Europe!” They also reportedly called him “a “dirty Jew.”
Protesters “occupied” [00:00:17] the area from May to July 2024, despite UofT’s warning they were trespassing. The group said they would not leave until UofT divested from companies that “sustain Israeli apartheid, occupation and illegal settlement of Palestine” and terminated partnerships with Israeli academic institutions.
Following the October 7, 2023 massacre of nearly 1,200 Israelis, the inverted red triangle - 🔻- became a Hamas symbol. This symbol appeared on large signs at the encampment multiple times. Erin Mackey, one of the primary organizers, is openly pro-Hamas, having used the symbol in her activism. In addition, pro-Hamas marches that began in other parts of the city concluded at the encampment.
On July 3, 2024, the Ontario Superior Court of Justice issued an injunction at the request of UofT’s Governing Council, requiring students to clear the encampment. Occupy UofT dismantled the encampment and wrote [slides 5-6]: “We are just getting started…come fall, every incoming student will hear our message loud and clear…Whatever institution you have access to and influence over - you need to take this campaign there!” The statement concluded: “Long live the intifada.”
The encampment was one of over 140 pro-Hamas and anti-Israel college encampments set up in North America, and over 20 more globally, in the spring of 2024. The first began on April 17, 2024, at Columbia University. The encampments were unofficially known as the “student intifada,” borrowing a term associated with terrorist violence.
Protesters harassed Jewish students, blocked Jews from campus facilities and shouted anti-Semitic slogans. They occupied campus grounds, in many cases illegally, caused property damage, violently took over buildings, celebrated terrorism and promoted the Boycott, Divestment, Sanctions (BDS) movement.
Activists set up encampments to oppose Israel’s right to wage war against the Hamas terror group following October 7, 2023, when Hamas murdered approximately 1,200 people, including 32 American and 8 Canadian citizens. Hamas also kidnapped 252 people, including 11 Americans and the bodies of 2 murdered Canadians. As of May 26, 2024, 125 hostages remained in Hamas captivity.
For more information on the October 7, 2023 terror attacks, see the Canary Mission page on Hamas.
On January 7, 2024, Jayyusi posted on Instagram a video that showed [00:00:01] a poster of Adolf Hitler with the caption: “Never Again!” Hitler transformed into Israeli Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu with the caption now reading: “Again!”
The International Holocaust Remembrance Alliance (IHRA) highlights as one possible contemporary example of anti-Semitism: “Drawing comparisons of contemporary Israeli policy to that of the Nazis.” The U.S. State Department adopted the IHRA’s working definition of anti-Semitism in 2016. Over 40 countries have adopted the definition as well.
The same Instagram video that Jayussi posted on January 7, 2024, also celebrated terrorists [00:00:12] throwing Molotov cocktails and it further portrayed [00:00:53] Jesus as a Palestinian being murdered by an Israeli soldier.
The accusation that the Jews are the killers of Jesus has historically fed into Christian anti-Semitism.
On December 26, 2023, Jayyusi posted on Instagram a screenshot of a post that said: “To Israel: You can’t say ‘never again’ while committing a literal genocide. You can’t bring up the Holocaust while detaining Palestinians, including children, in concentration camps…”
The phrase “Never Again” is deployed as a general declaration against genocide, invoking the Nazis’ war of extermination against the Jews.
On October 18, 2023, less than two weeks after the Hamas terror attack against Israel, Jayyusi posted a video from an anti-Israel protest in Toronto, where activists chanted: “There is only one solution: intifada revolution!”
The term “intifada” translates from Arabic as “uprising” or “insurrection” and carries the connotation of terrorist violence, including suicide bombings, hijackings, shootings and stabbings.
On October 7, 2023, Hamas murdered approximately 1,200 Israelis, kidnapped hundreds and wounded thousands. War crimes included mass rape and torture. Many Palestinian civilians participated in and supported the attacks, and Gazans working in the targeted Israeli communities gave intelligence to Hamas on where to strike.
For more information, see the Canary Mission page on Hamas.
As of August 2024, Jayyusi’s Instagram profile photo said: “FROM THE RIVER TO THE SEA.”
“From the River to the Sea, Palestine will be Free” is a chant used [00:02:47] to call for the elimination of the State of Israel. It has also been employed by Hamas leader Khaled Mashal to call for the replacement of Israel with an Islamic state. In April 2024, the U.S. House of Representatives passed a resolution condemning the chant as antisemitic.
Muna Jayyusi is a supporter of the Boycott, Divestment, Sanctions (BDS) movement.
As of August 2024, Jayyusi’s LinkedIn profile said she had been a project manager at Hariri Pontarini Architects (HPA) in Toronto since February 2023. She began at HPA in June 2015.
Also as of August 2024, Jayyusi’s LinkedIn said she studied “Building Information Modelling Revit” at Humber College (Humber) from 2012 to 2013, and received a bachelor’s in architecture from University of Jordan. Humber is located in Toronto, Ontario, and University of Jordan is located in Amman, Jordan.
As of August 2024, Jayyusi’s profile on Archinect.com said she was located in Toronto, Ontario.