Samira Baraki

Overview

Samira Baraki has spread hatred of Israel at Loyola University Chicago (Loyola), where she co-sponsored a Boycott, Divestment, Sanctions (BDS) movement resolution as a student senator in 2015.

As of September 2018, Baraki’s LinkedIn page said she graduated from Loyola in 2015 with a bachelor’s degree in Biology.

As of the same date, Baraki’s LinkedIn said she been an Executive Director at the RLJ Companies, LLC since February 2018, as well as a “Business/Entrepreneur” in the greater Los Angeles area.

Hatred of Israel

On March 10, 2015, Baraki featured [00:01:08] in a promotional video for Loyola Divest on Youtube, in which she claimed that Israel “sterilizes 50% of Ethiopian women upon entrance into Israel.”

The libel that Israel sterilized Jewish Ethiopian women was based on a flawed report by Ha’aretz.  

BDS Activism

Baraki posed fora photo published on Loyola Divest’s Facebook page in March 2015, to promote the group’s 2015 BDS campaign. In the photo, she held a sign reading: “I SUPPORT LOYOLA DIVEST.” On March 8, 2015, she promoted the BDS campaign on her personal Facebook page. 

In 2015, Baraki co-sponsored a Loyola Divestment resolution titled “Divestment from Companies Profiting from the Illegal Occupation of the Palestinian Territory To ensure adherence to Loyola’s University Chicago’s Socially Responsible Investment Policy.” 

The resolution resolved to urge the Loyola’s Chief Investment Office to collaborate with “students, faculty and staff” to “create and enforce a publicly available socially responsible investment policy and the Shareholder Advocacy Committee that will ensure that Loyola is upholding its Jesuit Catholic mission and Jesuit values in regard to investments” and divest from “corporations profiting from human rights violations committed against the Palestinian people.”

The resolution invoked the 2005 Palestine civil society call for BDS, and quoted Al Jazeera, claiming  that “Israel had been buying and ‘weaponizing’ Caterpillar bulldozers then using them to demolish Palestinian homes, build settlements and the separation wall, clear land to build Jewish-only roads, uproot olive and fruit trees, and carry out military operation [sic].”

The resolution, which was the third such proposed in as many years, passed on March 24, 2015, after an initial tie vote. In response to the resolution, Loyola University President Michael J. Garanzini wrote an open letter, titled “Endorsing a Community of Dialogue” to the student body. 

Garanzini’s letter decried the divestment resolution as a divisive, harmful and ineffective way to conduct discourse about the situation in Israel and the Palestinian territories. 

BDS

The Boycott, Divestment, Sanctions (BDS) movement was founded by Omar Barghouti in 2005 to challenge “international support for Israeli apartheid and settler-colonialism.” BDS is an allegedly “Palestinian-led movement,” although leading BDS activists have admitted [00:01:01] this is not true. 

One of the demands of BDS includes [point 3] what is generally known as the “right of return,” a demand discredited as a way to eliminate Israel. Barghouti said the “right of return” is a means to “end Israel’s existence as a Jewish state.”  

Barghouti has said that BDS “aims to turn Israel into a pariah state, as South Africa once was.”

In his activism, Barghouti has also said [00:05:55] regarding Israel: “Definitely, most definitely, we oppose a Jewish state in any part of Palestine. No…rational Palestinian, not a sellout Palestinian, will ever accept a Jewish state in Palestine.”

The movement has been linked to numerous terrorist organizations and received a public endorsement from Hamas in 2017.

BDS initiatives include calling on institutions and individuals to divest from Israeli-affiliated companies, promoting academic and cultural boycotts of Israel, and organizing anti-Israel rallies, protests and campaigns.

The movement’s most notable achievement has been the infiltration of university campuses through lobbying for “BDS resolutions.” In these cases, student governments and student groups, backed by their own anti-Israel members and affiliates, have proposed resolutions on some form of boycott of, or divestment from, Israel and Israeli-affiliated entities.

Boycott resolutions, although non-binding, have been passed by student governments on numerous North American campuses.


BDS activity is often aggressive and disruptive. It has been noted that universities that pass BDS resolutions see a marked increase in anti-Semitic incidents on campus. On one campus, when the student government debated a BDS resolution, reports emerged of violent threats against those opposing it.



Social Media and Weblinks

Facebook:https://www.facebook.com/561797347 [Deactivated]