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Anti-Israel activist Nerdeen Kiswani sues Betar USA, alleging violation of civil rights
Times of Israel
Published about 9 hours ago

Anti-Israel activist Nerdeen Kiswani sues Betar USA, alleging violation of civil rights

Times of Israel · Feb 27, 2026 · Collected from RSS

Summary

The founder of radical anti-Zionist organization Within Our Lifetime accuses right-wing militant Zionist group of putting bounties on her and harassing her with beepers The post Anti-Israel activist Nerdeen Kiswani sues Betar USA, alleging violation of civil rights appeared first on The Times of Israel.

Full Article

JTA — The founder of radical pro-Palestinian group Within Our Lifetime has sued the right-wing militant Zionist group Betar USA, alleging that it violated her civil rights by putting out social media “bounties” on her and harassing her with beepers. Anti-Israel activist Nerdeen Kiswani announced she had filed the lawsuit on Wednesday evening. She accused the revamped historic Revisionist Zionist group of violating the Ku Klux Klan Act of 1871, which makes conspiring against an ethnic minority a federal crime. The lawsuit comes more than a month after Betar USA agreed to cease its operations in New York following a settlement with the state’s attorney general, which Kiswani’s lawsuit notes. The office of Attorney General Letitia James found that Betar USA had engaged in a “campaign of violence, harassment, and intimidation against Arab, Muslim and Jewish New Yorkers.” “For years, Betar USA stalked & harassed me even offering $1,800 for someone to hand me a beeper while I was pregnant,” Kiswani wrote on X. “Last month, the NY AG found they engaged in bias-motivated harassment and threats. Still, they faced no real consequences. So I’m filing a lawsuit.” She included a crowdfunding link for the suit, which has raised $4,000 in the first 16 hours. In a statement, Betar USA called Kiswani a “terror supporter” and called the suit “an attack on Zionism itself” that “represents a serious danger to American and diaspora Jewry.” In a follow-up post on X, the group also said it welcomed a deposition against Kiswani and Within Our Lifetime, adding, “Let’s see where the money is coming from and how much you’ve cost NYC.” Get The Times of Israel's Daily Edition by email and never miss our top stories By signing up, you agree to the terms Kiswani, an ethnic Palestinian born in Jordan who came to the United States as a refugee at 1 year old, has sparked outrage and accusations of antisemitism in New York and beyond with her pro-Palestinian activism and aggressive attitude toward Zionists. “We don’t want zionists in Palestine, NYC, our schools, on the train, ANYWHERE,” she tweeted after a man was arrested for allegedly calling to eject Zionists from a subway car. Protesters outside a New York City subway station, April 24, 2024. (Cathryn J. Prince) Within Our Lifetime originated as a branch of Students for Justice in Palestine before splintering off from the national group, accusing SJP of being insufficiently radical. Since then, Kiswani’s group has protested at exhibits honoring the victims of the October 7, 2023, Hamas atrocities; university Hillels; synagogues holding Israel real-estate events; and at gatherings where speakers have praised Hamas and/or where Jews have been assaulted. Kiswani’s prominence and activities within the pro-Palestinian movement have led to clashes with many ardent pro-Israel activists. In recent weeks, a tweet of hers also prompted far-right Jewish pro-Israel Rep. Randy Fine, of Florida, to make disparaging remarks about Muslims that have led to rising Democratic calls for his censure. But it’s Betar USA, whose members engage in similarly radical activity on the pro-Israel side, that is now facing a direct lawsuit from Kiswani. Her attorneys said Betar and its leadership, including founder Ronn Torossian and former executive director Ross Glick, had “conspired” against her by “subjecting her to a coordinated and sustained campaign of racial violence, and interference with her rights to use public accommodations to intrastate travel.” A Betar supporter films anti-Israel protesters who targeted the home of a UCLA regent in Los Angeles; a Betar member mocks pro-Palestinian protesters in New York; a sign attacking Betar and including the inverted-triangle symbol of Hamas in New Orleans. (Screenshots via Instagram) Kiswani’s suit homes in on several facets of Betar USA’s common rhetoric, including the group’s use of beepers as a meme, a reference to Israel’s 2024 pager operation against Hezbollah militants in Lebanon. The suit also says Betar members “privately and publicly agreed to track Ms. Kiswani’s whereabouts, follow her, and threaten, intimidate, and attempt to assault her.” In tweets directed at Kiswani that are still visible, Betar USA threatened to “denaturalize” the activist (after she criticized New York City Mayor Zohran Mamdani’s condemnation of pro-Hamas chants at protests) and wrote, “We will send many more of you to meet Allah” (in reference to Kiswani calling for “the abolition of Israel by any means necessary”). A protest led by Within Our Lifetime in Manhattan, September 17, 2021. (Luke Tress) Responding to the lawsuit, Betar USA spokesperson Jonathan Levy called the group “a mainstream Zionist movement that has played a central role in Jewish and Israeli history.” Betar traces its lineage back to Ze’ev Jabotinsky, the pre-state Revisionist Zionist revolutionary, and has insisted its actions are in line with mainstream Zionist and Israeli viewpoints. Levy added, “Calling Betar a terror group akin to the KKK is the same accusations we’ve heard calling the IDF a criminal army and labeling Zionism as genocide.” Glick did not mention the suit when speaking to a Jewish Telegraphic Agency reporter at a different New York protest on Wednesday evening before Kiswani’s lawsuit went public. He disparaged the AG’s settlement as “a lot of lies,” adding, “My position and Betar’s position is, look, we were reborn for self-defensive reasons, we weren’t on the offense.” The Ku Klux Klan Act of 1871 was also successfully used by a group of progressive Jewish attorneys to prosecute the neo-Nazi marchers in Charlottesville, Virginia, in 2017. That case’s legal victory earned broad praise for finding a creative way to hold hateful actions to account without violating First Amendment rights. Joseph Strauss contributed reporting.


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