(New York Jewish Week) — Columbia University paid a Jewish student nearly $400,000 in a settlement after suspending them for spraying a novelty “fart spray” at an anti-Israel protest last year.
The settlement was revealed in a sprawling report on campus antisemitism released on Thursday by the House’s Committee on Education and the Workforce. The report runs more than 300 pages and is based on correspondence and other documents from several schools, many of them elite universities like Columbia. It depicts administrations struggling to respond to the October 7, 2023 Hamas attack and the large pro-Palestinian demonstrations and allegations of antisemitism that followed.
In one instance at Columbia, anti-Israel activists had claimed that Israeli students carried out a “chemical attack” against an unauthorized protest on Jan. 19 with “skunk spray,” a chemical used by the Israeli Border Police to disperse protests. The protesters claimed the alleged attackers were IDF veterans. The school said the NYPD was investigating.
The incident, and students’ claims that they had suffered adverse health effects from the spray, also garnered media attention, with Al Jazeera releasing a 15-minute video investigation of the affair.
But the House report said Columbia administrators failed to publicly correct the false claim of a chemical attack in a timely manner. The report said the school handed the offending students suspensions for a year and a half, even after learning in a disciplinary hearing that the incident involved a non-toxic gag “fart spray” and seeing receipts for the spray’s purchase from Amazon.
How universities responded to October 7
“While this conduct was inappropriate and a violation of University rules meriting discipline, it was also clearly a far less serious incident than characterized by anti-Israel activists or to the public,” the report said.
The incident is one of many detailed in the report in which university administrations debated how to respond to the October 7 attack and the campus turmoil it sparked. At Harvard University, according to correspondence cited in the report, the dean of the medical school successfully lobbied to have the word “violent” taken out of the university’s statement on the October 7 attack in order to avoid “assigning blame.” That Harvard statement also did not address an earlier declaration by student groups that blamed the Hamas attack entirely on Israel.








