Adam Elayan. (Canary Mission/Twitter) Canary Mission/Twitter
Adam Elayan

Adam Elayan, who was featured by United with Israel due to his violent anti-Semitic rhetoric, has rejected hatred and made his story public so that others will also “decide to make better choices.”

By JNS and United with Israel Staff

Canary Mission, an organization that documents anti-Semitic individuals and organizations on North American college campuses, has removed the profile of a Tuft’s dental student who had for years tweeted virulent anti-Semitism and called for violence against Israelis and Zionists.

In October 2020, United with Israel asked its readers to send a respectful message to Tufts’ president and dean asking them to investigate whether Adam Elayan violated the American Dental Association Principles of Ethics and Code of Professional Conduct and Tufts University School of Dental Medicine’s code of values and demanding that the university “remove him from the institution” if in fact he did violate those codes.

According to Canary Mission, after a “lengthy process” Elayan will now be featured on their “Ex-Canary” page due to the changes he has gone through since writing the tweets between 2012 and 2015. The Ex-Canary page is designed for individuals who have “shown moral courage to recognize their earlier mistakes, embracing tolerance and coexistence—despite social pressure from their peers,” according to the organization.

One crucial question it had for Elayan was what he meant by “anti-Semitism.”

“He confirmed that he meant the IHRA definition. After receiving his answer and being satisfied by the discussions he held with StandWithUs, it was appropriate to remove him from Canary Mission,” the organization said in a statement released on the JNS Wire on Monday.

Elayan says he wrote the tweets as an angry teenager after taking a trip to Jerusalem to visit family. “My guilt at my privilege, and my anger at their living conditions, left me looking for someone to blame. As a teenager, I directed my frustration at the Jewish people, posting comments on Twitter that were ugly and hateful,” he acknowledges.

He says his views changed as he grew older and learned more about the “complex issues in the Middle East.”

“With education and self-reflection, I learned I was unjustly blaming and demonizing an entire group of people,” he said. “Throughout college, a number of experiences helped me realize how misguided my anger at the Jewish community was.”

Elayan says he subsequently removed the anti-Semitic comments from his Twitter profile.

However, the tweets had already been noticed. When screenshots of them began surfacing online, Elayan said “it filled me with disgust to be associated with words that I saw to be hateful and wrong.”

Writing in JNS, he decided to make his story public in the hope that “someone who may harbor the kind of prejudice I used to will see that hatred towards others is a choice we make, and like me, decide to make better choices.”

Elayan recently reached out to StandWithUs, an organization that supports Israel and fights anti-Semitism. He particularly connected to Hussein Aboubakr, author of Minority of One: The Unchaining of an Arab Mind and an educator for the organization.

“We hope that this story helps others see what we see: That combating anti-Semitism is not just about pushing away hate but also bringing in new friends,” said the organization.

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