George Soros has funneled over $15 million in the last seven years to the pro-Hamas groups behind the terror-sympathizing protests following the October 7 attack on Israel, a report revealed.
The far-left billionaire’s grantmaking network, the Open Society Foundation, distributed $13.7 million through Tides Center, a “deep-pocketed lefty advocacy group that sponsors several nonprofits who’ve justified Hamas’ bloody attacks,” a New York Post review of the foundation’s records revealed.
Beneficiaries of the Tides Center include the Adalah Justice Project, which posted an image to Instagram of a bulldozer tearing part of Israel’s border fence down on the day Hamas terrorists carried out a massacre of over 1,400 Israelis.
View this post on Instagram
The caption read, “Israeli colonizers believed they could indefinitely trap two million people in an open-air prison… no cage goes unchallenged.”
The project, based out of Illinois, advertises being a “Palestinian-led advocacy organization based in the U.S. that builds cross-movement coalitions to achieve collective liberation.”
“Our work is rooted in the conviction that drawing the linkages between US policy abroad and repressive state practices at home is crucial to shifting the balance of power,” their website states.
The activist group occupied U.S. Rep. Ro Khanna’s (D-CA) office on October 20 after he “refused” to sign a resolution calling for a ceasefire in Gaza.
Hey @rokhannausa, why is it again that you can't call for a ceasefire?
— #EndTheSiegeOnGaza (@AdalahJustice) October 23, 2023
We will continue to push you and your colleagues in Congress to send a clear message: you cannot continue with business as usual while Israel commits genocide in Gaza with full U.S. backing.#CeasefireNOW pic.twitter.com/YitPQym2ct
Adalah’s members also cosponsored a rally in New York City’s Bryant Park that day, “where hostile demonstrators spewed antisemitic chants,” and displayed a sign reading “I DO NOT CONDEMN HAMAS,” the Post reported.
Open Society Foundations also awarded $1.5 million to Adalah’s founding nonprofit, Adalah – The Legal Center for Arab Minority Rights in Israel, but as the publication revealed, only $800,000 of it was received before they cut ties with the American organization in 2018.
Adalah – The Legal Center for Arab Minority Rights in Israel spokesperson Ari Remez said Open Society Foundations “has been generously supporting our work on defending the human rights of Palestinians under Israeli control for many years, and we are grateful for their immense contribution to this effort.”
Soros also contributed $30,000 in 2020 to the NYC South Asian immigrant group Desis Rising Up and Moving, another cosponsor of the Bryant Park protest where 139 people were arrested.
Soros’s foundation also doled out $60,000 in 2018 to the Arab American Association of New York, a group cofounded by leftist anti-Israel activist Linda Sarsour that organized the October 21 “Flood Brooklyn for Palestine” protest in Brooklyn, where protestors reportedly “called for the eradication of Israel and held a sign of the Israeli flag in a trash basket that read ‘Please keep the world clean!'”
Other Soros-backed Hamas-sympathizing groups include Jewish Voice for Peace and If Not Now, which were given $650,000 and $400,000, respectively. Both groups were also cosponsors of the Bryant Park rally, and both had members who were among the “insurrectionists” occupying the U.S. Capitol on October 18.
Jewish Voice for Peace also participated in the occupation of Rep. Khanna’s office, as well as claimed that “Israeli apartheid and occupation — and United States complicity in that oppression — are the source of all this violence,” in reference to the brutal murder of Israeli civilians.
Soros, a Hungarian American Jew and Holocaust survivor, has a reported net worth of $6.7 billion according to Forbes. The magazine reported that the progressive philanthropist has distributed more than $15 billion to nonprofits through his Open Society Foundations, which he founded in 1993.