France Deports Gazan Scholarship Student Who Called for More Dead Jews
Well, if you call for Jews to be killed and glorify the master of Genocide himself, what do you think is going to happen?

In a stark reminder that words can wield as much destruction as weapons, 25-year-old Nour Attaallah, a Gazan student granted a French government scholarship to flee the war-torn strip, has been deported to Qatar after her social media history revealed a torrent of virulent antisemitism. Posts from the past two years, now deleted but unearthed by authorities, included explicit calls for the killing of Jews and glorification of Adolf Hitler, turning what was meant as a humanitarian lifeline into a cautionary tale of unchecked hatred.
Attaallah arrived in France on July 11th to study at Sciences Po Lille under a program evacuating Gazan students from conflict. But the discovery of her inflammatory content, vetted too late by French and Israeli officials, prompted quick action. The Foreign Ministry's statement was unequivocal: "Given their seriousness, Ms. Attaallah could not remain on French territory." Foreign Minister Jean-Noel Barrot branded the remarks "unacceptable" and "hateful," their venom a direct affront to the values of tolerance that underpin such initiatives.
The fallout extends beyond one individual: the entire Gaza student evacuation program has been frozen pending a thorough probe into the oversight. How many aspiring scholars now face dashed hopes? The ministry cites privacy, but the ripple effect is clear, innocent dreams derailed by the poison of prejudice. For France, a nation grappling with its own surges in antisemitism since October 7, this incident clearly demonstrates the peril of overlooking hate, even in gestures of goodwill.
Attaallah's expulsion to Qatar highlights a bitter irony: escaping one cycle of violence only to be undone by promoting another. In a world still shadowed by the Holocaust's lessons, her words evoke chilling echoes, a betrayal not just of her hosts but of humanity's shared struggle against bigotry.