A landmark federal civil rights lawsuit has been initiated by Nerdeen Kiswani, a prominent Palestinian-American activist and founder of the pro-Palestinian organization Within Our Lifetime, against the far-right Zionist group Betar USA. The legal action, filed in the Southern District of New York, alleges a systematic campaign of violent intimidation, threats, and harassment spanning several months.
Kiswani, a naturalized U.S. citizen who arrived as a Palestinian refugee in childhood, asserts that Betar USA orchestrated a targeted campaign against her that transcended protected speech. The complaint details how the group utilized social media platforms to offer cash rewards for delivering beepers to Kiswani—a menacing reference to Israel’s 2024 use of exploding pagers against Hezbollah operatives in Lebanon. The lawsuit further describes physical confrontations where Betar affiliates allegedly cornered Kiswani on public sidewalks and at demonstrations while shouting threats.
The legal team from Lee & Godshall-Bennett LLP and Emery Celli Brinckerhoff Abady Ward & Maazel LLP contends that Betar unlawfully targeted their client. The group reportedly submitted Kiswani’s name to federal authorities during the Trump administration, advocating for the revocation of her citizenship and her deportation. This tactic aligns with Betar’s publicly acknowledged practice of collecting names of pro-Palestine activists for submission to government officials, which previously resulted in the harassment, arrest, and forced self-deportation of several international students in New York City.
The lawsuit invokes the Ku Klux Klan Enforcement Act of 1871, a Reconstruction-era statute originally designed to protect freed slaves and Republican activists from organized racial terror. The legal action aims to terminate what plaintiffs characterize as Betar’s “campaign of terror” against those opposing Israel’s actions in Gaza.
This development follows the recent dissolution of Betar’s New York chapter after an investigation by the state attorney general found the group repeatedly targeted individuals based on their faith and ethnic origin, specifically Muslim, Arab, Palestinian, and Jewish New Yorkers.
Founded in 1929 and recently obtaining US tax-exempt nonprofit status in July 2024, Betar USA describes itself as “loud, proud, aggressive and unapologically Zionist.” The group traces its origins to the right-wing Zionist ideologue Ze’ev Jabotinsky’s 1923 formation of a youth paramilitary organization in Latvia, formally named Brit Yosef Trumpeldor after a Jewish settler killed in a 1920 firefight with Palestinians.
The case represents a significant test of civil rights protections against organized intimidation tactics in the context of highly charged political discourse surrounding the Israeli-Palestinian conflict.
