A religious studies teacher at a Catholic school has been suspended and reported to the police after saying that Hamas had “committed no crime”.
As reported by the Telegraph, Ronan Preastuin, a Year 9 tutor, also described the Oct 7 attacks as a “justified act of resistance” and called for “Glory to Hamas”, adding: “The destruction of the racist state of #Isarel [sic] is coming soon.” The report continues:
A string of recent social media posts by Mr Preastuin, who teaches at Ursuline High School, a Catholic girls’ school in Wimbledon, south-west London, included hatred of the state of Israel. In one post he wrote: “Israel is not a true Jewish state, but an inversion and perversion of Judaism.”
The teacher also prayed for God to grant victory to Hamas over “the grotesque, barbaric, idol-worshipping invaders IDF.”
In November 2021, the Government announced that Hamas had become a proscribed terrorist organisation in the UK – meaning that its members or those who invite support for the group could be jailed for up to 14 years.
In correspondence seen by The Telegraph, Eoin Kelly, Ursuline High School’s head teacher, confirmed that Mr Preastuin has been reported to the police, that he has been suspended from work, and that the school had opened an internal investigation.
Mr Preastuin’s posts were first exposed by the GnasherJew website on April 23 2024, and a few hours later Mr Preastuin removed his account on X, formerly Twitter.
Among his other posts, he wrote: “So yes October 7 was a justified act of resistance under a brutal and crushing occupation”.
On Jan 25 2024 he posted: “I’m delighted to infirm [sic] you monsters, Hamas committed no crime, IsraelinIreland. Their actions were entirely legitimate resistance to a criminal state masquerading as Jewish, colonising their country.”
Worth reading in full.
Since Israel’s military response to Hamas’s October 7th terrorist attack on its southern Kibbutzim, the FSU has regularly been asked where the legal line between free speech and ‘hate speech’ is drawn, specifically in the current context.
In response, we’ve produced two comprehensive set of FAQs on the issue for our members.
One relates to freedom of expression, the other on campus — outlining the relevant laws to be aware of and shedding light on that difficult ‘grey zone’ where the boundary is between lawful free speech and speech that may be construed as stirring up hatred or inciting violence. Click the button below to read the FAQs on the legal limits to online freedom of expression.
And the FAQs on the limits to freedom of expression on campus are below.
To join us and get access to these and the many other, similar documents we prepare for our members, click the button below. Without your support we wouldn’t be able to do the work that we do, standing up for the free speech rights of our members in the workplace and the public square. Membership starts from just £4.99 a month, and includes regular newsletters, FAQs and briefings, exclusive online content and free or heavily discounted tickets to our regular live events — link is below!