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Dwight D. Eisenhower’s career achievements are unparalleled in American history.

Popular two-term president. Supreme Commander of Allied forces in Europe in World War II. Led the epic D-Day invasion, helped reclaim postwar peace, launched NASA into orbit, sent America rolling down the interstate highway system. 

Also mentored a then-future president, Ronald Reagan, on everything from national security to running for higher office.

Ike also served for five years as president of Columbia University. 

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Given the chaos and disruption on that campus in April 2024, however, it is almost unimaginable that a five-star general of his caliber would lead that institution of higher learning today.

He took the position at the top of the elite New York City Ivy League university in May 1948 — and resigned from it only after he won election to the U.S. presidency and moved into the White House in January 1953. 

Former President Dwight Eisenhower

Dwight D. Eisenhower served as President of the United States from 1953 to 1961. Before that, he led Columbia University for five years, from May 1948 until January 1953, as its 13th president. (Associated Press)

The year he became Columbia's president, Eisenhower said, "The principal purpose of education is to prepare the student for effective personal and social life in a free society. From the school at the crossroads to a university as great as Columbia, general education for citizenship must be the common and first purpose of them all," as Columbia itself noted. 

Several years before that, and as part of his lasting legacy, he vowed to keep alive the memory of the shock and horror, the images of evil lurking within our species, that he observed at the Ohrdruf concentration camp in Germany in April 1945.

Dwight Eisenhower at Columbia University

Gen. Dwight Eisenhower, during his time as president of Columbia University, is shown giving a speech to students and faculty from the Alma Mater statue at Low Memorial Library, New York, on July 10, 1948. (Keystone/Hulton Archive/Getty Images)

"The things I saw beggar description," Eisenhower wrote to Gen. George C. Marshall, chairman of the Joint Chiefs of Staff, in Washington, D.C.

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"The visual evidence and the verbal testimony of starvation, cruelty and bestiality were so overpowering as to leave me a bit sick."

The victims were mostly Jews — first dehumanized by Adolf Hitler’s far-left National Socialist German Workers Party, then brutalized in a systemic extermination of humans on an industrial scale.

Ohrdruf concentration camp

Gen. Eisenhower, third from left in front (with cap), is surrounded by generals Bradley and Patton at the liberation of Ohrdruf camp in Germany, near Buchenwald, on April 4, 1945. (Keystone-France/Gamma-Keystone via Getty Images)

"Bodies were piled like wood and living skeletons struggled to survive," the United States Holocaust Memorial Museum reported of Ike’s arrival at Ohrdruf. 

Eisenhower instinctively knew that the atrocities defied belief — and therefore needed proof.

"The visual evidence and the verbal testimony of starvation, cruelty and bestiality were so overpowering as to leave me a bit sick." 

He vowed "to give first-hand evidence of these things if ever, in the future, there develops a tendency to charge these allegations merely to ‘propaganda,'" Eisenhower wrote in his message to Gen. Marshall.

One third of the global population of Jews, about 6 million people, were slaughtered by the National Socialists in the Holocaust. 

Buchenwald

By order of U.S. military authorities, the German population passed by the bodies of several hundred inmates of the Buchenwald concentration camp in April 1945. (ullstein bild via Getty Images)

Millions of other people were systemically killed, too. 

At Eisenhower’s frantic urging, members of Congress and a cadre of journalists descended on Ohdruf, and then on dozens of other death camps like it that the Allies discovered amid disbelief as they swept through Germany in the final weeks of World War II. 

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"He invited the media to document the scene. He compelled Germans living in the surrounding towns and any soldier not fighting at the front to witness the atrocities for themselves," the Holocaust Museum notes. 

Dwight Eisenhower before map

Gen. Dwight Eisenhower stands in front of a large wall map in his office in London on Jan. 17, 1944.  (Keystone/Hulton Archive/Getty Images)

It added, "Eisenhower foresaw a day when the horrors of the Holocaust might be denied."

That day is here right now — on the campus of Eisenhower’s own Columbia University. 

'By any means necessary'

Anti-Israeli student groups took over the Columbia quad this week as current university President Minouche Shafik testified before Congress on Wednesday about antisemitism on her campus.

Columbia, and other schools around the nation, as well as city streets, have been overtaken by calls for Israel’s destruction since the Oct. 7 Hamas terror attacks. 

"Antisemitism has no place on our campus, and I am personally committed to doing everything I can to confront it directly," Shafik said in her opening remarks. 

Complaints of antisemitism and Islamophobia have increased at the New York City campus of 35,000 students, prompting the school to put limits on demonstrations, The Associated Press reported. Now, protests can be held only on weekdays at certain times and locations — with advance notice, the AP also noted.

Eisenhower before D-Day

Gen. Dwight D. Eisenhower talks with American paratroopers on the evening of June 5, 1944, as they prepare for the Invasion of Normandy in Greenham Common, Berkshire, England on June 5, 1944. (Underwood Archives/Getty Images)

Shafik cited this as evidence the school is serious about protecting students, saying 15 students have been suspended and six are on probation for breaches — though some maintain this interferes with free speech.

Yet a day after her appearance, a current Columbia University student who is of Jewish heritage told "FOX & Friends" on Thursday that she does not feel safe at all on campus. 

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Columbia, and other schools around the nation, as well as city streets, have been overtaken by calls for Israel’s destruction since the Oct. 7 Hamas terror attacks slaughtered more than 1,000 civilian citizens of the Jewish-majority nation.

Anti-Israel protesters occupy the Columbia University main lawn

Anti-Israel protesters take over the main lawn on Columbia University's campus in New York City on Wednesday. (WNYW)

Antisemitic protesters have shouted "by any means necessary" and "from the river to the sea" – essentially calling for another Holocaust, for the extermination of Jews.

The phrase "by any means necessary" has been spread around campuses, including Columbia's, by the far-left group National Students for Justice in Palestine. 

Its platform comes straight from Hitler's far-left National Socialist playbook: monolithic government and a belief that Jews are colonizers. 

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"A parasite in the bodies of other nations," as Hitler called Jews in "Mein Kampf."

Columbia's deans issued a statement on Dec. 20 that acknowledged the hatred on its campus.

Columbia University protestors

Protesters demonstrate near Columbia University in New York City as they call for the destruction of Israel "by any means necessary." (Alexi J. Rosenfeld/Getty Images)

"Phrases such as ‘by any means necessary’ and ‘from the river to the sea,'" the school noted, are "antisemitic and deeply hurtful."

"Eisenhower foresaw a day when the horrors of the Holocaust might be denied."

Yet the shouts for the elimination of the Jewish state continue at Columbia and at other American universities today. 

Eisenhower predicted this day.

Eisenhower at Ohdruf

Gen. Eisenhower listens as a U.S. lieutenant questions a liberated slave laborer at the German prison camp en Ohrdruf, Germany, in April 1945. (Photo12/UIG/Getty Images)

He said the horrors of antisemitism, of the Holocaust, might be forgotten. 

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Many believe that America’s educational system today has failed to heed his important history lesson. 

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