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Pamphlets declaring "Death to America" were shared at a growing anti-Israel encampment at the University of Michigan this week, according to an eyewitness.

One of the pamphlets, titled "10 anarchist theses on Palestine solidarity in the United States," was made available for students to take and read. The pamphlet discusses a wide-ranging set of opinions related to the confrontation between Israel and Hamas and states on one page, "Freedom for Palestine means Death to America."

The pamphlets were made available to students at the encampment, said Josh Brown, a junior at the University of Michigan who documented the ongoing unrest.

Brown told Fox News Digital that the encampment, which has not been removed or taken down, featured a "library" of materials for students.

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Univ. of Michigan anti-Israel protest

One page of a pamphlet made available to students at the University of Michigan encampment states, "Freedom for Palestine means Death to America." (Josh Brown)

Other pamphlets were handed out to students, including one titled "The Gaza Ghetto Uprising" and another, "First We Take Columbia."

"In ‘The Gaza Ghetto Uprising’ the anonymous author draws parallels of 10/7 and the Warsaw Ghetto Uprising. The author also shows soft support for taking Israeli hostages," Brown wrote in a post to X. "Another pamphlet is titled ‘First We Take Columbia’ apparently authored by @Yale and @Columbia students."

Brown, who studies computer science at the university, noted on X that the encampment appeared to have been organized by a handful of student groups, some of which "have advocated for terrorism and glorified those who engage in it online."

The four groups, according to Brown, include Students Allied for Freedom and Equality (SAFE), which describes itself on social media as "a Palestinian solidarity group"; Jewish Voice For Peace, which claims to organize "for Palestinian liberation and Judaism beyond Zionism" on it's Instagram page; the Graduate Employees' Organization at the University of Michigan; and the TAHRIR Coalition, which claims on social media to be "90+ student organizations united for the TAHRIR (liberation) of Palestine at the University of Michigan."

University of Michigan anti-Israel encampment

An anti-Israel encampment is shown on the University of Michigan's campus in Ann Arbor on April 22, 2024. (Josh Brown)

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Brown's online documentation of the encampment purportedly showed that the anti-Israel demonstrators directly targeted Santa Ono, who has served as the 15th president of the University of Michigan since October 2022.

Written in chalk on one brick at the encampment site, which was set up in an effort to push the university to divest investments from Israel, were the words "ONO, YOU CAN'T HIDE".

Footage shared by Brown online showed several anti-Israel protesters engaging in chants like "Intifada! Intifada! Long live the intifada," "Resistance is justified, when people are occupied," and "Five, six, seven, eight, smash the settler Zionist state!"

Ono, you can't hide brick

Targeting University of Michigan President Santa Ono, one anti-Israel protester purportedly wrote in chalk, "ONO, YOU CAN'T HIDE". (Josh Brown)

Another clip shared by Brown appeared to show a Jewish student holding an Israeli flag who was surrounded by anti-Israeli demonstrators.

"'There is only one solution: Intifada revolution!' chanted the protestors while encircling a Jewish student with an Israeli flag inside the encampment," Brown wrote in a post to X.

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Asked about the pamphlets that were made available at the encampment, or the encampment in general, the University of Michigan told Fox News Digital, "While we are proud of our long history of student activism, U-M does not tolerate harassment and is committed to ensuring a campus culture that respects all cultural identities, religious backgrounds and beliefs."

"Antisemitism is antithetical to everything that U-M stands for. We are carefully monitoring the situation and remain prepared to appropriately address targeted harassment or threats against our Jewish community and our broader campus community," the school added.