(The Hill) - A typical academic year for Mark Bray, an assistant teaching professor of history at Rutgers University, turned into a nightmare after President Trump signed an executive order to designate antifa as a terrorist group.
Soon after the order, conservative activists targeted Bray, who wrote "Antifa: The Anti-Fascist Handbook," and he began to receive death threats. Once his home address was posted online, he knew it was time to act.
With the support of Rutgers, Bray and his family fled to Spain, where he will remain at least through the end of the school year as he fights what he calls false allegations regarding his beliefs and work.
“I'm very clear that I identify as an anti-fascist. I am completely opposed to fascism. I've never hidden that, but I myself have never been par